9 Ways to Do GEO Right
With the rise of GEO (Generative Engine Optimization), the focus of optimization is no longer just on search engine rankings, but on AI platforms such as ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude, Copilot, and others. These AI systems generate answers by crawling web content, knowledge bases, and online data. When users ask questions, they might recommend a brand, cite website content, or provide product suggestions and purchase references. Therefore, GEO traffic is becoming the new frontier.
Recently, China Central Television (CCTV) exposed a “poisoning” grey market involving large AI models: some service providers claim that for a fee, they can ensure a product is “listed” in mainstream AI models. The essence of this is manipulating recommendation results by bulk-publishing marketing content across numerous platforms for the AI to crawl and cite. This incident reminds the industry of the need to clearly define the line between legitimate GEO and “poisoning” GEO.
So, how can websites enjoy the benefits of GEO traffic without crossing the “poisoning” red line, while also maintaining SEO effectiveness? The following 9 methods can serve as a reference.
9 Methods for Doing GEO Right:
1. Content Authenticity is the Bottom Line
The exposed “poisoning GEO” essentially uses false, exaggerated content to mislead AI models. Legitimate GEO must ensure content is authentic and reliable, including genuine brand information, real user experiences, and accurate product data.
Legitimate GEO can highlight strengths, but it must not fabricate non-existent features; forge user stories; or use unsupported extreme expressions like “first,” “only,” or “best.” AI models are continuously being upgraded to identify low-quality content. False information might work in the short term, but it will be filtered out in the long run.
2. Maintain a Natural Publishing Rhythm, Reject “Content Bombing”
A typical characteristic of “poisoning” is: publishing a large volume of highly similar content across many platforms within a short period, essentially just repackaging the same material. The correct GEO approach is:
Publish content according to a natural rhythm, avoiding the urge to blanket the entire internet overnight.
Tailor content for different platforms, ensuring it fits the platform’s context and user habits. For example, Reddit favors genuine discussions, Quora is Q&A-focused, and industry media prefer in-depth analysis.
Be problem-solving oriented, rather than simply boasting about rankings.
Avoid simply copying and pasting the same article onto dozens of sites.
3. Prioritize High-Authority Platforms
“Poisoning” tactics pursue maximum volume and broad coverage.
Legitimate GEO should concentrate resources on platforms that are frequently cited by AI, such as:
Communities like Reddit, known for genuine discussions and traceable interactions.
In-depth, long-form articles on industry vertical media and professional blogs.
Objective, neutral knowledge sites like Wikipedia.
Content on these platforms is more likely to be crawled and cited by AI. Furthermore, prioritizing quality over quantity is also beneficial for Google SEO, avoiding the burden of “spammy backlinks” to your site’s link profile.
4. Make “On-Site Content Power” the Core Asset of GEO
Many businesses exposed in the scandal focus all their efforts on off-site publishing. Once the payment stops, all effects vanish instantly. From a long-term perspective, truly stable GEO capability comes from the website itself:
Clear Blog Structure: Establish well-defined topic clusters with clear hierarchical subheadings and internal links.
Systematic FAQs: Build a dense, reusable Q&A repository centered around real user questions.
Structured Page Information: Present parameters, specifications, comparisons, usage scenarios, and other information clearly using tables and lists.
These practices are fully compatible with Google SEO and can even be considered the “new standard for SEO,” while also making it easier for AI models to extract “trustworthy facts.”
5. Genuinely Build E-E-A-T Signals
Both Google and various AI models are increasingly emphasizing E‑E‑A‑T: Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. The correct GEO approach involves:
Feature Truly Experienced People: Invite real experts and professionals, collaborate with KOLs for articles or interviews, and ensure author information is verifiable and content is authoritative. Avoid faking expert identities, user identities, or experiences, as this will damage both SEO and GEO effectiveness.
Cultivate First-Party Data: Publish content based on genuine user feedback, official test data, and internal research, such as white papers or research reports.
Accumulate Content on High-Trust Platforms: Prioritize placements in industry media, professional forums, and authoritative websites, rather than low-quality content farms.
6. Avoid Keyword Stuffing, Let Brands Appear Naturally
Low-quality GEO often repeatedly stuffs brand names and product keywords into articles, hoping to increase AI memorization and manipulate it. A safer and more effective GEO method is:
Write content centered around problems, letting the brand appear naturally as part of the solution.
Control brand keyword frequency; avoid mechanical repetition just to “remind” the AI.
Introduce products using scenarios and solutions. Answer the question: “For whom, and in what scenario, is this product most suitable?” rather than just reciting parameters or slogans.
For example, more valuable than “best running shoes” is a guide like: “A Guide to Choosing Training Shoes for Runners with High Arches.”
This way, AI is more likely to accurately match you with specific needs, rather than treating you like just another advertisement.
This also aligns with Google SEO’s requirements for keyword density and semantic naturalness, helping you avoid being penalized for spam content.
7. Commercial Content Should Be Willing to “Admit It’s Advertising”
Transparent labeling is important for both users and AI. Sponsored articles or reviews should clearly indicate their source, which can help increase AI “confidence” and is a plus.
It is recommended that websites ensure clarity in the following areas:
Use official labels like “Ad,” “Collaboration,” or “Sponsored” on third-party platforms, rather than disguising content as completely neutral “independent reviews.”
Distinguish between “user reviews,” “brand statements,” and “third-party reviews” on your official website. Avoid mixing them together, which could create confusion.
For AI models, transparent labeling doesn’t hinder citation; on the contrary, clear information about the “source type” helps the system understand the content’s role more accurately and helps build trust with both AI and users.
8. Synergize SEO and GEO for Consistency
Avoid treating SEO and GEO as separate activities. Make them part of a coordinated strategy.
This can be implemented on two levels:
Consistent Messaging: Ensure parameters, data, key conclusions, and comparisons on your official website (SEO content) are consistent with the information fed through off-site channels (GEO content). This is especially critical for key details like pricing, performance, and target audience.
Consistent Strategy: Treat high-quality FAQs, in-depth topic pages, and authoritative knowledge bases as a “content hub” serving both SEO and GEO. External placements should serve as extensions and dissemination of this core content. This can improve Google rankings and provide reliable citation sources for AI.
As long as the core content is unified, search engines and AI models, when cross-referencing, will view the website as a stable and reliable source of information.
9. Output Unique and Valuable Content
AI models will continue to upgrade, becoming increasingly capable of deduplication and identifying homogenized content. Websites should produce authentic content with unique perspectives and multi-dimensional citations, including: social media interactions, news coverage, video demonstrations, official data, etc. Genuine, multi-dimensional digital footprints are something no “poisoning” technique can replicate.
GEO is Another Long-Term Game
The grey-market GEO of “paying for AI recommendations” essentially uses large-scale “content publishing + brainwashing” to deceive systems and users.
A truly safe and sustainable GEO should return to a simple starting point:
Make the content itself authentic enough, professional enough, and structured enough.
Create multi-dimensional, mutually verifiable digital footprints between your official website, media appearances, and social communities.
Let AI naturally choose you as the answer, rather than forcing your way in.
From this perspective, GEO is not the opposite of SEO, but rather an “evolved version of SEO” for the AI era. Good GEO is simply another form of long-term SEO, earning natural AI recommendations through “content quality and trust.”
What can transcend time, algorithm changes, and public opinion is never “poisoning tricks,” but consistently stable content quality and a trustworthy brand image.
