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LLM Optimization

SaaS SEO vs AI SEO vs GEO: Breakdown for Founders

December 2, 2025 Mani Karthik No comments yet
Generative Engine Optimization

If you have been in a marketing meeting recently, someone probably threw out an acronym that made you pause.

GEO. AEO. LLMO. AI SEO.

Maybe they even said “traditional SEO is dead” with a straight face.

Here is what is actually happening. The industry is tripping over itself to name something that has not fully formed yet. Meanwhile, founders like you need to know where to put budget and attention.

So let me cut through this.

I have been doing SaaS SEO for brands like Dukaan, HappyFox, and SuperMoney. The landscape is shifting. But not in the way most LinkedIn posts suggest.

The Acronym Problem

The search optimization world is drowning in new terminology.

According to Search Engine Land research, AISO (AI Search Optimization) now has 11,001 active job postings on Indeed – more than SEO, AEO, GEO, and LLMO combined. The labor market has essentially picked a winner while practitioners are still arguing about definitions.

Yet when the same researchers asked marketers which term they actually use, 84% recognized GEO but only 14% use SEO to describe work targeting AI chatbots.

Everyone knows something changed. Nobody agrees what to call it.

Here is the practical translation:

SEO – Getting your website to rank in Google search results

GEO – Getting your content cited by AI systems like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude

AI SEO – The umbrella term covering everything AI-related in search

AEO – Getting your content featured in direct answer formats (featured snippets, voice responses, AI Overviews)

LLMO – Specifically optimizing for large language model outputs

The terminology does not matter as much as understanding what these approaches actually do differently.

What SaaS SEO Actually Looks Like

Let me ground this in what SaaS companies actually care about.

Traditional SaaS SEO focuses on ranking your website in Google to capture people actively searching for solutions like yours. The goal is driving qualified traffic that converts into trials, demos, and eventually customers.

According to First Page Sage, B2B SaaS companies see an average ROI of 702% from SEO with a breakeven period of 7 months. That is exceptional – but it requires patience and consistent execution.

Here is what a standard SaaS SEO strategy targets:

Keyword categories:

  • Product terms (“project management software”)
  • Problem-aware terms (“how to reduce employee churn”)
  • Competitor alternatives (“Asana alternatives”)
  • Integration terms (“Salesforce CRM integration”)

Content types:

  • Feature pages optimized for buyer intent
  • Comparison pages against competitors
  • Educational blog content for top-of-funnel
  • Use case pages for specific industries or personas

Technical foundations:

  • Site speed and Core Web Vitals
  • Internal linking architecture
  • Schema markup for rich results
  • Crawlability and indexation

This approach compounds over time. Unlike paid ads that stop the moment you pause budget, SEO assets continue generating leads years after creation.

The problem? Google’s AI Overviews and the rise of ChatGPT are changing where discovery happens. Ahrefs research found AI Overviews reduced click-through rates for top-ranking content by 34.5% in just one year.

Your content can rank number one and still get less traffic than it did 18 months ago.

This is why the conversation around AI SEO matters for SaaS.

How GEO Differs From Traditional SEO

GEO – Generative Engine Optimization – was formally defined in November 2023 by Princeton University researchers. The core idea is simple: instead of optimizing for rankings, optimize for citations.

When someone asks ChatGPT “What is the best CRM for startups?”, GEO determines whether your brand shows up in the answer.

This is fundamentally different from SEO in a few key ways.

DimensionTraditional SaaS SEOGEO
Primary GoalRank higher in search resultsGet cited in AI-generated answers
Success MetricRankings, traffic, conversionsCitation frequency, brand mentions
Traffic ModelUser clicks through to your siteUser may never visit your site
Optimization TargetGoogle’s algorithmMultiple AI platforms (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, Gemini)
Content FocusKeywords and backlinksEntity clarity, authority signals, structured data
Feedback LoopSearch Console, GA4Limited – no equivalent to Search Console

The shift from “earning clicks” to “earning citations” changes everything about how you measure success.

Andreessen Horowitz noted that GEO represents a move from a decentralized, data-adjacent market to something more centralized and API-driven. The $80 billion+ SEO market just got a major structural crack.

Tip: Think of SEO as competing for real estate on a webpage. GEO is competing to be the answer itself. Both matter, but they require different tactics.

Where AI SEO Fits In

AI SEO is best understood as the umbrella term that covers everything.

According to Onely’s analysis, AI SEO encompasses using AI tools for content optimization, keyword research, predictive analytics, and adapting to AI-powered search features. It is both how you use AI and how you optimize for AI.

For SaaS founders, AI SEO means:

  1. Using AI tools to improve your traditional SEO work (content generation, competitive analysis, keyword clustering)
  2. Optimizing your content so AI systems understand and cite it
  3. Adapting your strategy as Google AI Overviews reshape the SERP
  4. Building presence on platforms that AI systems cite (Reddit, Wikipedia, industry publications)

The distinction matters because a lot of agencies are selling “AI SEO services” that are really just traditional SEO with some AI writing tools bolted on. That is not the same as strategically positioning your brand for AI-driven discovery.

Understanding how AEO differs from traditional SEO helps clarify what is genuinely new versus what is repackaged.

AEO: The Bridge Between Old and New

Answer Engine Optimization predates the current AI hype. It emerged from featured snippets and voice search optimization.

AEO focuses on structuring content so search engines can extract direct answers. Think:

  • Clear question-and-answer formatting
  • Concise definitions at the start of sections
  • Lists and tables that can be pulled into featured snippets
  • FAQ sections with structured data

The difference between AEO and GEO is subtle but important.

AEO optimizes for answer boxes and snippets within Google’s traditional results. GEO optimizes for being cited by standalone AI platforms like ChatGPT and Perplexity.

In practice, they require similar tactics – clear structure, authoritative content, direct answers to user questions. The target just differs.

ApproachTarget PlatformOutput Format
AEOGoogle AI Overviews, Featured Snippets, Voice SearchAnswer boxes within search results
GEOChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, GeminiFull conversational responses
LLMOLarge Language Models specificallyBrand mentions and citations in AI outputs

For SaaS companies, AEO matters because Google AI Overviews now appear in over 11% of search queries – up 22% year-over-year. B2B tech sees AI Overviews in 70% of queries, up from 36% a year ago.

If you are not optimizing for answer formats, you are leaving visibility on the table.

LLMO: The Technical Layer

Large Language Model Optimization gets more specific about how AI models actually work.

LLMs do not crawl the web the way Google does. They synthesize from training data and, increasingly, from real-time retrieval (what is called RAG – Retrieval Augmented Generation).

LLMO focuses on:

  • Ensuring your brand is represented in training data sources (Wikipedia, Common Crawl, authoritative publications)
  • Making content easy for retrieval systems to parse and cite
  • Building consistent entity recognition across the web
  • Maintaining accuracy so models learn correct information about your brand

According to AUQ.io research, high-ranking SaaS content receives 3x more LLM citations. This suggests traditional SEO still feeds into AI visibility – the systems are connected.

But there is a critical technical caveat: AI crawlers cannot access schema markup the way Google does. So some traditional technical SEO tactics do not translate directly.

The E-E-A-T signals that matter for LLM visibility are slightly different from what works for Google. Both care about expertise and authority, but LLMs weight certain signals differently.

The Practical Question: Which Do You Need?

Here is the honest answer: you need all of them, but with different priorities depending on your stage.

Early-Stage SaaS (Pre-Product Market Fit)

Focus almost entirely on traditional SaaS SEO. You need the traffic and leads to validate your product. AI search is still a tiny fraction of total discovery.

Build a strong keyword foundation. Create comparison content against established players. Get the technical basics right. This compounds.

Growth-Stage SaaS (Post-PMF, Scaling)

Start layering in GEO and AEO tactics. As you build content volume, structure it for AI consumption. Begin building third-party presence on sites AI platforms cite.

This is where a proper SaaS SEO strategy starts including AI-specific elements alongside traditional optimization.

Enterprise SaaS

At scale, you cannot ignore AI visibility. Your competitors are optimizing for ChatGPT recommendations. Decision-makers are increasingly asking AI for vendor suggestions before they touch Google.

Enterprise SaaS SEO in 2025 means integrated strategies that capture visibility across every discovery channel.

Here is a simplified decision framework:

Company StageSEO PriorityGEO PriorityAEO PriorityLLMO Priority
Pre-PMFHighLowMediumLow
GrowthHighMediumHighMedium
EnterpriseHighHighHighHigh

Tip: If you are still figuring out product-market fit, ignore the AI hype and focus on ranking for buyer-intent keywords. That will tell you more about your market than any AI citation metric.

What Actually Works Across All Approaches

Here is what I have seen work regardless of terminology.

Content depth beats content volume. AI systems favor comprehensive resources over thin pages. A single definitive guide outperforms ten shallow blog posts.

Structure matters more than ever. Clear headings, Q&A formats, definition-first paragraphs, and logical organization help both Google and LLMs parse your content.

Authority is earned off-site. Getting mentioned on Wikipedia, Reddit, industry publications, and review platforms influences AI citations more than anything on your own domain.

Freshness signals relevance. The role of recency in AEO is significant – 85% of AI Overview citations come from content published in the last two years.

Technical access enables everything. If AI crawlers cannot access your site, nothing else matters. Check your robots.txt for GPTBot, ClaudeBot, and PerplexityBot blocks.

These principles apply whether you are doing traditional SEO, GEO, AEO, or LLMO. The fundamentals remain remarkably consistent.

The Integration Question

Should you treat these as separate strategies or one unified approach?

Backlinko’s analysis is instructive here: “Whether you call it SEO, GEO, AIO, or LLMO, the fundamentals of optimization and creating great content don’t change. The goals shift a little, and how you measure success will differ.”

For SaaS founders, I recommend thinking about it as layers:

Layer 1: SEO Foundation Technical soundness, keyword strategy, content architecture, link building

Layer 2: Answer Optimization Structured data, FAQ sections, featured snippet optimization, clear direct answers

Layer 3: AI Visibility Third-party mentions, entity consistency, citation-worthy content, platform-specific optimization

Each layer builds on the previous one. You cannot do effective GEO without a solid SEO foundation because 50% of AI citations come from pages ranking in Google’s top 10.

The best approach is integrated, not siloed.

Measurement Challenges

One practical problem: measuring AI visibility is hard.

Google Search Console tells you exactly how you are performing in traditional search. There is no equivalent for ChatGPT or Perplexity.

Conductor research found that 87.4% of all AI referral traffic comes from ChatGPT. You can track this in GA4 by setting up segments for AI referral sources. But you cannot see impressions or citation share.

Tools are emerging to fill this gap. HubSpot’s AI Search Grader, Profound, and Semrush’s AI Visibility Toolkit offer some visibility into how brands appear in AI responses.

But we are still early. The measurement infrastructure for GEO is roughly where SEO tools were in 2005.

My approach: track AI referral traffic as a leading indicator, run monthly prompt tests across major AI platforms, and monitor review scores on G2/Capterra since those influence citations.

For deeper monitoring approaches, I have reviewed several GEO tools that are worth considering.

The Agency Landscape

A word of caution about the agency market.

Because terminology is unstable, agencies are repackaging traditional SEO services under new names. “GEO services” might mean anything from genuine AI visibility optimization to basic content writing with a trendy label.

Onely’s research found that 37% of SEO professionals admit they do not know how to use AI tools. The skills gap is real.

When evaluating partners, ask outcome-based questions:

  • What specific AI platforms are you optimizing for?
  • How do you measure AI citation success?
  • Can you show examples of brands you have helped appear in ChatGPT responses?
  • What is your strategy for third-party presence building?

If the answers are vague or everything sounds identical, be skeptical. The field is too new for anyone to have all the answers, but they should at least be honest about the uncertainty.

What This Means for Your 2025 Strategy

Here is what I would prioritize if I were building a SaaS SEO program from scratch right now.

Keep doing what works. Traditional SEO is not dead. Organic search still drives vastly more traffic than AI platforms. According to GSQi research, AI search is under 1% of total traffic for most sites. Do not abandon proven channels for shiny new ones.

Add structure to existing content. This is low-hanging fruit. Update your top-performing pages with better headings, Q&A sections, and clearer definitions. This helps both Google featured snippets and AI citations.

Build third-party presence. Get active on Reddit in your category subreddits. Pursue guest posts on sites AI platforms cite. Request reviews from customers on G2 and Capterra. This influences AI visibility more than anything on your own site.

Monitor and learn. Set up AI referral tracking. Run monthly prompt tests. Pay attention to which content earns citations. The data will teach you what works for your specific space.

Do not panic about terminology. Whether you call it GEO, AEO, or AI SEO matters less than understanding the underlying shift: discovery is fragmenting across platforms, and you need to be visible wherever your buyers look.

Understanding which content formats LLMs prefer can help you prioritize what to create or update first.

The Honest Truth

The search landscape is genuinely changing. AI is not a fad that will disappear.

But the change is evolutionary, not revolutionary. The fundamentals of good SEO – helpful content, technical soundness, authority building – still matter. They are just expressed through new channels.

Most SaaS companies will be fine if they keep doing solid SEO work while gradually incorporating AI-specific tactics. The ones who will struggle are those who either ignore the shift entirely or chase every new acronym without building on fundamentals.

Find the middle path. Build on what works. Add new layers thoughtfully.


If you want to talk through how this applies to your specific situation – what to prioritize, where to invest, what to ignore – I am happy to share honest feedback. No pitch, just perspective from someone who has been watching this space evolve in real time. Reach out if that would be useful.

  • AEO
  • AI SEO
  • GEO
Mani Karthik

Mani Karthik is an SEO and growth consultant who’s helped scale traffic for SaaS brands like Dukaan, HappyFox, SuperMoney, and Citrix. With over 15 years of hands-on experience, he blends deep technical SEO know-how with a product-led growth mindset. Mani has worked inside high-growth teams, fixed what agencies missed, and built content engines that compound. He now works directly with founders to turn search into a reliable growth channel - no fluff, no shortcuts, just strategy that works.

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