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SEO Is Dead (Sort Of). Welcome GEO Generative Engine Optimization
25th Edition: Through the Funnel (Marketing News & Jobs)
News From MHQ to You 📰
Welcome to the 25th edition of the MHQ newsletter, where we explore the intersection of marketing, data, and creativity.
Today’s topic? The evolution from SEO (Search Engine Optimization) to GEO (Generative Engine Optimization); what it means, how it’s different, and what marketers can do to stay visible in the age of AI-driven search.
SEO vs. GEO: What’s Changing
Traditional SEO is about being found by algorithms.
Generative Engine Optimization is about being referenced by them.
Search engines (like Google) look for backlinks, keywords, and click-through rates.
Generative engines (like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity) look for authority, context, and clarity; they cite trustworthy sources, not just popular pages.
Generative engines just don’t care about backlinks anymore; they care about authority, context, and trust. Your next prospect may never visit your website. Instead, they might discover your brand through an AI-generated summary, chatbot citation, or embedded reference somewhere upstream.
In short: SEO optimizes for ranking. GEO optimizes for reasoning.
What’s Different in Tactics and Outcomes
The shift isn’t just technical, it’s philosophical.
SEO rewards link-building, metadata, and keyword precision.
GEO rewards narrative clarity, cited expertise, and consistent mentions across authoritative sources.
As marketers, we need to think beyond keywords and start optimizing for context, trust, and presence inside the LLMs.
Your next buyer might never visit your website.
Instead, they’ll hear about your brand through an AI-generated summary, chatbot citation, or embedded reference inside someone else’s content.
It’s a new kind of organic visibility, less about clicks and more about credibility.
That means your focus shifts from traffic → trust.
How to Set Yourself Up for Success
Start by shifting your mindset from keywords to concepts. You’re not just optimizing for search crawlers anymore, you’re training models to understand your authority within a topic cluster.
Here’s where to start:
✅ Publish clear, original perspectives that models can interpret semantically.
✅ Get mentioned in credible third-party sources: podcasts, trade press, analyst reports, and community conversations.
✅ Build consistent topical authority, not just domain authority.
As GEO matures, PR and communications will play a much bigger role in organic visibility. Generative engines rely on trusted sources and established news, trade, and analyst publications carry enormous domain authority. Getting your brand mentioned or quoted in those outlets helps “train” the models to recognize your expertise.
But visibility isn’t just about media mentions.
Content like FAQs, glossaries, case studies, and data-backed insights tend to perform exceptionally well in GEO. They’re structured, context-rich, and easy for models to parse, making them prime material for citations in AI-generated summaries and chatbot responses.
This is why we think the emerging GEO market is about to get really interesting, with new tools and tactics to start measuring visibility and performance in ways traditional analytics simply can’t.
The GEO Hype (and the Reality Check)
There’s a lot of noise right now around “owning” LLM visibility. And while the opportunity is real, the roadmap isn’t. GEO is still early day. The rules, the ranking signals, even the interfaces are all changing daily.
A few things worth keeping in mind:
No one has it fully figured out. Even the people leading the GEO conversation are experimenting in real time.
Shortcuts are tempting (DON’T DO THESE). There’s a growing wave of “AI visibility hacks” promising guaranteed LLM mentions, things like spamming “Best X Software” roundup sites, flooding Quora-style Q&A platforms with keyword-heavy answers, or mass-posting thin content on Medium and Reddit to trigger citation patterns. Most are just recycled SEO tactics with an AI twist, and they’ll fade as models get smarter.
Patterns beat precision (for now). LLMs reference based on repetition and recognition, not accuracy; meaning consistency and credibility still matter most.
Trust scales slower, but lasts longer. The brands winning today didn’t hack their way in; they earned authority through clarity, transparency, and real expertise.
The takeaway: treat GEO as a long game. Focus less on “cracking the algorithm” and more on becoming the brand worth referencing.
The new rule of thumb?
If your content helps people understand (not just find) it’ll likely help models do the same.
Tools to Watch
Now’s the time to start testing the new GEO tools emerging in this space. Platforms like Profound, Goodie AI, Geoptie and WriteSonic help marketers gain and track brand and topic inclusion across LLMs, giving an early look at how AI models see and reference your content.
These tools are still early, but they offer a glimpse of the next analytics frontier:
Measuring understanding, not just impressions.
You can’t “game” GEO the way we once gamed SEO. However, you can guide it by being clear, credible, and consistently present where your audience (and the models they rely on) learn.
Takeaways
The brands that master this shift early will become the trusted defaults in tomorrow’s AI-driven answers.
👉 Your Move:
Start small. Pick one high-intent topic your brand should own, in the eyes of both humans and models.
Publish. Get cited. Track how often your name shows up in generative responses over time.
This isn’t the death of SEO.
It’s the start of something smarter:
GEO - optimization for the era of intelligence.
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- The MHQ Team



