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    June 15, 20261 min read

    AEO: what answer engine optimization is, and how to get ready before the click disappears

    AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) is the discipline of getting your brand to be the source that AI cites and recommends when it answers a question, instead of fighting for the top spot on a list of links that fewer and fewer people open.

    In one sentence. AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) is the discipline of getting your brand to be the source that AI cites and recommends when it answers a question, instead of fighting for the top spot on a list of links that fewer and fewer people open.

    Search just changed its business model. For twenty years, SEO ran on one simple promise: rank high and you get the click. That promise is breaking. When someone asks Google, ChatGPT, or Perplexity today, the answer shows up right above the results page, and your site stops being necessary to find it.

    This article turns Vercel's The State of AEO report (Vercel) into practice, checks it against verified 2025 and 2026 data, and grounds it in what an SEO team should actually do this week. It is not an apocalyptic manifesto. It is a map of the new terrain and of what still works the same as always.

    What AEO is and how it differs from classic SEO

    AEO is optimization built so AI systems can understand, extract, and cite your content inside their answers. The goal is no longer the click but inclusion: showing up inside the answer the AI builds, not in the blue list underneath it.

    It helps to sort out the acronym soup, because you will see them used almost interchangeably:

    • AEO (Answer Engine Optimization): optimization for answer engines like Google's AI Overviews or Perplexity.
    • GEO (Generative Engine Optimization): optimization for generative models that synthesize long answers, comparisons, and recommendations.
    • AIO (AI Optimization): the broad umbrella of optimizing for artificial intelligence.

    Different names, same fundamentals. All three rely on the same things: structured data, clear formatting, and entity authority so a machine can understand you. As Nick Lafferty, Growth Marketing at Profound, puts it, "AEO builds naturally on existing SEO knowledge. Many professionals are already doing AEO without realizing it."

    The real difference is what you optimize for. Classic SEO optimizes a page to hold a position. AEO optimizes chunks of content so a model retrieves and uses them. The unit of work changes: you stop thinking in pages and start thinking in self-contained paragraphs that answer on their own.

    The numbers that prove we are not in the same game anymore

    This is not a future trend. It is the measurable present.

    13.14% of Google searches already trigger an AI summary. That number has more than doubled from 6.49% in January 2025, and it spikes for informational queries, where it reaches 88.1% (data compiled by SeoProfy). When someone searches to learn something, the AI most likely answers before they see a single link.

    When an AI summary appears, the click almost vanishes. The Pew Research study from July 2025, based on the actual browsing of 900 adults, found that users click a link only 8% of the time when an AI summary is present, compared with 15% when it is not. The click drops nearly in half. And only 1% click the sources cited inside the summary itself.

    26% of users end their session after reading an AI answer, versus 16% when there is no summary (Pew Research). They read the answer and leave. There is no next page.

    Traffic is moving toward the chats. Around 5.6% of U.S. desktop search traffic already flows to language models, with ChatGPT in the lead at more than 5 billion monthly visits. And 42% of users turn to AI chats for shopping recommendations.

    Here is the data point that changes the internal conversation with leadership: AI-referred traffic converts up to nine times more than standard organic traffic, according to compilations of GEO and AEO research for 2026. Fewer visits, but far more qualified. The user who arrives after an AI recommendation already shows up convinced.

    SEO is not dead: it is the foundation of AEO

    Here is the misunderstanding costing the most money right now. "SEO versus AEO" is the wrong conversation.

    AI crawlers access, parse, and understand your content using signals very close to those of a traditional search engine. Load speed, mobile responsiveness, and clean HTML are still decisive for a model to read you. You cannot skip SEO on the way to AEO.

    The E-E-A-T framework (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) does not go away. If anything, it weighs more than ever. AI engines show a stronger preference for E-E-A-T content than traditional search, because they synthesize information in detail rather than just rank it. As Malte Ubl, CTO at Vercel, says, "like how you had public perception, there's now LLM perception, and the tactics are almost similar [to SEO]."

    Laura J. Bal, of LTIMindtree, puts it bluntly: "Stop seeing SEO and AEO as either/or. Start thinking of AEO as the natural evolution of great SEO."

    What really changes: the page is no longer the unit of work

    If all of the above holds, what is genuinely new? That the smallest unit of optimization is no longer the page but the chunk.

    As Aleyda Solis, AI search content consultant, explains, "AI search engines don't index or retrieve whole pages; they break content into 'chunks' and retrieve the most relevant segments for synthesis. That's why you should optimize each section like a standalone snippet."

    This has three practical consequences.

    Brand mentions beat backlinks. For SEO, backlinks were the reputational proof Google demanded. For AI, the new currency is brand mentions across the open web, which weigh up to three times more than backlinks, because the model assesses your entity authority by how often you are discussed.

    Success metrics change. The headline KPI stops being the traffic your analytics report and becomes how often the models' answers mention you. You have to measure reference rate and share of presence in answers, not just sessions.

    Natural language rules. The average ChatGPT query is 86 words and runs across 8 messages. People no longer type loose keywords but long, conversational questions with context and follow-up. Your content has to fit that way of asking.

    The two myths worth busting right now

    There is no magic AEO tag. If someone sells you a schema or a meta that guarantees showing up in AI answers, they are lying. No markup guarantees visibility in an AI engine. Real success is holistic optimization of quality, structure, and authority, not a quick trick.

    Blocking AI crawlers is usually an own goal. Many publishers have blocked OpenAI's crawler to protect their content, but blocking the crawlers sacrifices your AI visibility. If the AI cannot read you, it cannot cite you. As Ubl reminds us, "the value of me writing something down [like software documentation] is dramatically increased, because an LLM is going to crawl it for a user's query."

    The AEO playbook, step by step

    This is the actionable part. Four fronts, in priority order.

    1. Technical foundations: let the AI read you

    Most SEO, social preview, and AI crawlers do not run JavaScript at all. If your content renders on the client, it does not exist for them. The minimum checklist:

    • Use server-side rendering (SSR) or static generation (SSG), with frameworks like Next.js or Nuxt.
    • Serve prerendered HTML to crawlers.
    • Include key metadata (titles, Open Graph tags, canonicals) in the initial HTML.
    • Add

    On top of that comes the usual: speed and mobile responsiveness, checked with PageSpeed Insights or WebPageTest. AI crawlers like GPTBot, Google-Extended, and ClaudeBot have their own patterns for prioritizing and processing the web. If your content is not optimized, it does not get crawled, and if it does not get crawled, it does not get seen.

    2. Content architecture built for machines

    Three principles that decide whether you get cited or stay invisible.

    Inverted pyramid model. Answer first, explain later. AI systems tend to pull content from the top of the page, so lead with value: answer the question in the title and the first paragraphs, and leave the deeper explanation for the body.

    Q&A formatting. FAQ-style content dominates AI answers more often than narrative content does, even when they cover the same topic, because a question-and-answer structure aligns with how users ask and how models structure their responses.

    Make every paragraph count. Since models break text into chunks, write self-contained paragraphs of 2 to 5 sentences with subject, context, and conclusion. Those get extracted far more than long passages that depend on the surrounding context.

    3. Entity authority: show up everywhere

    Models reward mentions over links, so the brand that builds entity authority is the one that ends up cited. Two paths:

    • Be where the AI looks. Web pages are not the only place AI crawls. Reddit, YouTube, X, and LinkedIn count too. Diversify where you publish so that, wherever the AI looks, your brand is available. In Ubl's words, "Reddit is now the place to influence the hive mind."
    • Earn mentions with other sites. Brand mentions and unlinked citations are key to visibility. Partnering with trustworthy, reliable sites multiplies those mentions. Collaborative content equals more mentions equals more visibility.

    4. Measurement for a world without clicks

    Stopping measurement is the fastest way to go obsolete. Adapt the dashboard:

    • Pick AI visibility tools that actually work, like Profound, or the adaptations from Ahrefs and Semrush.
    • Set KPIs for a zero-click world: reference rate and share of presence in answers.
    • Survey your leads about AI's role in conversion, noting when a call or a form explicitly mentions an LLM.

    The deeper problem: who pays when no one clicks?

    It is not all optimism, and that is worth naming. If AI delivers answers without generating traffic, the ad revenue that funds free content is at risk. And that brings the "garbage in, garbage out" problem: if creators stop producing new information, AI quality degrades, and if it degrades, creators have even less incentive to produce. A negative loop that could erode the whole ecosystem.

    Exits are being tested. OpenAI has already signed content licensing deals with the Financial Times and News Corp, with upfront payments, ongoing royalties, and mandatory attribution. And some find their own way: Nerdwallet posted 35% revenue growth in 2024 by optimizing conversion, despite a 20% drop in traffic. The lesson is clear: fewer visits do not have to mean less business, if you convert the ones who do arrive better.

    Frequently asked questions about AEO

    Does AEO replace SEO?

    No. AEO is the evolution of SEO, not its replacement. They share technical foundations, content quality, authority, and trust. You need both layers running at once.

    Should I block AI crawlers to protect my content?

    As a rule, no. Blocking AI crawlers usually sacrifices your visibility in answers. If a model cannot read you, it cannot cite or recommend you.

    What is the single most important practical change versus classic SEO?

    That the unit of optimization moves from the page to the chunk. Each section has to answer on its own, like a standalone snippet, because AI breaks up and retrieves segments, not whole pages.

    How do I measure whether my AEO works if traffic drops?

    With new metrics: reference rate, share of presence in AI answers, and the declared role of LLMs in your conversions. Lean on tools like Profound, Ahrefs, or Semrush.

    Is FAQ-style content actually worth it?

    Yes. The question-and-answer format shows up in AI answers more often than narrative content, because it matches how users ask and how models structure what they return.

    Adapt or disappear

    We are moving from an attention economy to an answer economy. Brands that do not adapt to this new definition of search will not just fall behind. They will disappear. As Zach Cohen and Seema Amble, partners at Andreessen Horowitz, put it, "visibility means showing up directly in the answer itself, rather than ranking high on the results page."

    The good news is that almost nothing you already know how to do gets thrown away. Technical SEO, quality content, and brand authority are still the foundation. What changes is the unit of work, the metrics, and where your visibility shows up. Whoever starts treating every paragraph as a standalone answer, while almost no one else does, starts with the same edge that early SEO adopters once had over their competition.

    The click we knew is fading. The question is no longer whether your site ranks first, but whether your brand is the answer.

    Written by

    FS

    Fabian Spura

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