
Search has expanded. Under pressure, buyers and brands default to the clearest voice they can trust. Buyers didn’t abandon search engines. They added new ones.
Today, decisions are shaped across two environments at the same time — search engine optimization (SEO), where buyers research, compare and validate through traditional search results, and generative engine optimization (GEO), where buyers ask AI tools to summarize, recommend and explain.
The mistake many teams are making is treating these as separate strategies. They’re not. They’re two moments in the same decision cycle.
Buyers don’t choose SEO or GEO — they use both
Under pressure, people don’t want more information. They want certainty. A modern buying journey looks like this: a buyer Googles a question to understand the landscape, asks an AI tool like ChatGPT, Perplexity or Google Gemini to summarize options, forms an opinion quickly and may never click a single website. That last point matters. You can rank first in search and still lose the deal if your perspective never shows up in the answers shaping buyer understanding.
This isn’t either/or. It’s interdependent. SEO builds discoverability. GEO multiplies distribution. SEO earns the click. GEO earns the quote. If your strategy only optimizes for rankings, you can still win traffic while losing influence.
Dig deeper: GEO isn’t a fad — but most GEO tactics won’t survive
Why SEO and GEO require one strategy, not two
When teams hear GEO, the instinct is to spin up a new initiative — new tools, dashboards and owners. That’s unnecessary and often counterproductive. What works in SEO is the same thing AI systems look for: clear expertise, structured information, credible sources and consistent messaging across the web. The difference is how content travels. Search engines send people to pages. AI engines extract and repeat explanations.
The real question isn’t “How do we optimize for AI?” It’s “Is our content clear enough to be reused?” If an AI model can’t confidently summarize what you do, who you help and why you matter, buyers won’t either.
Think of SEO and GEO like this: SEO helps you show up. GEO helps you show up repeatedly. That repetition is where trust forms. Trust is what people reach for when decisions feel risky. Trust is also what shortens sales cycles, not impressions.
5 moves that improve SEO and GEO together
You don’t need parallel strategies. You need one system that performs in two environments.
1. Build one plan for SEO and GEO
Stop treating GEO like a side project. Decide which topics you want to own, then build one system behind them: one core message, one source-of-truth page, multiple formats that travel, such as articles, summaries, FAQs and comparisons. When everything points back to the same clear explanation, both search engines and AI engines know what to reference.
2. Clarify your expertise in plain language
If your positioning reads like fog, you lose. AI doesn’t infer meaning from buzzwords. Neither do buyers. Be explicit: who you help, what problem you solve, how you solve it and proof that you can. If a human can’t repeat your value in one sentence, an AI won’t either.
Dig deeper: How to turn SEO wins into GEO dominance
3. Organize for discovery, not decoration
Structure matters more than cleverness. High-performing content is easy to scan, summarize and quote. Use clear headers, short summaries, Q&A sections, comparison tables, definitions and key takeaways. This isn’t about dumbing content down. It’s about making it portable.
4. Strengthen credibility everywhere you show up
Trust isn’t confined to your website. AI systems pull signals from reviews, partner pages, mentions, customer outcomes and founder or executive voice. If your expertise only lives on owned pages, it’s fragile. If it’s reinforced across the ecosystem, it compounds.
5. Measure and adapt beyond rankings
Traffic still matters, but it’s no longer the full picture. In addition to rankings and clicks, watch for visibility in AI answers, growth in branded search, more educated inbound leads, shorter sales cycles and fewer “explain this to me” conversations. Those are GEO signals. They tell you whether understanding is spreading.
Put it into practice: B2B SaaS
SaaS buyers search in two modes.
- Traditional search queries, such as:
- “Best SOC 2 compliance automation software.”
- “SOC 2 platform comparison.”
- “Vanta vs Drata vs Secureframe.”
- “SOC 2 timeline and cost.”
- AI-driven questions, such as:
- “What’s the fastest path to SOC 2 if enterprise deals are stalled?”
- “What matters more: policies, evidence collection or vendor risk?”
- “Which platform works best for a lean security team?”
The opportunity isn’t to answer these separately. It’s to build one asset that answers all of them.
- The move: Create a “source of truth” buyer guide.
- Example page title: How to Choose a SOC 2 Compliance Automation Platform (2026 Buyer Guide)
Include a 60-second executive summary, clear definitions with no jargon, a comparison table, use-case blocks by role, proof points and outcomes and 10 real buyer FAQs. If your guide is the clearest explanation online, you don’t just rank. You become the easiest source to repeat. That’s how SEO feeds GEO.
Dig deeper: Why AI visibility is now a C-suite mandate
The real shift: From traffic to understanding
This moment isn’t about chasing algorithms. It’s about earning explanation. Buyers are moving faster because they’re outsourcing synthesis to machines. Your job is to make sure what gets synthesized is accurate, differentiated and grounded in your expertise.
SEO gets you found. GEO gets you remembered. If SEO determines whether you’re found and GEO determines whether you’re trusted, then clarity becomes a growth discipline — not a content tactic. The teams that win will design for both: reach and resonance, clicks and quotes, discovery and understanding. The question now is simple: are you optimizing to be seen — or to be chosen?
The post The new buyer decision cycle happens across SEO and GEO appeared first on MarTech.