The GEO Checklist: 10 Ways to Optimise Your Content for AI Search in 2026 

Learn 10 proven GEO strategies to optimise content for AI search, earn citations in ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews, and stay visible in 2026.
The GEO Checklist: 10 Ways to Optimise Your Content for AI Search in 2026
You have done everything right. Your page ranks. Your keyword density is solid. Your backlinks are clean. And yet, traffic is quietly bleeding out. Here is what is actually happening: a growing share of your potential audience is asking ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI Overviews a question and getting a complete answer before they ever see a search result. Your page is not being ignored. It is being bypassed. That is the problem GEO exists to solve.

What is GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation)?

Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) is the practice of structuring your content so that AI-powered search systems, including ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Microsoft Copilot, select, cite, and recommend it in their generated responses. It sits at the intersection of traditional SEO, Answer Engine Optimisation (AEO), and structured data strategy. The goal is not just to rank in a list of results. It is to be the answer before the list appears. GEO does not replace SEO. It upgrades it. The technical foundations overlap authority, relevance, crawlability, but GEO adds specific requirements around content structure, citability, and brand signal consistency that traditional SEO does not address.

The GEO Checklist: 10 Ways to Get Cited by AI in 2026

1. Write answers that can stand alone

AI systems extract content. They do not read your whole page, they pull a passage and surface it in isolation. If your answer requires the surrounding paragraphs to make sense, it will not be pulled cleanly. 

The fix: write every key answer as if it will be read completely out of context. Declarative. Present tense. The core point in the first sentence. Aim for 40 to 60 words per answer block. 

Standout Actions 

  • Audit your top 10 pages. Find every section that answers a question. Rewrite the opening paragraph of each to be self-contained. 

2. Format headings as questions

AI Overviews are triggered by conversational, question-format queries. ‘How do I’, ‘What is’, ‘Why does’, ‘Should I’, these are the patterns that surface AI-generated answers. If your headings are written as statements (‘Benefits of X’), you are invisible to those triggers. 

Standout Actions 

  • Rewrite your H2s and H3s as questions where the content underneath directly answers them. ‘What are the benefits of X?’ performs better than ‘Benefits of X’ in AI search. 

3. Implement FAQ schema on every relevant page

Schema markup is the most under-implemented GEO lever available right now. FAQ schema tells AI systems, in machine-readable terms, that this page contains a direct question and a direct answer. It maps your content to the exact format AI Overviews are designed to surface. 

Standout Actions 

  • Add FAQ schema to every page targeting conversational or question-format queries. Validate implementations via Google’s Rich Results Test. Broken schema actively suppresses AI visibility. 

4. Add Article schema with credible author markup

AI systems assess credibility before citing a source. Article schema with author information — name, credentials, role, publication date gives AI systems the signals they need to treat your content as a trustworthy reference rather than an anonymous page. 

Standout Actions 

  • Add Article schema with author markup to all blog and editorial content. Link author names to dedicated author profile pages with verifiable credentials. 

5. Build topical depth, not just keyword coverage

AI systems do not read pages in isolation, they map relationships between concepts. A single well-optimised article on a topic is less likely to be cited than a site that covers the topic comprehensively from multiple angles. Topical authority is the signal that tells AI your domain is a reliable reference point. 

Standout Actions 

  • For every core topic you want to be cited on, map the full landscape of related questions. Build a pillar page with supporting cluster content. Internal linking between them is essential, it is how AI systems trace the depth of your coverage. 

6. Make your brand signals consistent everywhere

AI systems synthesise information from across the web to form a picture of your brand. Inconsistencies, different name formats, outdated service descriptions, conflicting addresses across directories create noise that reduces AI confidence in your brand as a citable source. 

This is one of the simplest fixes in GEO and one of the most consistently skipped because it feels administrative. It is not. It is foundational. 

Standout Actions 

  • Audit your brand name, address, phone number, and service descriptions across your website, Google Business Profile, directory listings, and social profiles. Standardise everything. 

7. Audit your robots.txt for AI crawler blocks

Several major AI crawlers, GPTBot (OpenAI), ClaudeBot (Anthropic), PerplexityBot, respect robots.txt. If you are blocking them from sections of your site you want cited, that is a direct visibility problem. Many sites are doing this unintentionally, as legacy blocks intended for scraper bots catch AI crawlers in the net. 

Standout Actions 

  • Check your robots.txt against the user-agent strings for GPTBot, ClaudeBot, PerplexityBot, and Bingbot. Remove unintended blocks on content you want AI systems to access and cite. 

8. Check that your content is accessible without JavaScript

Some AI crawlers do not execute JavaScript. If your content is rendered client-side, those crawlers see a blank page. This is increasingly common with React and Vue-based sites, and it is an invisible problem, your analytics will not flag it, but your AI citation rate will quietly suffer. 

Standout Actions 

  • Test your key landing pages and blog content in a JS-disabled browser. If the content disappears, it is invisible to a subset of AI crawlers. Work with your dev team on server-side rendering or static generation for high-priority pages. 

9. Earn third-party citations: AI reads the whole web

AI systems do not only look at your site when assessing whether to cite you. They factor in the wider web: industry publications, review sites, news mentions, forum discussions. A strong on-site content strategy with no external footprint still looks thin to an AI evaluating your authority. 

Standout Actions 

  • Prioritise getting mentioned, not just linked. In credible industry publications relevant to your topic. Guest articles, expert quotes in roundup pieces, and PR placements all build the external citation layer that AI systems use to validate authority. 

10. Test your content in AI tools, then reverse-engineer what is working

The most direct GEO feedback loop available right now is free: ask ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews the questions you want to be cited for. If you are not appearing, look at what is. Analyse the structure, the depth, the format, the source. That is your benchmark. 

Standout Actions 

  • Build a monthly habit of testing your 10 most important queries across AI tools. Track which sources are getting cited. Use that to inform your content and schema priorities for the following month. 

The GEO Audit Checklist

 

Audit Item 

Status 

1 

Question-format headings (H2/H3) on all target pages 

To do / Done 

2 

Answer blocks written as self-contained 40–60 word paragraphs 

To do / Done 

3 

FAQ schema implemented and validated on question-targeting pages 

To do / Done 

4 

Article schema with author markup on all editorial content 

To do / Done 

5 

Author bios with credentials added to all content 

To do / Done 

6 

Topical cluster map built for core topics 

To do / Done 

7 

Orphan pages identified and internally linked 

To do / Done 

8 

robots.txt audited for unintended AI crawler blocks 

To do / Done 

9 

Brand footprint audit completed across all listings and directories 

To do / Done 

10 

JS rendering checked for AI crawler accessibility 

To do / Done 

11 

Core Web Vitals passing on all key landing pages 

To do / Done 

12 

Third-party citation opportunities identified and pursued 

To do / Done 

13 

Target queries tested monthly in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google SGE 

To do / Done 

What Most People Get Wrong

Treating GEO as a separate project. GEO works best when it is baked into your existing content workflow not bolted on as a quarterly exercise. If your content briefs do not include question-format headings and standalone answer blocks as standard, you are creating extra work for yourself later. 

Optimising for keywords instead of questions. AI systems answer questions. Content built around two-word keyword phrases is progressively less suited to the queries that trigger AI Overviews. The shift from ‘content marketing tips’ to ‘What are the most effective content marketing strategies in 2026?’ is not cosmetic, it is structural. 

Waiting until something breaks to implement schema. Schema is a proactive visibility tool. Every week you publish content without it is a week of AI search signal you cannot get back. 

Ignoring the external footprint. On-site GEO without off-site citation building is half a strategy. AI systems are reading the whole web, your content needs to exist out there too, not just on your domain.

Start with One Thing

The checklist has ten items. You do not need all ten done this week. 

Pick the one that will make the biggest difference for your site right now. If you have never touched schema markup, start there, it is high leverage and most sites have zero of it implemented correctly. If your brand signals are inconsistent across the web, fix that first: it is an hour of work with compounding returns. 

GEO is not a project with a finish line. It is a standard you build toward, tactic by tactic. The sites getting cited by AI in 2026 are not necessarily the biggest or the oldest, they are the ones that understood the new rules earliest and started building to them. 

Start today. 

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