SEO gets your page ranked in a list of results. AEO gets your business named in the single answer an AI gives. They share foundations — crawlability, content quality, authority — but AEO adds new success metrics (mention rate, citation rate, share of voice) and rewards direct answers, structured data, and third-party corroboration more heavily than position tracking.
The core difference: a list vs. an answer
Classic search returns ten links and lets the user judge. An answer engine — ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews — returns one synthesized answer naming a handful of businesses. That structural change rewrites the economics:
- In SEO, position #8 still gets some clicks. In an AI answer, you're either named or you're invisible.
- In SEO, the click goes to your page. In AEO, the AI may answer fully without any click — so being named and cited is itself the win.
- In SEO, you compete on a keyword. In AEO, you compete on a question — and the engine decides which few entities deserve to be the answer.
Side-by-side comparison
| SEO | AEO / GEO | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Rank pages in results | Be named & cited in AI answers |
| Unit of competition | Keyword | Buyer question |
| Success metric | Rankings, organic traffic | Mention rate, citation rate, share of voice |
| Winning content | Comprehensive, keyword-targeted pages | Direct answers, FAQs, comparisons, citeable resources |
| Key technical signal | Crawlability, speed, links | Structured data (JSON-LD), entity clarity, answer-shaped markup |
| Authority signal | Backlink profile | Cross-source corroboration: reviews, listings, mentions, press |
| Failure mode | Ranking on page 2 | Not existing in the answer at all |
What transfers from SEO
If you've done SEO well, you're not starting from zero. AI engines retrieve from the indexed web, so these carry over directly: a crawlable, fast site; genuinely useful content; accurate business listings; and real authority in your niche. A site that ranks well organically is more likely to be retrieved as a source — retrieval is the entry ticket to being cited.
What doesn't transfer
Three SEO habits actively hurt in AEO:
- Burying the answer. The classic SEO long-intro article — 600 words of context before the point — is hard for an engine to lift. AEO wants the answer in the first paragraph, then the depth.
- Keyword-first thinking. Engines synthesize from meaning, not keyword density. A page that plainly answers "how much does duct cleaning cost in Austin" beats a page optimized for "duct cleaning Austin cost 2026 best price".
- Self-reference only. Your own site saying you're the best is weak evidence. Engines cross-check against reviews, directories, and independent mentions before recommending you to a user. SEO could be won on-site; AEO can't.
Where to spend effort in 2026
Our recommendation, in order:
- Measure first. Run the buyer questions your customers ask through the engines and see who gets named. (Our free check automates this.) You can't fix a share-of-voice problem you haven't seen.
- Fix technical readiness. JSON-LD schema, FAQ structure, clear titles/H1s, sitemap, canonicals — cheap, fast, and foundational. Details in What is AEO.
- Publish answer-shaped content. One page per real buyer question, answer first.
- Build corroboration. Reviews, consistent listings, and independent mentions — the slow moat.
Frequently asked questions
Should I stop doing SEO?
No. SEO keeps feeding the retrieval layer AI engines depend on. The shift is in emphasis and measurement, not abandonment.
Is AEO just featured-snippet optimization renamed?
It inherits from snippet optimization but goes further: snippets extracted one passage from one page; AI answers synthesize across many sources and name specific businesses, so entity signals and corroboration matter far more.
How do agencies sell AEO alongside SEO?
Usually as a visibility audit + monitoring layer on existing retainers — "here's what AI says about you vs. competitors, monthly." Bnarrativ provides this white-label for agencies.