Generative Engine Optimisation & AI Search: Your questions answered

Frequently asked questions about Generative Engine Optimisation and how to improve visibility inside AI search engines.

Table of Contents

The world of search is changing - fast and forever. In fact, much of the change has already happened.

If you’re a B2B marketer still focused solely on Google rankings, you’re missing the new front lines of visibility: AI search assistants like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude and Google AI Overviews along with Gemini..

We call it GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation) and it's changing how B2B buyers discover, research, and evaluate software.

This post tackles the most common (and important) questions we hear from marketers trying to get their heads around GEO. No fluff, no hype, just sharp answers grounded in what’s happening now.

What actually is GEO?

Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) or AI Search is the process of improving your visibility, influence, and presence inside AI powered search tools.

That includes tools like:

  • ChatGPT with browsing enabled
  • Perplexity (which combines LLMs with real-time search)
  • Claude, Gemini, and more
  • Google's Search Generative Experience (SGE)

Unlike traditional SEO, where keyword volumes were easy to measure and rankings were static and predictable, GEO is probabilistic - every prompt gets a slightly different answer, pulled from different sources, depending on how it’s phrased and who’s asking.

We believe in a B2B marketing context, GEO is:

  • Prompt driven, not keyword driven
  • Built for LLMs, not legacy search engines
  • A process of buyer journey orchestration across the full length of the B2B buyer journey, not just a measure of brand visibility

Is it called GEO or AIO or AEO or LLMO?

Marketers and agencies (let's be honest, mainly agencies) are throwing all sorts of acronyms around:

  • GEO = Generative Engine Optimisation
  • AIO = AI Optimisation
  • LLMO = Large Language Model Optimisation
  • AEO = Answer Engine Optimisation (typically used in voice/search)

We use GEO because it reflects a broader truth: search has shifted to generative engines. It’s not about optimising for one tool. It’s about understanding how AI systems are generating answers, and making sure you’re present when they do.

We also feel GEO is a nice natural next iteration of SEO.

What is a GEO agency?

Think of a GEO agency like the next generation of a SEO agency. A GEO agency should help you:

  • Understand how your buyers are using AI search assistants
  • Track your brand’s visibility across generative tools
  • Map prompts to buyer journey stages
  • Influence the sources LLMs pull from
  • Build content strategies optimised for prompt driven journeys
  • Monitor and adapt visibility over time

At FirstMotion, we specialise in B2B software. Our methodology is built around deep audience intelligence and buyer context, prompt mining, and influence intelligence - not just guessing prompts and writing blog posts.

How does GEO differ from SEO?

At a foundational level, SEO was about rankings. GEO is about probabilities.

In SEO, you aimed to get on page one of Google. Ideally position number one. In GEO, there’s no single ranking - just the likelihood of your brand or content being surfaced in response to a prompt.

GEO is more dynamic, more contextual, and more dependent on structured data, semantic language, and trust signals from third party sources.

That said, there are plenty of areas of overlap. In some verticals we've seen strong correlation between 'traditional SEO performance' and AI search performance. And some of the 'tactics' we use to improve a brand's visibility and performance in GEO will be similar to SEO.

It's not about one or the other - it's about understanding your customers, the tools they use to search, discover and evaluate, and shaping strategies to influence their journeys in the right way and the right time.

How does AI search or GEO change the B2B buyer journey?

It compresses it. Blurs it. Personalises it. Makes it harder to measure. But also presents lots of opportunities for B2B software brands to accelerate the sales cycle, influence it earlier and turn AI search into a channel that drives growth.

B2B buyers now use ChatGPT and Perplexity as buyer enablement co-pilots - not just top of funnel discovery tools.

GEO doesn’t just influence top of funnel. It influences:

  • How buyers shortlist vendors
  • What features they evaluate
  • What reviews or use cases they see
  • What integrations or differentiators get mentioned
  • What questions they ask vendors
  • How they evaluate and make a final decision

Our own framework, PromptPath™, aligns GEO strategy to the full buyer journey:

  1. Problem Identification
  2. Solution Exploration
  3. Requirements Building
  4. Supplier Evaluation

And we then map ICPs, personas and prompts to every B2B buyer journey stage using our ContextualJourney™ technology platform.

What are the best analytics tools for measuring AI visibility?

Right now, the most useful tool in our stack is Peec AI which is a purpose built analytics tool for AI prompt visibility tracking across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews and other platforms.

We also use our own ContextualJourney™ platform for the audience intelligence, prompt mining and some of the content strategy parts of our work and to help us reverse engineer generative engine visibility success for our clients.

GEO visibility is harder to measure than SEO - but it’s possible, it's essential, and it should be happening consistently.

What’s the most important part of a GEO strategy?

Without question, our perspective at FirstMotion is that it's audience intelligence.

You can’t optimise for prompts if you don’t deeply understand your ICPs, personas, and buyer journey, along with some strong competitor analysis.

At FirstMotion, our ContextualJourney™ platform uses millions of B2B buyer data points, enrichment, intent data and AI to:

  • Deeply understand B2B buyer pain points and goals
  • Building buying units
  • Understand the buyer journey
  • Translates those insights into likely AI prompts (searches)
  • Builds a Prompt Matrix mapped across journey stages

No prompt strategy is complete without deep, enriched buyer context - and we don't believe it's possible to define a winning AI search content strategy without deep audience intelligence.

Will AI tools like ChatGPT eventually overtake Google?

Maybe not entirely. But in many B2B software categories, they're already the first stop - especially for:

  • Problem framing
  • Tool comparison
  • Feature evaluation
  • Writing RFPs or spec sheets
  • Identifying possible risks/red flags
  • Asking what to ask on a demo call

Think less in terms of Google vs ChatGPT. Think more in terms of parallel influence. Either way, we believe AI tools are playing an active role in the decision making unit.

GEO is already shaping decisions - and that's only going to increase.

Is GEO just about discovery and top of funnel?

Not at all. We strongly believe AI tools are buyer enablement co-pilots across the full B2B buyer journey. We think less in easy to attribute linear funnels, and more in non-linear journeys that are complex, considered and hard to measure.

GEO can influence:

  • What problems buyers prioritise
  • Which tools they consider
  • How they build shortlists
  • What questions they ask during demos
  • How confident they feel in supplier selection

That’s not top of funnel. That’s revenue impact.

Are sources like G2, Gartner, Reddit & Quora more important for GEO?

Yes, massively. At FirstMotion we're doing lots of search into the sources that influence B2B software related search queries.

LLMs don’t just crawl your homepage. They pull trusted, cited content from:

  • G2, Capterra, TrustRadius
  • Reddit, Quora, LinkedIn Pulse
  • Forrester, Gartner and other analyst reports
  • Niche industry media sources
  • Third party blogs, integrations directories, and guest posts

We call this influence intelligence - knowing which sources AI tools cite for prompts in your category, and earning visibility in those locations.

Do I need to focus on Bing for to improve visiblity in ChatGPT?

If you want to be visible in ChatGPT’s web search mode, then yes, 100%.

When ChatGPT doesn't have a confident answer within its training data (the knowledge already built into the model), it uses Bing to search the web. If your content isn’t ranking on Bing, ChatGPT may never find it.

We cover this in detail in this post.

How do I figure out what prompts my buyers are using?

That’s the million dollar question, and the heart of GEO.

At why at FirstMotion, we start with strong audience intelligence that considers:

  • Not just job titles, but buying behaviour
  • Use lots of data enrichment and intent data sources
  • Use AI to reverse map likely prompts by persona and journey stage
  • Analyse source language from reviews, Reddit, LinkedIn, etc
  • Feed all this into our Prompt Matrix for each client

It’s not about guessing or simply taking 'SEO keywords' and converting them easily into prompts. Prompts are much more contextual, and often much longer than a keyword.

We wrote this post exploring the type of prompts B2B software companies should think about being visible for.

How can I track clicks from AI answers in ChatGPT?

Not reliably, and that’s part of the dark funnel problem we unpack in this post.

ChatGPT often paraphrases your content without linking. It might mention your brand name, but not include a link to your site. Buyers may then search your brand separately in Google after seeing a mention. That means no attribution, no UTM, no referrer from ChatGPT - even through ChatGPT was where the discovery moment happened, or what prompted the user to come to your site.

One thing to keep an eye out for is an increase in branded searches to your site. Maybe a tool like ChatGPT is recommending your brand name, but the 'referrer' is still organic search because the user still has to Google you.

We'll keep this page regularly updated with some of our most frequently asked questions about AI search and the shift from SEO to GEO - let us know if you have questions you want answering.

If you want to keep up to date with all the latest GEO research, studies and data driven insights, check out our GEO research database.

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Generative Engine Optimisation

Is AI traffic higher quality & more likely to convert?

Is traffic or referrals from AI search tools like Perplexity or ChatGPT higher quality and more likely to convert than traffic from Google? Here's what the data says.

This article was updated on 18th March 2026

When this post was written in August 2025, the evidence on AI traffic quality was limited to early studies. There are now multiple primary datasets across different industries and time periods. The direction is consistent: AI referral traffic converts at higher rates than traditional organic for B2B and high-consideration purchases. The effect is weaker or neutral for transactional ecommerce.

The most robust study: Seer Interactive (B2B software, October 2024 to April 2025)

Seer Interactive analysed GA4 data from a single B2B software client across six AI platforms, tracking 1,370 AI-driven conversions against almost 14 million organic sessions. ChatGPT converted at 15.9%, Perplexity at 10.5%, Claude at 5%, Gemini at 3%, versus Google organic at 1.76%. ChatGPT users viewed 2.3 pages per session on average — nearly double the organic search average of 1.2 — suggesting they arrived mid-funnel, having already researched and compared options inside the AI tool.

Ahrefs: first-party data showing 23x conversion rate advantage

Ahrefs published its own internal data in June 2025: AI search traffic accounted for 0.5% of total visits but drove 12.1% of all new signups — a 23x higher conversion rate than organic search. These users also viewed 50% more pages per visit and had lower bounce rates. This is first-party data from Ahrefs on their own site, using Ahrefs Web Analytics.

Semrush: broader cross-industry finding

Semrush's July 2025 research found LLM visitors convert 4.4x better than organic search visitors on average. Their explanation: by the time someone clicks through from a ChatGPT response, the AI has already summarised their options and effectively pre-qualified the visitor. They arrive ready to act, not still browsing.

Microsoft Advertising: Copilot-driven journeys and lower-funnel conversion

Microsoft Advertising's April 2025 analysis found that Copilot-powered purchase journeys are 33% shorter and 76% more likely to lead to lower-funnel conversions than journeys that do not involve Copilot. This is first-party data from Microsoft's own advertising platform.

Important nuance: the effect varies by sector

Not all AI traffic converts equally. Seer Interactive notes their B2B software finding may not generalise to transactional ecommerce where purchase intent is different. Semrush's cross-industry figure of 4.4x is an average across research-heavy and transactional categories. The conversion advantage is most consistent for B2B, SaaS, professional services, and other high-consideration purchases — the exact markets this blog addresses.

Update: Google have shared their own thoughts on quality of traffic coming from AI - read more here.

The increase in use of AI powered tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and Google’s AI Overviews and AI Mode is transforming how users discover content. While traditional SEO has long dominated  organic user acquisition strategies, the emergence of AI-driven answers is shifting the focus and putting more attention on quality over volume.

In a world where attention is scarce and zero-click search is on the rise, the big question is no longer "how much traffic?" but "what kind of traffic?"

Is AI growing it's share of search volume over Google?

We don't believe any brands should be choosing between AI search and Google as if it's a case of having to pick one over the other. SEO is not dead, and Google is not going anywhere. But it's hard not acknowledge the shifting search behaviour, and some of the important differences between SEO and GEO.

Research from clickstream data provider Datos recently highlighted that in the United States, the share of users that went to chatbots rather than traditional search engines reached 5.6% in June, up from 2.48% in June 2024 and 1.3% in January 2024. While Google still commands the lion's share of search activity, the growth of AI tools suggests a new class of traffic is emerging.

Are AI referral traffic conversion rates higher than Google?

Recent studies are starting to uncover a surprising pattern: AI search traffic, while lower in volume, may be significantly higher in quality.

  • Ahrefs (June 2025) reported that AI search accounted for just 0.5% of their total visits, but drove 12.1% of all new signups. That’s a 23x higher conversion rate than organic search.
  • These users also viewed 50% more pages per visit and had lower bounce rates, suggesting higher engagement.

In other words, AI referrals might be smaller in number, but they punch well above their weight.

Platform specific performance: ChatGPT and Perplexity

The picture becomes even clearer when looking at individual AI platforms.

Source: Seer Interactive

A Seer Interactive case study found:

  • ChatGPT accounted for 61% of AI-driven visits, Perplexity ~24%, Gemini ~15%
  • AI visitors viewed an average of 2.3 pages/session compared to 1.2 for Google organic
  • Engagement rates for AI referrals were on par with organic (~60%) but delivered 100% more attributed conversions year-on-year (Seer Interactive)

These tools appear to act as mid-to-late funnel accelerators: users arrive more qualified, more curious, and more ready to act.

Does AI SEO traffic convert higher in B2B SaaS?

We love this data study from Goodie showing a 56.3% higher close rate from leads that originated in AI search agents compared to Google or Bing.

Out of all the platforms analysed, ChatGPT was the most efficient B2B traffic source that they identified with nearly double the lead:close rate of traditional search engines. 

Source: Goodie

For B2B marketers, this means vertical context matters. But even modest AI visibility can yield strong ROI if aligned to the right funnel stage. Whilst Google was still leading top of funnel referral traffic, ChatGPT was clearing referring better quality, ready to convert traffic.

Why do AI referrals convert better?

Several factors may explain the high performance of AI referred traffic over Google referred traffic:

  • LLM tools act as buyer enablement engines: they answer specific questions aligned with real problems
  • Users arrive further down the funnel: often in exploration, comparison, or evaluation stages
  • Less noise, more relevance: AI links are often more direct and intentional than search listings

The result? Higher commercial intent and better conversion efficiency.

Final thought: Smaller volumes, higher stakes

In the age of AI native B2B buyer journeys, it's not just about reaching more people - it's about reaching the right ones. B2B SEO has always been about quality over traffic, but at FirstMotion we think that's more important than ever now.

AI tools may deliver fewer users, but if those users convert at 10x or 20x the rate, the economics shift dramatically. As visibility in these tools becomes more competitive, now is the time to build an AI first visibility strategy that drives revenue, not just rankings.

Tom Batting

August 1, 2025

Generative Engine Optimisation

From Keywords to Conversations: The AI Search Revolution in B2B SaaS

The world of B2B SaaS is built on discovery. Digital transformation has accelerated changes in B2B SaaS discovery, reshaping how buyers and businesses interact with solutions. For years, discovery has meant mastering search engines through traditional SEO: keywords, backlinks, and ranking mechanics. Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the quality and quantity of website traffic from search engines, helping buyers discover relevant content. But a major shift is underway. Buyers are no longer typing a few words into Google and scrolling through ten blue links. They are asking questions in natural language, expecting instant, context-aware answers, and AI search has created new ways for buyers to discover solutions. This is the AI search revolution, and it is transforming how B2B SaaS companies and businesses are found, evaluated, and chosen. In this article, we explore the behaviour changes driving this shift, how AI search differs from traditional search, what it means across platforms, and the strategic implications for SaaS marketing leaders, including the impact of AI search on B2B SaaS businesses.

The Search Behaviour Shift

The B2B buyer journey has always been research-intensive. A typical SaaS purchase involves multiple stakeholders, months of consideration, and dozens of touchpoints. Traditionally, search engines like Google acted as the gateway to information. Buyers typed in keywords such as “best CRM for mid-sized businesses” or “enterprise project management software” and sifted through results, blogs, and review sites. Today, that same buyer is just as likely to turn to AI search tools. Customers now expect more conversational and context-aware answers from these tools. Instead of typing “best CRM”, they might ask:

  • “Which CRM platforms integrate natively with HubSpot and support AI automation?”
  • “What are the key differences between Salesforce, Pipedrive and Zoho for a 100-person B2B sales team?”

The difference is subtle but profound. Search is no longer about keywords, it’s about conversations. AI-powered engines automatically interpret a wide range of search queries, compare options, and summarise insights instantly. AI-powered search engines use Natural Language Processing (NLP) and Machine Learning (ML) to understand user intent and context. In many cases, buyers receive answers directly in the search results without visiting a given page. This means buyers are reaching informed conclusions faster, with fewer clicks, and often without ever landing on a vendor’s website. For SaaS companies, this shift means visibility and influence are no longer guaranteed by simply ranking high on Google.

Traditional Search Engine Optimization vs AI Search

AspectTraditional SEOAI Search
Primary focusKeywords and rankingBuyer intent and context
Result formatLinks to websitesSummarised answers, comparisons
Ranking signalsBacklinks, site authority, on-page SEOAuthority, structured knowledge, semantic depth
User actionMultiple clicks and researchOne conversational query
Content type rewardedBlog posts, keyword-optimised landing pagesIn-depth expertise, structured documentation, conversational answers

Indexing and file management practices have evolved in AI search, with less emphasis on manual control of files and more on structured data and semantic understanding.

Traditional SEO rewarded content volume, technical optimisation, and backlinks. It relied heavily on PageRank, indexing, and managing files and URLs to ensure visibility in search results. For example, managing multiple URLs and same content was crucial, specifically through canonical tags and redirects to consolidate link equity and avoid duplicate content issues. Writing content and creating content remain important, but the focus has shifted toward authority and clarity. The choice of domain and descriptive URLs can still influence search visibility, especially when targeting specific markets or improving user experience. Creating compelling and useful content influences a website’s presence in search results more than any other SEO suggestions. It is less about chasing every keyword and more about ensuring your solution is consistently represented in AI-generated answers.

Platform Differences

PlatformAI Search ImpactSaaS Marketing Implication
Google SGEContextual overviews and comparisons in search resultsFocus on structured content and schema markup
ChatGPT, Perplexity, ClaudeSynthesis of answers from multiple sourcesEnsure documentation, thought leadership and comparisons are widely accessible
G2, Capterra, TrustRadiusFrequently cited as authoritative sourcesBuild reviews, manage sentiment, encourage customer advocacy
LinkedIn, Reddit, XPeer conversations summarised in AI responsesInvest in thought leadership and community presence

AI search is not one monolithic channel. It manifests differently across Google’s SGE, independent AI tools, review platforms, and social networks. SaaS marketers must consider visibility across all these points of influence. Providing access to valuable resources across platforms is essential for enabling member participation and keeping users informed.

Connecting different types of content, including forum posts and other user-generated resources, can enhance visibility in AI search by improving discoverability and supporting ranking considerations.

Strategic Implications for B2B SaaS

ImplicationWhy It MattersPractical Steps
Authority & ExpertiseAI references trusted voicesPublish expert insights, technical guides, case studies, and focus on building strong relationships with clients and partners
Structured DataAI uses schema and structured docsImplement schema, publish comparison tables, improve documentation
Review PlatformsAI cites reviews frequentlyEncourage reviews, manage profiles, drive sentiment
Content StrategyConversational queries matterWrite for humans and AI, answer niche buyer questions
New MetricsRankings are not enoughTrack AI citations, share of voice in generative search
Brand StrengthRecognition influences trustInvest in PR, thought leadership, and consistent messaging. Highlight your company's ability to adapt and aim for leadership in AI search.

The shift to AI search demands a broader strategy. SaaS companies must optimise for authority, structure, and presence across multiple platforms, while measuring success in new ways. It is also important to promote your company and services both online and offline to maximize reach and brand impact.

From Search to Conversations

The AI search revolution is not about the death of SEO, but its evolution. Traditional SEO principles — clarity, relevance, authority — still matter. But they must be reframed through the lens of conversations, not keywords. For B2B SaaS companies, this is both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge lies in adapting fast: rethinking content strategies, investing in structured knowledge, and diversifying presence beyond Google.

With the introduction of AI mode in search engines, which leverages the web using a query fan-out technique to break down search queries into sub-topics, answers are generated with greater relevance and depth. AI-generated content is created by synthesizing information from across the web, drawing on a vast array of sources to provide comprehensive responses. Large Language Models enable AI-powered search to generate original content or summaries by synthesizing information from multiple sources.

The opportunity is clear: those who embrace AI search early will capture disproportionate visibility, shaping buyer perceptions before competitors catch up. The companies that thrive will be those that understand a simple truth: in B2B SaaS, discovery is no longer about being the loudest voice on Google. It’s about being the trusted answer wherever buyers ask their questions.

Measuring Success in Modern Search

In the rapidly changing world of search engine optimization, understanding how to measure success is more important than ever. As search engines evolve and user expectations shift, relying solely on traditional metrics like keyword rankings or organic traffic no longer provides a complete picture. Modern SEO requires a broader approach—one that explores how your content is discovered, cited, and engaged with across a variety of search platforms.

To effectively gauge the impact of your SEO efforts, focus on insights that reflect the true nature of today’s search environment. This includes tracking how often your brand or website is referenced in AI-generated search results, monitoring user engagement with your content, and analyzing the visibility of your pages across multiple search engines and conversational platforms. Additionally, consider metrics such as share of voice in industry-specific queries, the quality and relevance of inbound links, and the frequency with which your resources are included in curated lists or directories.

By exploring these modern KPIs, businesses can gain a deeper understanding of their search performance and make data-driven decisions to optimize their strategies. The key is to move beyond surface-level numbers and focus on the insights that truly matter—how users are finding, interacting with, and trusting your content in an increasingly complex digital landscape.

FAQs

1. Will SEO still matter in the age of AI search?
Yes. SEO remains critical, but its focus is evolving. Technical SEO, site performance, and structured content all remain relevant. However, content must be designed to be cited by AI systems, not just ranked by Google.

2. How can B2B SaaS companies measure success in AI search?
Beyond traditional rankings, SaaS marketers should track how often their brand is mentioned in AI-generated responses, presence on review platforms, and share of voice in conversational search engines like ChatGPT or Perplexity.

3. What type of content performs best in AI search?
AI engines prefer clear, structured, and authoritative content. This includes product comparison tables, API documentation, in-depth guides, customer case studies, and thought leadership that directly answers buyer questions.

Tom Batting

October 3, 2025

Generative Engine Optimisation

What GPT-5 Means for SEO & AI Search (GEO/AEO)

This article was updated on 18th March 2026

Updated March 2026 - What actually happened after GPT-5 launched

This post was written on August 8, 2025 - the day GPT-5 launched - and contained our initial analysis. Now that GPT-5 has been live for several months, we can compare those predictions against what has actually happened.

What OpenAI confirmed at launch

GPT-5 launched on August 7, 2025. OpenAI stated that responses with web search enabled are approximately 45% less likely to contain a factual error than GPT-4o, and around 80% less likely when using extended thinking mode. OpenAI positioned it as the first model to meaningfully unify reasoning and real-time retrieval in a single system.

What the traffic data now shows

The zero-click risk predicted in the original post is now measurable. Seer Interactive's November 2025 study of 3,119 informational queries across 42 organisations found organic CTR for queries with AI Overviews dropped 61% (from 1.76% to 0.61%) between June 2024 and September 2025. Even queries without AI Overviews saw a 41% CTR decline - suggesting users are going to ChatGPT and other AI tools before they even reach Google.

What this means for the original analysis

The predictions in the post below have largely held. The citation upside is real - Seer found that brands cited in AI Overviews earn 35% higher organic CTR and 91% higher paid CTR than uncited brands. SE Ranking's December 2025 study of 129,000 domains confirmed that referring domains are the single strongest predictor of ChatGPT citation.

When GPT-4 launched in March 2023, it was the first time many marketers realised that search might not be confined to Google forever. GPT-5, released in August 2025, makes that shift feel permanent.

It is not just a better chatbot – it is a new search layer, with its own retrieval system, ranking logic, and bias towards certain content types.

How does GPT-5 change SEO and visibility?

OpenAI has improved reasoning, accuracy, and long-context handling in GPT-5, but the more important change for SEO is behind the scenes.

The search experience is faster, citations are cleaner, and sources feel more intentionally selected. It is also more agent like - able to follow instructions across multiple steps - but the most impactful change is how it retrieves and ranks results.

How GPT-5 search actually works

If you assume GPT-5 is just passing your query to Google or Bing, things are in reality a bit more complex than that.

    • GPT-5 almost certainly uses a proprietary meta layer rather than raw SERP feeds go get its results.
    • Results seem to sometimes overlap more with Bing results than Google, but whilst also pulling from lots of other sources, re-ranking, changing the order of things etc. So it does not always mirror the search engine results page.
    • It appears not to be able to access live Google search results page, but it does seem to be able to access a Bing SERP if provided an exact URL.

Have a read of this great round up by Josh from Profound for more technical insights.

Why GPT-5 matters for SEO

With GPT-5 it seems more apparent than ever that there is not always a link between ranking highly on Google and being visible in AI results.

Optimisation for SEO/AEO/GEO now means thinking about AI search as a standalone channel – one where:

    • Authority is measured across multiple engines and ecosystems.
    • Content must be easily parsed, summarised, and cited by an LLM.
    • Being present on other trusted domains can matter as much as your own site.
    • Structured, context-rich content outperforms thin keyword-driven pages.

The risk of AI search for marketers

Zero click behaviour is likely to intensify. GPT-5’s improved answers mean users may never need to visit the source. That puts more pressure on measuring exposure in generative answers, not just traffic/clicks.

It also means you cannot assume that you will be highly visible in AI tools like ChatGPT even if your traditional SEO rankings stay strong – because the ranking logic is not exactly the same.

GPT-5 is not simply a better ChatGPT - it is a more sophisticated search engine in its own right, with a proprietary retrieval and ranking layer. Whilst it's still important to focus on SEO, the mindset shift, approach to measurement and more granular Answer Engine Optimisation/Generative Engine Optimisation approaches are key.

Tom Batting

August 8, 2025