GEO — Generative Engine Optimisation
What is GEO?
The new SEO
you need to know.
Search is changing. AI systems are answering questions before users click anything. GEO is how you make sure your business shows up in those answers.
What GEO actually means
GEO stands for Generative Engine Optimisation. It's the practice of structuring and writing your content so that AI systems — ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, Microsoft Copilot — include your business, your expertise, or your content in the answers they generate.
Traditional SEO gets you into the list of blue links. GEO gets you into the answer itself — the paragraph that appears before anyone sees those links.
The shift that's already happening
When someone asks ChatGPT "who are the best accountants in Cape Town" or asks Google "what does a site audit include" — they're not getting ten blue links. They're getting a generated answer. If your business isn't in that answer, you don't exist for that query.
GEO is not a replacement for SEO. It's the next layer on top of it. Strong SEO is still the foundation — AI systems pull from well-structured, authoritative, indexed content. But optimising for AI-generated answers requires additional thinking about how you present information, how you establish credibility, and how your brand is referenced across the web.
Why it matters right now
Google AI Overviews launched in South Africa in 2024. They're already appearing on competitive commercial queries — services, products, comparisons, how-to questions. Perplexity.ai is growing fast. ChatGPT is being used for research before purchase decisions.
The businesses that rank in AI answers right now aren't necessarily doing anything special — they happen to have well-structured content that AI systems can parse and trust. That window won't stay open forever.
GEO vs SEO — the actual difference
| Dimension | SEO | GEO |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Rank in search result pages | Appear in AI-generated answers |
| Target | Google's ranking algorithm | LLMs — ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI |
| Success looks like | Position 1–3 for target keyword | Your brand cited in AI answer |
| Content style | Keyword-optimised pages | Direct, authoritative, question-answering |
| Technical focus | Site speed, crawlability, backlinks | Schema markup, entity clarity, citations |
| Measurement | Rankings, organic traffic | AI mention tracking, brand visibility |
| Timeline | 3–12 months to rank | Ongoing — AI models update frequently |
| Relationship | Foundation for GEO | Built on top of good SEO |
The important thing: they're not competing. Good SEO makes good GEO easier. If your content is well-structured, authoritative, and clearly answers specific questions, you're already doing half of GEO without knowing it.
How AI search engines find your content
AI systems like ChatGPT and Perplexity don't crawl the web the same way Google does — but they use indexed content, they reference websites, and they draw on training data. Here's what influences whether your content gets cited:
1. Crawlability and indexing
If Google can't crawl it, AI can't cite it. The technical SEO basics still apply — your site needs to be fast, clean, and properly indexed.
2. Topical authority
AI systems favour sources that cover a topic comprehensively and consistently. A site with 30 well-written articles about SEO will be cited more than a site with one page. Depth of coverage matters.
3. Direct answers to specific questions
AI is looking for clear, factual, direct answers. Content that buries the answer in three paragraphs of preamble gets skipped. Content that answers the question in the first sentence gets cited.
4. Schema markup and structured data
FAQ schema, Article schema, HowTo schema — these help AI systems understand exactly what your content is about and what questions it answers. This is table stakes for GEO.
5. Brand mentions across the web
When your business is mentioned positively across multiple trusted sources — not just your own site — AI systems build a picture of your authority. Reviews, press mentions, directory listings, industry publications.
6. EEAT — Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trust
Google's EEAT guidelines were written for humans reviewing content quality — but AI systems have internalised the same signals. Author credentials, first-hand experience, original research, transparent sourcing. All of it counts.
How to optimise for GEO — practical steps
Fix your SEO foundation first. Fast site, clean code, proper indexing, quality content. GEO builds on SEO — a broken foundation means both fail.
Write direct answers. Every page should answer a specific question clearly in the first paragraph. Don't make AI dig for the answer.
Add FAQ sections with schema. FAQ schema tells AI systems exactly which questions your content answers. Every guide page should have one.
Build topical depth. Don't have one page about SEO. Have 15. Cover every angle. AI cites authorities, not one-pagers.
Get mentioned elsewhere. PR, guest posts, directory listings, industry publications, client testimonials on third-party sites. Brand mentions across the web build AI authority.
Add author credentials. Who wrote this? What's their experience? AI systems weight content from identifiable experts higher. Put your name and credentials on your content.
Use clear entity signals. Your business name, location, services, and specialisations should be crystal clear and consistent across your site and across the web.
Track your AI visibility. Search for your business and competitors in ChatGPT and Perplexity regularly. Know what answers are appearing for your key queries.
What this means for South African businesses specifically
Most SA-specific GEO content doesn't exist yet. When someone asks an AI "what should I look for in a Cape Town accountant" or "how do I find an SEO specialist in South Africa" — the AI is pulling from whatever it can find. Right now that's mostly general content, international sources, and whatever local businesses have happened to put online.
This creates a specific opportunity: SA businesses that create detailed, authoritative, local content now will be the sources AI systems reach for when users ask local questions. The competition is minimal because most local businesses don't know GEO exists yet.
The relationship between GEO and NoGravy
This site — oonie — is built to help SA businesses understand and implement GEO and SEO themselves, using AI tools. If you want to go deeper, work with someone who does this professionally, or get an honest assessment of where your site stands — that's what NoGravy is for.
Need the human version?
NoGravy does GEO
and SEO properly.
Site audits, SEO strategy, GEO positioning — done by Lindsay Campbell, Cape Town. No jargon. No lock-ins.