Categories B2B

On-page content formats answer engines actually favor [new research]

It seems like every brand is scrambling to get a piece of the pie in this new answer engine optimization (AEO) world. But what if you could get ahead of the curve by knowing the best on-page content formats for AI as verified by research? I pored over results from the new HubSpot State of AEO 2026 report and Wix Studio’s AI Search Lab research on most-cited content types to find out.

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In this article, I’ll cover which formats earn the most citations across ChatGPT, Gemini, AI Overviews, and Perplexity, why LLMs favor them, and how to apply them to both new and existing pages on your site. You’ll also find format-by-format templates, a five-step audit for legacy content, a measurement framework for AI visibility, and a governance model for keeping cited pages fresh.

Table of Contents

TL;DR The Best On-Page Content Formats for AEO

The best on-page content formats for AI across the board are listicles, articles, product pages, and category pages, while comparison content tops ChatGPT specifically, at a 95% citation rate — the highest of any format on any engine. These conclusions come from two independent 2026 datasets — HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026 and Wix Studio’s AI Search Lab — which analyzed over a million AI citations between them.

Content type is one of the three layers that influence citations. Cited pages pair the format with an intent-matched title pattern (“What is X,” “X vs. Y,” “How to X,” “Best X”) and citation-correlated structural elements: statistics and data, visible last-updated dates, author bios, and FAQ sections with schema. Match the format to buyer intent, then layer the title pattern and structural signals on top.

What are the best on-page content formats for AEO?

Listicles, articles, product pages, and category pages are the four most-cited content types overall, and comparison content wins ChatGPT outright with the highest single-citation rate in either dataset. That’s the picture across two independent datasets: HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026, which analyzed thousands of citation themes between December 2025 and March 2026, and Wix Studio’s AI Search Lab, which indexed over a million citations across 75,000 AI answers.

A scope note: This article covers on-page content formats — the pages you publish on your own domain. Third-party discussion content (Reddit, G2, LinkedIn, Quora) sits outside that scope, but it’s worth flagging that discussions account for 17.35% of Perplexity citations in the Wix dataset, more than double the cross-engine average. If Perplexity matters to your buyers, an off-site discussion strategy is a parallel effort to the on-page work in this piece.

A taxonomy note: Both studies treat “blog posts/articles” and “listicles” as separate categories, even when the listicle lives on a blog. So throughout this article, “article” and “blog post” refer to informational long-form content (the “What is X” or explainer kind), and “listicle” is treated as its own format.

Content type is only one of three on-page layers that correlate with high AI citations:

  • Content type: What the page fundamentally is (listicle, article, product page, category page, comparison, how-to guide)
  • Title pattern: How the title is phrased (“What is [X],” “How-to,” “X vs. Y,” “Best [X]”)
  • Structural elements: What goes inside the page (FAQ sections, schema markup, statistics, last-updated dates, author bios, outbound links)

For the rest of this article, I’ll use “format” as the umbrella term under which all three sit.

Content Types AI Engines Cite Most

Both datasets from HubSpot and Wix agree on the same top three formats as cross-engine safe bets: listicles, articles, and product pages. Wix, in particular, found category pages as the fourth most-cited, and HubSpot discovered that comparison pages are favored by ChatGPT specifically. Here is the engine-by-engine breakdown from State of AEO:

AI engine citation rates by content type table comparing product listings, listicles, blog posts, and comparison formats across AI Overviews, Gemini, ChatGPT, and Perplexity

State of AEO 2026 measured citation rates — the share of queries where the answer engine cited at least one page of that content type — across eight content categories. The per-engine leaders:

  • Google AI Overviews: Blog posts (42% citation rate)
  • Gemini: Blog posts (76%)
  • ChatGPT: Comparison content (95%, narrowly edging out PR at 92%)
  • Perplexity: Product listings and landing pages (84%)

Caveat on ChatGPT: Every content type measured on this answer engine scored 69% or higher, with most clustered between 86% and 95%. ChatGPT is comparatively format-agnostic. Content type matters more in AI Overviews, where rates vary widely, from 5% (news) to 42% (blog posts).

State of AEO’s top-three claim rests on three layers of evidence in the report:

  1. Citation rate averages. Across the four engines measured (AI Overviews, Gemini, ChatGPT, Perplexity), only three content types clear a 65% average citation rate: product listings or landing pages (68.5%), blog posts (66.75%), and listicles (66%). Comparison content sits fourth at 62.75%, while documentation, PR, user reviews, and news all average below 60%.
  2. Brand-level confirmation. Every one of the top-cited B2B brands in the report has its most-cited page type inside the blog/product/listicle set. State of AEO reports a similar pattern in B2C, where blogs and product pages dominate among top performers. Microsoft’s “What is a CRM?” blog post was a standout, and NerdWallet’s top performer was a product page/listicle.
  3. The explicit recommendation. The report’s “Next steps” callout states: “Product pages, blogs, and listicles are the most cited across answer engines, so make sure yours are optimized and up to date.”

Wix Studio’s AI Search Lab, built with Peec AI, looked at the same question from the opposite angle: share of citations across all engines, not rate within each. Their top three:

  • Listicles (21.9% of all citations)
  • Articles (16.7%)
  • Product pages (13.7%)

Those three formats earned more than half of every citation Wix measured.

The practical takeaway: Listicles, articles, and product pages are the safe cross-engine bets. Comparison content earns its place by winning ChatGPT outright, and how-to earns its place by leading on title pattern in AI Mode and Perplexity and over-indexing on informational queries in the Wix data. Layer engine-specific tweaks on top: comparison framing for ChatGPT, informational depth for AIO and Gemini, and step-by-step structure for AI Mode.

Title Patterns That Get Cited

In State of AEO’s dataset, title pattern is the single most significant citation factor when writing meta titles. Here’s what it found:

Best title patterns for answer engines chart showing performance of What is, comparisons, how-to, and Best X formats across AI platforms

  • “What is [X]” tops both Google AI Overviews and Gemini.
  • “X vs. Y” comparison titles top both ChatGPT and SearchGPT.
  • “How-to” tops both Google AI Mode and Perplexity.

Including the year in the title and H1 correlates with higher citations in AI Overviews, according to State of AEO. My advice would be to only commit if you’ll genuinely refresh the post each year; a title that still says “2024” in 2026 might hurt your case.

Structural Elements That Correlate With More Citations on Any Content Type

Per HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026:

  • FAQ sections correlate with more citations in AI Overviews; pairing them with schema extends the correlation to Gemini, Google AI Mode, and Perplexity. Descriptive H2 phrasing (“Frequently Asked Questions About Content Hub Pricing”) paired with questions as H3s outperforms a bare “FAQ” heading.
  • Statistics and data correlate with citations across the board, strongest in AI Overviews and ChatGPT.
  • Outbound links, author bios, and visible “last updated” dates all correlate with higher citations, with the last-updated date a stronger predictor than the original publish date.
  • Heading depth (H3s and H4s) and more headings correlate with more citations, peaking on pages with seven to fifteen H2s.

Pro tip: HubSpot AEO tracks how your brand shows up across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, surfaces which content types are getting cited in your category, and recommends where to invest next.

TL;DR — Which combination to use, by buyer intent

As the Wix Studio research notes, “User intent is the strongest predictor of which content types get cited.” A comparison summarizes differences. A best-of list ranks options. A step-by-step guide walks the reader through a procedure. An FAQ matches a natural-language question. Check out the table below to get suggestions on how to match user intent to content format.

Buyer intent

Content type

Title pattern

Structural must-haves

Engines you’re most likely to win

Informational (“What is X?”)

Article/blog post

“What is [X]?”

FAQ section + schema markup, statistics, author bio

AI Overviews, Gemini

Comparative (“X vs. Y”)

Comparison article

“X vs. Y”

Side-by-side table, statistics, last-updated date

ChatGPT, SearchGPT

Commercial (“Best X,” “X tools”)

Listicle

“Best [X]” or numbered list

Numbered H2s/H3s, last-updated date, FAQ section

AI Overviews, Gemini, Perplexity, ChatGPT

Procedural (“How to do X”)

Step-by-step guide

“How to [X]”

Numbered steps + HowTo schema, screenshots

Google AI Mode, Perplexity

Transactional/navigational (ready to buy)

Product listing, landing page, or category page

Product or feature name

ItemList or product schema, specs in tables

Perplexity, plus all engines for navigational queries

Why the Best On-Page Content Formats for AI Work for LLMs

The best content formats for AI search optimization have three things in common: They’re predictable to extract, they match patterns LLMs already produce, and they show citation signals to indicate they’re a trusted source.

Predictable Extraction

LLMs don’t read pages like humans do. They process tokenized chunks and weight information unevenly. Stanford research documented a U-shaped accuracy curve in which LLM performance drops when relevant information sits in the middle of long input contexts rather than at the start or end. Consistent headers, short sections, and front-loaded answers shift important content into the positions models actually use. A separate 2026 GEO-SFE preprint found that lists, tables, and similar structured formats had 43% better LLM extraction accuracy than similar prose.

Citation Signals

Schema markup (such as FAQPage, HowTo, ItemList, Article, etc.) tells crawlers what kind of page they’re on before they parse a word. Visible last-updated dates and author bios signal recency and authority. Declarative claims with named subjects and verifiable facts give models language they can lift directly. The same GEO-SFE preprint found that structural changes alone produced an average 17.3% citation lift across six generative engines, without changing the content’s actual meaning. None of these signals replaces good content, but they make good content easier to trust and easier to attribute.

How to Structure Pages Using the Best On-Page Content Formats for AI

Some structural elements are specific to certain formats. Numbered steps belong in how-to guides, for instance, while side-by-side product tables belong in comparison pages. But the structural elements below apply to almost every page, regardless of content type. They create a baseline structure that makes any format easier for answer engines to understand, extract, and summarize.

The universal structural elements:

  • H1 matching the title pattern for the intent (per the table above)
  • Intro TL;DR that delivers the direct answer in the first paragraph or a stand-alone summary box
  • H2/H3 hierarchy with a new heading every 150-200 words so each section reads as its own self-contained chunk
  • Tables for any facts that can be compared side by side (specs, pricing, study results, etc.)
  • A descriptive FAQ section near the bottom (e.g., “Frequently Asked Questions About [Topic]”) formatted as an H2, with questions formatted as H3s
  • Section takeaways at the end of long H2s, so models extracting from the tail of a chunk find a clean summary

Structured Data for AI

Map each schema type to the page that fits: Article for editorial posts, HowTo for procedural guides, FAQPage for Q&A sections, ItemList for listicles and ranked roundups. Include author and organization schema on every page so it declares who wrote it and which brand stands behind it.

A note on schema markup: It’s debated in the AEO field. I can’t guarantee that implementing it will magically boost your AI citation rates, but I can say that it’s good hygiene. Adding schema markup is an SEO best practice, and because answer engines use search indexes (such as those from Google and Bing) to help generate answers, it may indirectly influence how AI interprets your content.

Internal Links and Topic Clusters

A single page is one citation candidate; a topic cluster creates multiple connected entry points into the same subject. Build a pillar page that defines the topic broadly, link subtopic pages back to it, and cross-link related cluster pages where they share concepts, entities, or follow-up questions. Google’s own guidance treats internal links as a signal for both users and crawlers navigating between pages on a site, and its AI optimization guide confirms that generative AI features in Search pull from the same index — and the same ranking and quality systems — that traditional results do.

In AEO terms, that means a well-linked cluster can make your site easier to crawl, easier to understand, and more likely to surface across the fan-out queries answer engines use to assemble responses. It does not guarantee citations, but it gives answer systems more relevant, connected pages to choose from.

Templates for the Best On-Page Content Formats for AI

Five content format cards showing informational articles, comparative posts, commercial listicles, procedural how-to guides, and navigational product pages with their typical reader questions and title patterns

Five page types earn the bulk of AI citations across answer engines. Each maps to a different intent, takes a different shape, and rewards different structural choices on top of the universal structural elements from the previous section. The templates below assume you’ve already nailed the basics — H1 matching the intent, intro TL;DR, H2/H3 hierarchy every 150–200 words, descriptive FAQ section, last-updated date — and focus only on what’s distinctive about each format.

Note: The five formats come from the State of AEO and Wix data. The structural choices inside each template are part measured (statistics, schema, FAQ, title patterns) and part principle-led — drawn from research and my own AEO work, but not from studies isolating those exact choices.

Long-Form Articles and Explainer Blog Posts

Best for: Informational queries (“What is X,” “Why does X happen,” “How does X work” as a concept)

Blog posts and informative articles lead citations in AI Overviews (42% citation rate) and Gemini (76%) per State of AEO, and account for 45.48% of citations on informational queries in Wix Studio’s analysis — more than any other format on that intent. They’re the safest cross-engine bet when the searcher wants to understand a concept rather than buy something.

Template:

  • Title: “What is [X]?” or “What is [X], and why does it matter?”
  • Definition lead: a 1-2 sentence direct answer to the title question in the opening paragraph, before any context, history, or framing
  • Defined entities block near the top, declaring the adjacent terms the topic depends on (for “What is AEO,” that’s answer engines, citations, and share of voice)
  • Original statistics or first-party data in the article
  • Schema: Article

Listicles and Best-of Posts

Best for: Commercial queries (“Best [X],” “Top [N] [X],” “[X] tools”)

Listicles are the most-cited content type in Wix Studio’s cross-engine data, accounting for 21.9% of all citations and 40.86% of citations on commercial queries. In State of AEO, listicle title patterns (“Best [X],” numbered lists) work across AI Overviews, Gemini, Perplexity, ChatGPT, and SearchGPT.

Template:

  • Title: “Best [X] in [Year]” or “[N] best [X] for [audience]” — number-led and Best-led titles both perform; the year qualifier correlates with citation lifts when refreshed annually
  • Selection criteria stated explicitly in the intro: what made the list, what didn’t, who you wrote it for
  • Each item as its own H2 or H3 with the brand name in the heading (“2. Semrush AI Visibility Toolkit”), not generic positional headings (“2. Our second pick”)
  • Per-item callout showing the three or four facts buyers compare: pricing, key feature, best for
  • Comparison table consolidating those facts across every item, near the top or bottom of the post
  • Schema: ItemList, with each item’s name and position declared

Brand-name H2s make it clear which entity each section is about, while vague headings like “Our second pick” require LLMs to rely on surrounding text to identify the brand being discussed.

Comparison Posts (X vs. Y)

Best for: Comparative commercial queries (“[Brand A] vs. [Brand B],” “Is [X] better than [Y]?”)

Comparison content has the highest citation rate of any format in State of AEO at 95% in ChatGPT, and is the top title pattern for both ChatGPT and SearchGPT.

Template:

  • Title: “[Brand A] vs. [Brand B]” or “[Brand A] vs. [Brand B]: Which is better for [use case]?”
  • At-a-glance verdict in the first two sentences: who wins for what. Not buried below a 300-word intro.
  • Comparison table, with the same attributes for both products in clearly labeled columns (pricing, key features, integrations, target user, ratings)
  • One H2 per comparison criterion (not one H2 per product), so each section directly answers “which is better at [criterion]”
  • Mini-verdict at the end of each H2 stating which product wins that criterion and why
  • A final “which one should you pick” section mapping use cases to choice, not just summarizing
  • Schema: Article; there’s no native comparison schema.

Product and Landing Pages

Best for: Navigational and transactional queries where the searcher already knows the brand or product (“[Brand] [product name],” “[Brand] [feature name]”)

In Perplexity, product listings and landing pages earn an 84% citation rate per State of AEO — the highest of any format on that engine. Wix Studio’s analysis places product pages at 13.7% of all AI citations across engines, with the share concentrated where the buyer is closest to a decision — 24.88% of transactional citations and 21.95% of navigational citations. These pages aren’t where readers come to learn about a category; they’re where the searcher already knows the product and wants the specs or confirmation of a feature.

Template:

  • Title: Product or feature name as the primary anchor (“HubSpot AEO,” “Marketing Hub email automation”)
  • One-sentence product summary in the opening paragraph (what the product is, who it’s for, what category it belongs to)
  • Specs table listing key features, integrations, supported platforms, and plan availability
  • FAQ section answering the questions actually typed into answer engines about a known product (“Does [product] integrate with [tool]?” “Is [feature] available on the [tier] plan?”)
  • Schema: Product

Category Pages

Best for: Navigational and commercial-exploratory queries where the searcher wants to browse options in a category, not read editorial commentary on them (“[Category] tools,” “[Category] software,” “[Category] in [location]”)

Wix Studio treats category pages as a distinct content type from product pages, at 11.3% of all AI citations. The intent split is where they earn their place: 18.31% of navigational citations, 14.97% of transactional citations, and 12.42% on commercial queries. They’re even more visible in ecommerce (15.96%) and home repair (14.95%) than the cross-industry average. State of AEO doesn’t break category pages out separately from product listings and landing pages, so the segmentation here is Wix-only.

Template:

  • Title: The category name itself (“Email marketing software,” “BI consultants in Boston”) — no individual product brand in the title
  • One-paragraph scope statement at the top: What the category covers, who it’s for, and how the items on the page were grouped or filtered
  • Item list of the products in the category, each one linked, with a one-line description naming the product’s primary use case
  • Snapshot table comparing one or two attributes across every item (a starting price, a category-defining feature, or a “best for” use case)
  • Schema: ItemList or CollectionPage, with each item’s name and position declared

How to Optimize Existing Pages with the Best On-Page Content Formats for AI

Start optimizing content for AEO on pages that already earn organic traffic. Structural updates alone may compound on the SEO equity you’ve built. The audit below targets the highest-leverage changes first.

The 5-Step Quick Audit

  1. Pick candidate pages. Pull your top 25-50 organic pages by impressions, then prioritize the ones whose target queries you’d want to win in ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity. Re-run those queries through the engines and note which pages get cited and which don’t.
  2. Standardize the heading hierarchy. Add an H2 roughly every 150-200 words and rewrite vague headings into descriptive, entity-anchored ones. For example, “Frequently Asked Questions About [Topic]” instead of “FAQ,” “Step 3: Add JSON-LD markup” instead of “Markup setup.”
  3. Insert a TL;DR. Put the direct answer to the page’s primary question in the opening sentences or a dedicated summary box, before any history or framing.
  4. Convert dense facts into tables and FAQs. Specs, pricing, study results, and side-by-side comparisons in tables are easier for AI to extract than if they’re buried in paragraphs. Move recurring reader questions into a descriptive FAQ section near the bottom of the page.
  5. Apply the schema that matches the format. If applicable to your content, apply Article, HowTo, FAQPage, or ItemList, plus Author and Organization.

Making Content More “Chunkable”

Long paragraphs are the best candidates for AEO optimization. When creating content for generative AI to extract from, restructure walls of text this way:

  • Break paragraphs over 100 words into shorter paragraphs or bullet lists. Make sure each key paragraph can stand on its own; in other words, if only that one paragraph were extracted from the page, would it contain a valuable answer? Would it make sense?
  • Lead each paragraph with a subject-verb-object claim, then support it.
  • Replace pronoun openers (“It also helps with … “) with named-entity openers (“Schema markup also helps with … “) to remove ambiguity over what the pronoun refers to.
  • Pull buried statistics and definitions into their own sentences.
  • Add a section takeaway at the end of long H2s to give readers and answer engines a clean summary of the section’s main point.

Bulk Updates and Governance

Updating pages by hand gets tedious and tough to track. HubSpot Content Hub gives teams one CMS to update and republish content at scale, with built-in SEO recommendations that flag on-page issues as you work through the audit list. Be sure to check out our guide on how to use AI in your SEO workflow, too.

The answer-engine-specific recommendations come from HubSpot AEO, which surfaces what to fix; Content Hub is where you fix it.

HubSpot AEO Recommendations tab showing suggested content types and priorities for boosting AI citation rates

Source

How to Measure Results from the Best On-Page Content Formats for AI

Content format changes only matter if you can prove they moved the metric. AEO-savvy marketers measure AI visibility alongside page-level performance and regularly pull reports to track the progress of both.

AI Visibility Tracking

Three metrics form the baseline across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity for a tracked set of prompts:

  • Brand visibility: The percentage of those prompts where your brand appears in the AI’s answer
  • Share of voice: Your brand mentions divided by total brand mentions across you and your competitors
  • Owned citations: When your website is cited in an AI answer

If you do it manually, you’ll have to run a pre/post comparison for every retrofitted page by sending its prompts through each engine before and after the update. But HubSpot AEO automates prompt tracking and provides brand visibility scores, share of voice scores, and information on citations.

Pro tip: AEO Grader is a free tool that gives marketers a scored snapshot of how answer engines represent their brand today. HubSpot AEO automates prompt tracking across answer engines and benchmarks competitor share for those prompts, helping marketers improve their brand’s AI visibility.

Page-Level Performance Mapping

Visibility doesn’t always translate to revenue, so map each optimized page to its conversion role — demo signups, content downloads, trial starts — and track the engagement and conversion delta after the update. Referrer data from ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity is incomplete or missing in many analytics tools, so AI-sourced sessions often land in “direct” traffic. Branded search volume and direct-traffic shifts are useful proxy signals when referrer data falls short.

Reporting Cadence

Set a monthly baseline and a quarterly deeper review. At least monthly, re-run your tracked prompts across the engines and log changes against the baseline. Quarterly, audit which pages gained or lost citation share and decide what to update next. HubSpot AEO sends you weekly score tracking and trend alerts, saving you time and helping you quickly assess results.

How to Govern and Refresh Pages Built with the Best On-Page Content Formats for AI

Governance keeps every page updated and citable long after the first audit. Here’s a framework you can use to make sure your content stays fresh for your audience, search engines, and answer engines.

Governance Model

Assign one owner per content cluster. The owner runs the cluster’s review cadence and handles any updates triggered between reviews. Common update triggers worth noting:

  • A drop in citation share on any cluster page (caught in the monthly visibility re-check from the previous section)
  • A major model release from OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, or Perplexity
  • Pricing, feature, or product-name changes on a referenced product page
  • A new competitor or entity that’s started appearing in your category’s answers

The internal QA checklist a cluster owner can run before re-publishing:

Refresh Tactics

Refresh the parts of the page that most directly carry citation signals.

  • Update outdated statistics in tables and comparison sections to current numbers. A good rule of thumb is that if it’s more than two years old, you need to find newer research if possible.
  • Add or rewrite FAQs to better reflect the prompts customers might ask an answer engine. Marketers who use AEO in Marketing Hub Pro or Enterprise can get prompt recommendations informed by their business context in HubSpot Smart CRM.
  • Update screenshots and steps in how-to content when product UI changes.
  • Refresh case study results with the latest measurable outcomes.
  • Verify author bios, credentials, and outbound links to demonstrate ongoing E-E-A-T.

Audience Alignment and Tooling

The prompts you track should reflect the concerns your potential buyers have. AEO in Marketing Hub Pro+ uses your Smart CRM data to inform prompt suggestions, so what you’re monitoring stays anchored to your business context (not made up from scratch). Pair that with AI content optimization tools to make changes to your content that can help boost AI citation.

Frequently Asked Questions About On-Page Formats for AI

Do I need schema to rank in AI results?

No. Schema isn’t required for AI citations, but the State of AEO 2026 dataset flagged it as a structural element worth implementing, particularly schema markup paired with a properly formatted FAQ section, which lifted citation rates in Gemini, Google AI Mode, and Perplexity. Treat schema as a way to tell crawlers what each page is, not a cheat code for citations. Apply Article, HowTo, FAQPage, or ItemList only where they accurately reflect the content; marking up elements that don’t exist on the page violates Google’s structured data guidelines.

How often should I refresh AI-optimized content?

There’s no magic number for frequency of refreshing AI-optimized content, but there are some events that should trigger an update. Re-test a page’s target prompts as soon as you see a citation drop, a competitor enter the answer, or a major model release from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, or Perplexity. Run monthly visibility re-checks across your tracked prompts, and quarterly audits of the pages that lost ground. HubSpot AEO automates the prompt-level tracking and flags trend shifts so you can act quickly.

Can I block AI crawlers while keeping search visibility?

Yes, major AI companies separate training crawlers from search crawlers, and the directives go in robots.txt. Block GPTBot to stop OpenAI from using your content for training while keeping OAI-SearchBot allowed so ChatGPT live web search citations remain possible. Block Google-Extended to opt out of Gemini training while leaving Googlebot — which is used for Google Search — able to crawl. Check each company’s bot documentation to confirm what each user-agent actually does before adding it to your robots.txt.

Which format should I start with first?

Start with the format that matches the dominant intent behind your buyers’ searches. If most of your high-value queries are informational (“What is X,” “How does X work”), articles are your best entry point; they lead citations in AI Overviews and Gemini per HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026. If they’re comparative (“X vs. Y”), prioritize comparison posts, which earn the highest citation rate in ChatGPT. If buyers come in through commercial queries (“Best X,” “Top N X”), listicles cover the broadest cross-engine range. From there, audit the pages already ranking for those intents and optimize them first. Building upon existing organic equity is the fastest path to citation wins.

Categories B2B

The Signal Drop: The 48-Hour Reality

Welcome to The Signal Drop: your bite-sized transmission from the frontlines of the B2B universe to help you take action and drive results.

This series distills the most important insights from NetLine’s 2026 State of B2B Content Consumption and Demand Report, filtered through Luna’s Lens.

Our resident astronaut and B2B expert orbits above the noise to zero in on what actually matters. She’s been floating through millions of data points, tracking shifts in demand, engagement, and intent—so you don’t have to.

Strap in, fellow explorer. Luna’s found something you don’t want to miss.

The Drop

“47.7 hours. The gap is real—and it’s never been wider.”

The Signal

Way back in 2017, NetLine’s GM David Fortino told the B2B world something it wasn’t ready to hear: Let your prospects actually read what they requested before your sales team starts knocking. How long did Dave suggest? 

48 hours.

He’s basically a prophet… like Galileo, but without the telescope.

Why This Matters

In 2025, the average B2B professional waited 47.7 hours between registering for content and actually opening it. That’s a 9.2-hour jump year over year—a 23.9% increase from 2024—and the widest Consumption Gap NetLine has measured in ten years of tracking. 

I checked the math. Then I checked it again, because #Science. It’s correct.

The market is recalibrating. Think of it like the reclassification of Pluto—hey, another great philosopher mentioned!—things shift, categories evolve, and what was once a simple solar system gets a little more complicated. (Sorry. I’ve had this helmet on too long.)

Here’s what I need you to hear, though: 47.7 hours is not a distress signal. It’s a delay signal. 

There’s a massive difference between a buyer who doesn’t care and a buyer who cares deeply but hasn’t gotten there yet. The Consumption Gap measures the second one.

Since 2021, the Gap has expanded 43.2%. Over that same period, demand for gated content grew 57.6%. Those aren’t opposing forces—they’re the same story. Buyers want the content. They’re just busier, more distracted, and more overwhelmed than ever. The culprit isn’t apathy. It’s a lack of urgency. And urgency, unlike interest, cannot be manufactured.

What your content can do is make sure that when urgency finally arrives—and it will—you’re already trusted and already in the room.

What’s on Luna’s Radar

There’s a lot of signal in these numbers. But keep on target, Explorer. Here’s what the radar’s revealed.

  • You have two clocks. Stop mixing them up. Clock One starts at registration—peak brand recall. They’ve seen your title and your logo (if it’s not on the cover of your gated content, that’s your next mission), and they cared enough to hit submit.

    This is not your moment to pitch. It’s your moment to say hello and nothing else. Acknowledge, wish them well, disappear. Then wait 48 hours.

    Clock Two begins when the download occurs—when they’ve actually decided it’s time to consume the content—and the conversation has context.

    So, what happens if you confuse these clocks? Well, you’ve surely seen a space movie or six, but confusing these clocks is a big problem big enough to tell Houston. You’ve either gone silent when a nudge would have landed, or you’ve pushed for a discovery call with someone still on the first paragraph. Neither outcome serves you. Neither moves the deal.
  • The format your buyer chose is a tell. Read it. I’m an astronaut, which means I know a thing or two about reading instrument panels.A Playbook registrant who opens in 20.6 hours? That’s urgency—a buyer with a problem to solve right now. A Cheat Sheet sitting unopened for 64 hours? Real interest, zero urgency.Don’t expect a purchase decision from that lead for at least two quarters. Treating both registrants the same way is like wearing the same spacesuit on Mars and the Moon. It fits neither mission.


 

  • The higher the title, the longer the wait—but don’t write them off. C-suite professionals clocked a 48.3-hour Consumption Gap in 2025. Owners hit 59.0 hours. VP and Senior Director gaps ballooned 43% and 50% year over year. But the fastest consumers? Executive VPs (31.4 hrs), Senior VPs (31.7 hrs), and Directors (39.5 hrs).

    These are the people building the internal case, vetting vendors, and preparing C-suite recommendations. They’re moving fast because the pressure is on them. Engage those fast movers quickly and substantively.

    Give the C-suite the patience and proof points they’ll need when their moment comes—because when it does, they won’t be slow at all.

Looking Through the Telescope

  • Buyers aren’t saying no. They’re saying not yet. Nearly half of B2B professionals (45.9%) expect to make a purchase decision within the next 12 months. But near-term intent (within 3 months) dropped 15.7% year over year, while mid-range intent—the 6–12 month window—surged 78.6%.

    The average B2B customer journey spans 211 days and 76 touches before a deal closes. No amount of AI-compressed research eliminates the stakeholders, politics, and competing priorities standing between a registration and a signature. Stop trying to rush it.
  • A registration is research in motion, not a transaction in progress. Your job isn’t to manufacture urgency. It’s to be so consistently present and genuinely useful that when the moment arrives, you’re the obvious choice.

    Ask yourself: which of your assets are pulling real qualified traffic, and which ones are just taking up space debris? Don’t be afraid to scrub the launch and begin again.

Your Mission Checklist

  • Audit your follow-up sequences. Are you reaching out at Clock One or Clock Two? Shift to Two—and make sure your Clock One message asks for absolutely nothing.
  • Let format dictate your follow-up timing. A Playbook registrant and a Checklist registrant are not on the same trajectory. Stop treating them like they are.
  • Build nurture programs for both fast movers and slow ones. EVPs and SVPs are doing the legwork—meet them with substance. C-suite needs patience and proof points. Give both what they actually need.
  • Stop trying to manufacture urgency. Start earning presence. The 48-Hour Rule is the first step. Wait for the gap to close before you try to bridge it.

The 2026 content universe is not waiting for anyone to catch up.

The Consumption Gap isn’t a crisis. It’s a reality—and the B2B programs that build around it, rather than fight it, are already light-years ahead of the competition.

Don’t forget, cadet, there’s plenty more to be discovered amongst the stars…oh, and also, the 2026 State of B2B Content Consumption and Demand Report!

Categories B2B

The AI Perception-Reality Gap

There’s a widening gap between what the market says about AI and what we actually hear from customers. The media, the VCs, the AI labs, and influencers have all talked about AI replacing humans, ripping out trusted software, and token-maxxing as ends worth pursuing. But the leaders running real businesses are increasingly asking the right questions. How do I make my people better with AI? Which systems can I trust? How can I measure the ROI of this spend? We hear these questions every day.

After three and a half years of building, shipping, and watching many of our growing customers put AI to work, the AI perspectives we are most certain of at HubSpot are the things almost no one else is saying out loud.

Here are six of them.

AI activity is not AI outcomes.

The industry has confused motion for progress. Drafting emails, generating summaries, doing research. These are activities that AI has made much easier. They are useful capabilities, and we ship them at HubSpot. But activity is the input, not the result. Activity without outcomes is theater.

The companies winning with AI are the ones working backwards from a business problem, not forward from a model demo. For example, customers using Customer Agent are responding to tickets 25% faster, while those using Prospecting Agent are generating 76% more leads.

Graphic comparing customer agent and prospecting agent outcomes. Customer agents show a 70% average resolution rate and 25% faster ticket response time. Prospecting agents show 76% more leads generated and 80% more meetings with prospects booked

This is why we moved Customer Agent and Prospecting Agent to outcome-based pricing in April. AI outcomes are what matter. And they’re what we help growing businesses deliver. We put our pricing where our point of view is.

AI is necessary. It is not sufficient.

Generating code is certainly easier now. Anyone can build a prototype in a weekend, but it’s brittle and falls apart under real use. Lowering the floor on generating code doesn’t raise the ceiling on shipping value because the things that actually run a growing business have gotten harder, not easier.

You still need to have clean data, not another silo. You still need to integrate with tens of applications. You still need a full customer view across marketing, sales, and service, one actually powered by context.

The industry will sell you a model or single-purpose agents. But it won’t sell you the system in between: the data hygiene, the workflow design, the change management. That’s left to the customer. And the more disconnected point agents pile up, the harder that work gets.

Comparison diagram showing disconnected point agents versus integrated agentic customer platform with shared network

The future belongs to the companies that build AI into a coherent system, where the data, workflows, agents, and people share context. That’s what we are building at HubSpot. AI is a new layer, not a replacement for the foundation.

AI needs to be built for the Future 5000, not just the Fortune 500.

Today’s AI roadmap is being written for the enterprise that can afford to make it work. By their own disclosures, frontier labs are spending billions of dollars on forward-deployed engineers to get AI running inside large companies.

That model works if you’re a large enterprise. It doesn’t work for the millions of growing businesses that will drive the next decade of growth. A small or midsize company can’t get forward-deployed engineers, rebuild its data pipeline, or build the context platform to make it all work.

So when the consensus says “AI is for everyone,” it’s worth asking who it actually works for today. In practice, it’s the customers who can already afford to make it work, with armies of engineers and developers behind them. That’s not democratization.

We’re optimizing for outcomes per token, not tokens per task.

There’s a business-model conflict in the AI industry that customers haven’t fully seen yet. The vendors who benefit the most from AI usage are not incentivized to make AI cheaper or more efficient. They are incentivized to keep the meter running. So customers are asked to pay for activity and told they are buying transformation.

The honest version of AI economics is the inverse: be clear on the outcome the customer is trying to drive, then find the lowest-cost path to driving it. That is the customer’s job. It should also be the vendor’s. Right now, it isn’t.

Illustration comparing three people on left to database symbol on right, representing outcome-maximizing over token-maximizing

Token-maxxing is the vendor’s game. Outcome-maxxing is the customer’s. The vendors that align with the customer will win. The vendors that align with the meter may not.

AI should make people more powerful. Not more replaceable.

The loudest AI narrative is autonomy: agents replace humans, headcount goes down, the future has fewer people in it. That narrative is built for Wall Street, not Main Street. We reject that framing.

We build for the person doing the work, not the person being subtracted from the budget. The rep closing more deals. The marketer shipping more campaigns. The service person solving more complex problems. The owner running more of the business themselves. AI’s job is to make them more powerful, not make them disappear.

Yes, we ship autonomous agents. But autonomy is a capability, not a mandate. Customers decide where to delegate, where to keep humans in the workflow, and where AI suggests. Our defaults are built to serve the operator, not slash the org chart.

We believe in human authenticity and AI efficiency. The things AI cannot replace — trust, judgment, taste, relationship will only get more valuable as the things AI can do become ubiquitous. The companies betting against the human are going to lose the customer, the employee, and eventually the public, of which 57% already think the risks of AI outweigh its benefits.

Scale showing 57% of people say AI risks outweigh benefits, with thumbs down and thumbs up icons

Trust is more than a privacy policy.

Every AI vendor is claiming trust. But most define it as a security posture: we won’t train on your data, we’re SOC 2 compliant, we offer enterprise SSO. Those things matter. They are also table-stakes. None of them is a differentiated claim. They are what you promise.

What you prove is something else. Real trust is a complete business posture: how you choose the model and handle cost, reliability, and governance for your agents. That’s what customers are actually asking for. Can I trust the model choice? Can I trust the cost? Can I trust the reliability? Can I trust the governance?

Privacy answers what we won’t do. Trust answers what we will. Most of the industry is still answering the first question. The second is the one customers need.

What this all adds up to

The AI consensus held so long as no one in the room had to answer for it. Cut headcount. Rip out the old stack. Keep the meter running. Trust us.

Growing businesses cannot spend time cutting through what is hype versus what is reality. They do not have forward-deployed engineers to throw at implementation. They cannot absorb a pricing model that bills for activity and calls it transformation. They cannot build on a stack that treats humans as the exception.

They need AI built on a foundation that works for them, designed to empower and not eliminate their people, and delivered by a vendor whose business model is aligned with theirs, not against it.

That is what we are building at HubSpot.

Categories B2B

6 top answer engine optimization benefits for growth and enterprise marketers

The AEO benefits that matter most to marketing leaders have shifted from theoretical to measurable. As more buyers discover brands through AI tools like ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, and Perplexity, the teams investing in AEO now are seeing real returns in conversions and long-term authority.

Free AEO Grader: See Your Brand's Visibility in Answer Engines [Free Tool]

But capturing the full benefits of answer engine optimization requires way more than just knowing it matters. B2B marketers face persistent AEO challenges: unclear ROI measurement, no standardized frameworks, friction in integrating AEO with existing SEO strategies, and gaps in structured data implementation.

Meanwhile, the landscape keeps moving. New AEO tools are maturing, optimization trends are shifting quarterly, and generative engine optimization is creating entirely new surfaces to compete on. More critically, it’s ceding authority to competitors who are already optimizing content for AI search.

This guide breaks down six tangible benefits of AEO with the actionable details you need to build a business case, overcome common blockers, and start executing. You’ll learn how AEO differs from traditional SEO, how the perks of AEO-focused tools make measurement and scaling practical, and how to integrate AEO into your existing content strategy, whether you’re working with AI agents, evaluating AI costs, or refining AEO best practices across your team.

Table of Contents:

Why Answer Engine Optimization’s (AEO’s) Benefits Are Clearer Than Ever

AEO is the practice of structuring your content so AI-powered search engines (think ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, and Claude) can extract, understand, and cite your brand’s information as a direct answer to user queries.

Unlike traditional SEO, which focuses on ranking pages in a list of blue links, AEO focuses on:

  • Entity clarity
  • Structured data
  • Direct-answer formatting (so large language models can confidently surface your content)

To help you visualize the difference, here’s a comparison table I put together that compares traditional SEO and AEO side by side:

Here’s my take: AEO is fundamentally reshaping the customer journey. Buyers increasingly get their answers before they ever click through to a website, which means the brands that appear in AI-generated responses are the ones doing the following:

a hubspot-branded image showcasing how AEO is fundamentally reshaping the customer journey

  • Shaping perception
  • Building trust
  • Capturing demand at the earliest possible moment

AEO increases brand visibility in AI-powered search results, and that visibility compounds over time as AI systems learn to associate your brand with authoritative, well-structured answers. For marketing leaders, this isn’t a “nice-to-have” anymore. It’s a direct line to pipeline influence.

AEO’s benefits are becoming measurable in ways they weren’t even a year ago. Early adopters are reporting stronger engagement metrics, shorter sales cycles, and improved content ROI, all because their content is formatted for how people actually search today.

That said, AEO benefits don’t materialize without addressing real AEO challenges head-on. Here’s a succinct breakdown of the most common blockers for marketing teams:

an image explaining and defining the most common blockers for growth and enterprise teams in AEO

  • Measurement gaps. Traditional rank-tracking tools weren’t built for AI answers, making it difficult to quantify AEO ROI or tie citation appearances back to revenue.
  • Framework fragmentation. Many teams lack a repeatable, actionable process for optimizing content specifically for LLM retrieval, so efforts stay ad hoc.
  • SEO integration friction. AEO differs from traditional SEO by focusing on direct answers and entity clarity, but that doesn’t mean you abandon your existing SEO stack. The challenge is layering AEO on top of what’s already working without duplicating effort or creating governance headaches.
  • Structured data blind spots. Structured data and entities support AEO by enabling AI systems to extract and cite information, yet many marketing teams still under-invest in schema markup, entity definitions, and content architecture that LLMs can parse.

But there is good news, reader: the benefits of utilizing tools designed specifically for the shift toward AEO are making each of those challenges more manageable.

The difference now? The payoff is more direct, and the feedback loop is faster.

Pro Tip: HubSpot’s AEO Grader, for example, lets you measure your AEO visibility and performance across answer engines, providing a concrete baseline, identifying gaps in your content’s answer-readiness, and offering prioritized recommendations so you can take action immediately.

Benefits of Answer Engine Optimization (AEO)

AEO’s benefits go well beyond showing up in one more channel.

For marketing leaders, AEO creates compounding advantages across:

  • Visibility
  • Lead quality
  • Long-term brand authority

These are advantages that become harder for competitors to replicate the earlier you start.

With all of this in mind, here are six AEO benefits that map directly to the metrics leadership teams care about:

a hubspot-branded image that defines and explains six tangible benefits of AEO

1. Higher-Intent Traffic and Improved Lead Quality

AEO improves lead quality and time to value because, by the time someone clicks your link from an AI answer, the AI answer has already explained the topic, matched their intent, and positioned your content as relevant.

They’ve seen your brand positioned as the authority before they ever hit your site. The result is a shorter path from discovery to action, which means:

  • Fewer bounce-backs
  • More engaged sessions
  • A pipeline that moves faster

2. Brand visibility where buyers actually start their research.

AEO increases brand visibility in AI-powered search results, and that matters because buyer behavior has shifted.

According to HubSpot’s 2026 State of Marketing Report, nearly half of marketers (49%) agree that web traffic from search has decreased because of AI answers. However, 58% note that AI referral traffic has much higher intent than traditional search.

This means that visitors who come from LLMs such as ChatGPT are much further along in their buyer’s journey. Thus, the brands that appear inside AI-generated responses capture demand at the moment of intent formation, not after.

3. Stronger E-E-A-T Signals and Compounding Authority

AEO strengthens E-E-A-T and long-term authority because the optimization work itself (i.e., defining entities, adding structured data, publishing clear and well-sourced answers) is exactly what both traditional and answer engines reward.

Every piece of answer-optimized content reinforces your brand’s entity profile across LLMs, increasing the likelihood of future citations.

4. Measurable Performance with Purpose-Built Tools

One of the biggest AEO challenges has been proving ROI.

Legacy rank trackers weren’t designed to measure AI citations, leaving marketing teams to rely on intuition.

However, that’s changing. To get a baseline snapshot of where your brand stands in AI search today, start with HubSpot’s AEO Grader. Then, to measure your AEO visibility, use HubSpot AEO.

Combined, these tools give you:

  • A concrete score
  • Gap analysis
  • Prioritized recommendations

With this information at your disposal, you can tie optimization efforts directly to outcomes rather than guessing.

5. A Natural Extension of Your Existing SEO Investment

Let me be clear: The benefits of AEO tools become clearest when they layer onto what’s already working.

Here’s why:

  • Your highest-ranking pages become candidates for AI citation optimization.
  • Schema markup and structured data you add for AEO simultaneously improve traditional rich results.
  • Topic clusters built for SEO provide the entity relationships that LLMs need to confidently cite your content.

This means teams can adopt AEO incrementally without rebuilding their content programs from scratch, thereby directly addressing integration friction.

6. Future-Proofed Content Architecture

Voice search, multimodal AI, agent-driven commerce, and zero-click interfaces all rely on the same foundation:

  • Clearly defined entities
  • Well-structured answers
  • Machine-readable relationships

Investing in AEO now means you’re not just optimizing for today’s answer engines. More specifically, you’re building the content infrastructure that scales across every emerging channel.

AEO’s successes are no longer theoretical. They’re measurable, they compound, and they align directly with the visibility and pipeline goals that marketing teams are accountable for.

The teams that treat AEO as a core capability are the ones building defensible brand authority in a fast-evolving search landscape.

Common AEO Challenges (And How to Solve Them)

AEO’s benefits are well-documented at this point.

But knowing the upside doesn’t eliminate the friction of actually executing. Most marketing teams face the same set of AEO challenges when they try to move from experimentation to a scalable program.

Here are six of the most common blockers and, most importantly, how to solve each one:

1. You can’t measure AEO ROI with your current stack.

This is another challenge that prevents AEO programs from doing well. Traditional SEO tools track keyword rankings and organic clicks, but they weren’t built to monitor whether your brand is being cited inside AI-generated answers. Without that data, it’s nearly impossible to justify the budget or prove the impact to leadership.

How to solve it: Adopt purpose-built AEO measurement tools. HubSpot’s AEO Grader measures your AEO visibility and performance across answer engines, giving you a baseline score, a gap analysis, and prioritized actions, so you can report on AI citation presence with the same rigor you apply to organic traffic.

The pros of AEO tools like this compound quickly. Once you have a measurable baseline, every optimization becomes trackable.

Pro Tip: Also use HubSpot AEO to continuously monitor your brand visibility and presence, so you can catch visibility gains or drops in real time and connect them directly to the content changes driving them.

2. There’s no repeatable framework for optimizing content for LLMs.

Many teams attempt AEO in bursts (e.g., restructuring a handful of pages or adding some schema markup) without a systematic process. The work likely feels ad hoc because it is, and, on top of that, it doesn’t scale.

How to solve it: Build a repeatable AEO content workflow with defined steps.

To get started, do the following:

  • Audit existing high-traffic pages for answer-readiness (clear definitions, entity clarity, structured data).
  • Prioritize by search intent (start with pages that already target question-based queries).
  • Optimize by adding concise, direct-answer paragraphs at the top of each section, implementing relevant schema markup, and defining entities explicitly so LLMs can parse relationships.
  • Measure and iterate using AEO-specific tools to track citation appearances after each round of updates.

This turns AEO from a one-off project into an operational capability your team can run quarterly.

3. AEO feels like it conflicts with your existing SEO strategy.

Naturally, teams worry about duplicate effort, conflicting priorities, or cannibalizing what’s already working.

How to solve it: Treat AEO as a layer on top of SEO. Your highest-ranking pages are your best AEO candidates because they already have topical authority.

The structured data you add for AI citation eligibility simultaneously improves traditional rich results. Topic clusters you’ve built for SEO provide the entity relationships LLMs need.

When framed this way, AEO reinforces your existing investment rather than competing with it.

4. Structured data and schema markup feel too technical to implement at scale.

Many marketing teams lack the technical resources to implement schema across hundreds or thousands of pages. The gap between “knowing it’s working” and “getting it done” is, unfortunately, quite real.

How to solve it: Start with high-impact, low-effort schema types.

The following three are examples of schema types that don’t require heavy engineering lift:

  • FAQ schema for pages that answer common questions (requires minimal dev effort and directly signals answer content to LLMs).
  • Organization and author schema to reinforce E-E-A-T signals and entity identity.
  • HowTo schema for process-oriented content.

5. Leadership doesn’t understand why AEO matters, so it doesn’t get resourced.

Even when practitioners see AEO’s benefits clearly, securing buy-in from VP- and C-level stakeholders requires tying AEO to business outcomes they already track:

  • Pipeline
  • Revenue influence
  • Competitive positioning

How to solve it: Frame AEO in terms leadership already cares about. Answer engines are projected to handle a growing share of queries that previously drove organic traffic, meaning brands that aren’t cited in AI answers risk losing the visibility they’ve spent years building.

When pitching AEO to leadership, position it as risk mitigation and a competitive advantage. Then, use your AEO Grader score as a benchmark and show progress over time alongside pipeline metrics.

6. You don’t know which answer engines matter or how they select sources.

Each LLM (i.e., ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, Claude) has different retrieval behaviors, which makes it unclear where to focus. This ambiguity leads to paralysis.

How to solve it: Optimize for shared fundamentals rather than platform-specific quirks.

Focus on making your content the most clear, well-structured, and authoritative answer to the queries your audience asks. In the era of AEO, that consistency extends everywhere and has a ton of influence.

The AEO challenges above are real, but none of them are unsolvable. The teams enjoying the advantage of AEO right now aren’t the ones with the biggest budgets or the most technical resources.

They’re the ones who identified these blockers early, built practical solutions for each, and committed to AEO as an ongoing capability rather than a one-time experiment.

A Checklist to Get Started With AEO

The biggest AEO challenges aren’t technical. They’re operational.

Most teams struggle with AEO because they don’t have a clear sequence of steps. This checklist gives you a repeatable, tool-supported workflow to start capturing the AEO’s benefits within your first 30 days.

Take a look:

a hubspot-branded featured image defining what’s on a checklist to get started with AEO

Step 1: Benchmark your current AI search visibility.

You can’t improve what you haven’t measured.

Before optimizing anything, establish a baseline of how often (and where) your brand appears in AI-generated answers. HubSpot’s AEO Grader measures your AEO visibility and performance across major answer engines, giving you:

  • A scored assessment
  • A gap analysis
  • Prioritized recommendations in minutes

Run your domain through it first so every optimization that follows is trackable against a concrete starting point.

Tool recommendation: HubSpot’s AEO Grader for your initial visibility score and gap report.

Step 2: Identify your highest-opportunity pages.

Not every page on your site needs AEO optimization on day one.

Start with the content that already has topical authority and organic traffic. These pages have the strongest signals for LLMs to pick up.

To identify your highest-impact AEO opportunities, do the following:

  • Pull your top 20 organic pages by traffic and identify which ones answer specific questions your audience asks.
  • Cross-reference with your AEO Grader results to see which topics are already appearing (or missing) in AI answers.

Tool recommendation: AirOps for automating content audits at scale. It can programmatically evaluate pages for answer-readiness, entity clarity, and gaps in structured data across large content libraries without manual page-by-page review.

Step 3: Optimize content structure for direct answers.

AI answer engines extract information most reliably when content is clearly structured and relationships are explicitly stated.

For each priority page, make these changes:

  • Lead with a direct-answer paragraph. Open each section with a concise, definition-style response to the question the section addresses. Keep it under 50 words so it can be extracted as a standalone answer.
  • State entity relationships explicitly. Use semantic triples throughout (for example, “AEO increases brand visibility in AI-powered search results”). This way, LLMs don’t have to infer meaning from context.
  • Cap paragraphs at five sentences. Break longer passages into bullet points to improve both reader scannability and AI parseability.

Tool recommendation: HubSpot’s Content Hub enables the creation and management of answer-friendly content formats with built-in support for structured data, making it easier to publish and maintain optimized content at scale.

Step 4: Implement structured data on priority pages.

Focus on these three high-impact schema types first:

  • The FAQ schema on any page that answers two or more distinct questions.
  • Organization and Author schema to reinforce your brand entity identity and E-E-A-T signals.
  • HowTo schema on process-oriented content (guides, tutorials, walkthroughs).

You don’t need a full dev sprint for this. Most CMS platforms support schema plugins, and Content Hub handles structured data natively across templates.

Step 5: Monitor AI citations and iterate monthly.

The more obvious pros of AEO tools become most valuable in the overall feedback loop. That said, be sure to set up ongoing monitoring so you can see:

  • Which pages are earning AI citations
  • Which queries trigger them
  • Where competitors are showing up instead of you

Then, review results monthly, re-run your AEO Grader assessment quarterly, and use each cycle to prioritize the next batch of pages for optimization.

Tool recommendation: Use Perplexity as a testing surface. (Run your target queries directly in Perplexity to see whether your content is being cited, how it’s being summarized, and what competing sources appear alongside it.)

Step 6: Scale with automation and governance.

Once your initial pages are optimized and you’re seeing measurable results, the next challenge in AEO is scaling without losing quality or consistency. This is where automation tools pay for themselves.

  • Establish editorial governance by documenting your AEO standards (i.e., required schema types per content format, semantic triple density, direct-answer paragraph requirements, and review cadence).
  • AEO benefits compound fastest when optimization is systematic rather than ad hoc. Treat this checklist as a repeatable quarterly cycle.

Tool recommendation: AirOps for building automated AEO workflows (i.e., programmatic content audits, bulk schema generation, and AI-assisted optimization recommendations across your entire content library).

Again, AEO strengthens E-E-A-T and long-term authority with every optimization cycle you complete.

The teams capturing the full perks of AEO right now aren’t doing anything beyond your reach. They’re simply following a clear process, using the right tools, and committing to iteration. Start with Step 1 today and build from there.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) About AEO Benefits

How long does AEO take to show results?

Most teams begin seeing measurable changes in AI citation visibility within 30 to 90 days of implementing structured optimizations, though the exact timeline depends on:

  • Your starting point
  • Content volume
  • How aggressively you optimize

Additionally, quick wins like adding FAQ schema, rewriting introductory paragraphs as direct answers, and clarifying entity definitions can surface in AI responses relatively quickly because LLMs recrawl and reindex authoritative content more frequently than many marketers expect.

Overall, the longer-term advantages of AEO compound over time. As AI systems repeatedly encounter your brand associated with clear, well-structured answers, they build stronger entity associations, which means your content gets cited more frequently and across a wider range of queries.

Pro Tip: HubSpot’s AEO Grader measures your AEO visibility and performance so you can benchmark where you are today and track progress at regular intervals rather than guessing at timelines.

Does AEO risk cannibalizing my existing rankings?

No. Optimizations actually reinforce traditional ranking signals rather than competing with them.

Here’s why:

  • Structured data you add for AEO eligibility simultaneously improves rich results in traditional search.
  • Direct-answer formatting (concise definitions, clearly stated relationships) aligns with what Google already rewards for featured snippets.
  • Entity clarity (also known as the consistent representation of your brand, products, and people across the web) and E-E-A-T improvements strengthen your domain authority across both AI and traditional answer engines.

All in all, the benefits of the AEO layer on top of your existing SEO investment. Teams that treat them as complementary, not competing, consistently see gains in both channels.

Should I change my site architecture specifically for AEO?

In most cases, you don’t need a full architectural overhaul.

If your site already uses a logical topic cluster structure with clear internal linking, you have a strong foundation. But to make that structure legible to LLMs, do this:

  • Implement schema markup (FAQ, HowTo, Organization, Author) on your highest-traffic pages first.
  • Ensure each page has a clearly defined primary entity and states relationships explicitly in the opening paragraphs.
  • Use internal links to connect related entities across your content hub so LLMs can follow the same topical paths your readers do.

Pro Tip: HubSpot’s Content Hub enables the creation and management of answer-friendly content formats with built-in support for structured data, making these changes easier to implement at scale without re-platforming.

How does AEO impact voice assistants and smart devices?

Voice assistants like Siri, Alexa, and Google Assistant pull answers from the same AI retrieval infrastructure that powers text-based answer engines, which means AEO’s capabilities extend directly to voice search.

When your content is structured as a clear, concise, direct answer with strong entity definitions, it becomes eligible for voice responses. .

This is important because voice queries tend to be conversational and question-based, which is exactly the format AEO optimizes for.

Do I need developer resources to start AEO?

Not to get started. Many of the highest-impact AEO optimizations are content-level changes that marketers can execute directly:

  • Rewriting section introductions as direct, definition-style answers to specific questions.
  • Adding explicit relationship statements (semantic triples) throughout your content so LLMs can parse meaning without ambiguity.
  • Structuring content with clear headings that mirror the questions your audience actually asks.

Overall, developer support becomes more valuable when you’re ready to scale, particularly for:

  • Implementing schema markup site-wide
  • Automating structured data across templates
  • Integrating AEO performance data into your reporting dashboards

AEO tools that are purpose-built for this type of workflow significantly reduce that technical dependency.

Whether you start with a single page or a full site rollout, the best approach is to begin with what your team can execute now and layer in technical resources as the program matures.

The benefits of AEO are evolving every day.

A year ago, most marketing teams treated AEO as an emerging trend worth watching. Today, winning plays for AEO are:

  • Measurable
  • Repeatable
  • Directly tied to the visibility and pipeline metrics that growth and enterprise leaders are accountable for

That shift happened fast, and it’s accelerating.

Here’s what this post covered and why it matters for your next move:

  • AEO is reshaping how buyers discover brands. AEO increases brand visibility in AI-powered search results at the exact moment intent forms — before a prospect ever clicks through to a website.
  • The benefits compound across channels. AEO improves conversion quality (also known as lead quality) and time to value (also known as sales cycle length) because AI-cited traffic arrives pre-qualified. It strengthens E-E-A-T and long-term authority because the optimization work (i.e., entity clarity, structured data, direct-answer formatting) reinforces signals that both AI and traditional search engines reward.
  • AEO’s biggest challenges are solvable now. Unclear ROI measurement, lack of frameworks, integration friction with existing SEO, and structured data gaps are real blockers, but each one has a practical solution. Purpose-built tools, incremental workflows, and a systematic checklist enable you to start capturing results within 30 to 90 days without rebuilding your content program from scratch.
  • AEO tools make execution scalable. From benchmarking your visibility with HubSpot’s AEO Grader to monitoring citations with Profound, automating audits with AirOps, and testing answers in Perplexity, the tooling ecosystem has matured enough to support enterprise-scale programs.

The teams winning in AI search right now aren’t waiting for the landscape to stabilize. They’re treating AEO as a core operational capability, measuring progress with real data, and iterating monthly.

What’s even more? The potential of AEO will only grow as AI systems handle a larger share of the discovery journey, and the competitive advantage will go to the brands that build their foundations now.

Ready to see where your brand stands in AI search? Get started with HubSpot’s AEO Grader.

Categories B2B

AI search behavior: What it means for your marketing strategy in 2026

AI search behavior may be causing a dip in your traffic, but it’s also sending higher-quality leads your way. For marketers, that second part is a massive win. AI search was the number one predictor of purchase intent for CRM software buyers, according to HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026 report. And there are more findings from the report that every go-to-market team needs to know.

In this article, I’ll share the latest findings on AI search behavior, its impact on brand discovery, an answer engine optimization (AEO) strategy you can implement today, and much more.

Free AEO Grader: See Your Brand's Visibility in Answer Engines [Free Tool]

Table of Contents

What is AI search behavior, and why should marketers care?

AI search behavior refers to the actions people take when they’re seeking answers using artificial intelligence, whether that’s asking ChatGPT or consulting Google AI Overviews.

In the past, traditional search consisted of a user entering keywords into a search engine like Google, getting a list of blue links, and clicking them to find their answer. But search behaviors are changing. Today, users are increasingly turning to AI with conversational queries (usually a few sentences long) and reading AI-generated summaries that instantly fulfill their search. AI search behavior differs from traditional search behavior in that it becomes a multi-turn Q&A — an entire conversation in one chat, not just a click to a single webpage.

Comparison table of traditional search versus AI search covering journey, click behavior, and discovery paths

Marketers should care about AI search behavior because it’s a growing part of search. SEO still determines which pages rank in the underlying search index, but answer engine optimization (AEO) determines which sources AI tools cite when composing summaries. Both have to be optimized in parallel, and increasingly, AEO is what influences whether buyers ever see your site listed in the first place.

How AI Search Behavior Creates New High-Intent Discovery Paths

Yes, AI search behavior decreases organic traffic, but the good news is that the traffic that comes from AI is higher intent. HubSpot saw 3x better conversion from AI-sourced leads versus other channels in 2025. Referral traffic from tools like ChatGPT and Gemini has also tripled, according to Search Engine Land.

AI-referred traffic converts better because summary-first experiences resolve the easy questions inside the answer engine itself. A reader asking “what is AEO?” doesn’t need to click a single result; they get a definition, sometimes a list of vendors, and move on. But a reader who clicks after reading an AI answer to their query, “how can a B2B marketing team of five implement AEO on their blog,” has usually progressed past that surface layer. They’ve validated their problem, seen who got cited, and want to verify, compare, or convert.

That shift in funnel shape changes how you measure success. Clicks become a smaller, later signal in a journey that now happens partly inside the answer engine. The metrics that capture the rest of it look different: how often your brand surfaces in the summary, which competitors you appear alongside, and which prompts route the highest-intent traffic to your site.

The Impact of AI Search on Brand Discovery

AI search behavior has reshaped brand discovery, too. The old canvas was predictable: ten blue links, a few ads at the top, maybe a featured snippet. Pre-AI, ranking #1 for a category term reliably put your brand in front of buyers. But AI answer engines, chat assistants, and copilots have replaced that canvas, and most of the visible page space now goes to the AI-generated answer itself, not the links beneath it.

Just take a look at my recent Google search for “wordpress plugin for google analytics.” The AI Overview occupies most of the screen above the fold. Even though the page for GA Google Analytics holds position #1, it’s outranked by Site Kit in the AI Overview — and which do you think I’m more likely to click?

Google search results for WordPress plugin for google analytics with AI Overview highlighting Site Kit plugin

Brands that previously ranked #1 for a category term are competing for a smaller slice of visible real estate, and the AI Overview itself decides which sources to cite. About 60% of Google searches now end without a click, according to SparkToro. In my opinion, that number is likely to keep climbing as more queries trigger AI-generated answers.

Branded search has held up. Buyers who already know your name still type it and land on your site. Category-term discovery is where AI search has hit hardest: Google serves AI Overviews for non-branded queries 1.9x more often than for branded ones, according to Ahrefs. A query like “what is the best software for video editing” no longer returns just a list of blue links to evaluate. It returns one or two brands recommended by AI in a highly personalized output, sometimes with a comparison table, and the buyer often acts on that answer.

HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026 found that 42% of CRM software buyers used AI search to evaluate vendors. Across the full set of evaluation activities tracked in the report, AI search ranked as the strongest predictor of purchase intent for CRM buyers. When an answer engine names your competitor in that recommendation, the deal is often decided before your sales team knows the buyer exists.

Entity clarity, topical authority, and reputation signals now determine which brands answer engines surface. Each plays a distinct role:

  • Entity clarity establishes whether an answer engine recognizes your brand as a distinct, well-defined option. Without it, answer engines may struggle to associate your brand with the right category, use case, or comparison set.
  • Topical authority reflects the depth and consistency of coverage across a category. It influences which category questions, comparisons, and use cases your brand is eligible to be cited for.
  • Reputation signals, such as third-party mentions, reviews, comparison pages, news coverage, and Reddit threads, tell answer engines that you’re an entity they can trust.

In the old model, signals like links, keywords, and authority won blue-link visibility, and reputation grew from there over time. Those signals still matter, but in AI search, they get evaluated by an answer engine before a prospect ever reaches your site. By the time someone clicks through, they’ve usually weighed several options inside an AI answer — including, hopefully, you.

How to Plan Content Around AI Search Behaviors

Content planning for AI search behavior starts with prompts instead of keywords, requiring a different approach to content marketing strategy. A buyer using AI rarely asks one isolated query. They start with one, then ask a follow-up, then a clarifier, then a comparison question. To earn citations across that whole multi-turn exchange, your content has to anticipate the sequence and be more comprehensive.

Brainstorm the questions your buyers are asking AI.

Question mapping starts with a seed query and traces the follow-ups. Pick a question your category gets asked early in the funnel (“what is AEO?”), then write out the next five questions a buyer would logically ask (“how is AEO different from SEO?”, “do I need an AEO tool?”, “which AEO tools do marketers actually use?”, “how much does AEO software cost?”, “what’s the ROI of AEO?”). That sequence is what your content needs to answer collectively.

HubSpot’s topic cluster model organizes the question set into a pillar page and supporting cluster pages: one pillar for the broad seed question, cluster pages for each follow-up. That structure gives answer engines a clear entity to cite for the broad query and a clear trail of supporting pages for the long-tail follow-ups.

Topic cluster diagram showing pillar content connected to multiple cluster content pages via hyperlinks

Source: Matt Barby

HubSpot’s Content Hub helps marketing teams organize topic clusters and manage pillar pages right within its CMS.

Pro tip: Run your seed question through ChatGPT and Perplexity yourself, then track which sources they cite for each follow-up. Those brands are who you’re competing against inside the answer engine, and the citation patterns tell you what kind of content earns a mention at each step.

Restructure existing content into extractable answers.

A content audit reveals which pages already earn citations and which need work. Re-run your top 20 or so organic landing pages’ target queries through ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity. Cited pages are working. Absent ones are restructure candidates.

Here are some strategies to apply to your existing content to make it more AEO-friendly:

  • Put the answer upfront. The “lost in the middle” Stanford research maps a U-shaped extraction curve: Answer engines pull most reliably from the opening and closing of a passage, not the middle. If the direct response to the target query sits four paragraphs in, cut the context-setting ahead of it and lift the answer into the first sentence of the lead.
  • Write self-contained paragraphs. Answer engines retrieve passages, not pages, so each paragraph has to make sense as a standalone chunk. Pronoun-led openers (“This is why…”) or paragraphs that braid two ideas together land in retrieval as broken context. Rewrite each one to lead with its own named subject and cover one idea. As AEO/SEO expert and founder of iPullRank Mike King puts it, “A passage that focuses on one idea will, in nearly every measurable case, retrieve better than a passage that tries to cover three.”
  • Make content skimmable with tables and bullet points. Comma-separated lists embedded in prose (“the benefits include speed, accuracy, and cost”) should be bulleted lists; embedded numeric comparisons should be tables. In Yu et al.‘s March 2026 preprint, lists and tables had 43% better extraction accuracy across six engines than the prose versions they replaced.

See how to write for AI search for more.

Why Track AI-Driven Search Engines and How to Start

Tracking AI search metrics turns declining traffic into a visibility win you can show leadership. The same metrics tell you which prompts your brand is losing, which competitors are winning them, and which content to fix first.

AI search visibility breaks down into three signals worth tracking:

  • Citations show whether an answer engine linked to your page as a cited source.
  • Brand mentions appear when an answer names your brand, even without a link.
  • Share of voice measures how often your brand surfaces compared to competitors when buyers ask category questions.

But traditional analytics tools like Google Analytics weren’t built to count brand mentions or share of voice. To do that, you can manually check within AI answer engines or get a specialized tool like HubSpot AEO to automate AI visibility tracking.

How to Audit Your AI Search Visibility

A baseline audit starts by running your 10 highest-priority prompts through ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity (make sure you’re logged out in each instance or using a temporary chat). Record which sources get cited, whether your brand appears, and which competitors are pulling ahead across your most important topic clusters, branded queries, and category-level questions. Use this baseline to identify gaps between where you and your competitors sit and create a roadmap to optimize content for better AI visibility.

How to Track AI Search Visibility Over Time

AEO Grader is a free tool that gives you a quick snapshot of where your brand stands across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini, including a share of voice score.

HubSpot AEO monitors your brand visibility across answer engines over time, analyzes how competitors appear in your tracked prompts, and prioritizes recommendations to lift your citation rate. It’s the continuous-tracking layer once your baseline is set.

How AI Model Updates Impact Search Optimization

Much like Google’s algorithm changes, AI models update frequently, and each update changes the way the model weighs certain things, leading to different answer patterns and source selections.

For example, when OpenAI rolled out GPT-5 in August 2025, the update marked a substantial improvement in how ChatGPT answers health-related questions. As OpenAI wrote in its announcement of GPT-5, regarding health: “The model also now provides more precise and reliable responses, adapting to the user’s context, knowledge level, and geography, enabling it to provide safer and more helpful responses in a wide range of scenarios.”

To keep up with the changes and ensure your content is still optimized for the newest models, you can track release notes from OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and Perplexity.

I also recommend a consistent review cadence:

  • Monthly: Re-run your core prompt set across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity. Compare citation and brand mention counts against your baseline. Flag any prompt where your presence shifted noticeably in either direction.
  • Quarterly: Audit the pages that lost citation share. Check whether the content format, schema, or entity definitions still align with how each platform is currently structuring answers.
  • On major model announcements: Run an immediate re-test on your five highest-priority prompts. OpenAI, Google, and Perplexity all publish release notes — a public model update is a signal to audit before you see the impact in your tracking data.

Pro tip: HubSpot AEO tracks brand visibility across answer engines over time, making it way less burdensome to monitor AEO efforts.

Between review cycles, here are the four content-side elements that are most worth maintaining:

  • Entities: Confirm your brand, product names, and key people are defined consistently across your site, about page, and third-party profiles like LinkedIn, Crunchbase, and G2. Inconsistent naming can confuse an answer engine.
  • Schema: Verify that relevant schema markup, such as Article, FAQPage, and Organization, is present and error-free using Google’s Rich Results Test and Schema.org’s validator.
  • Internal links: Check that pillar pages and cluster pages are still pointing to each other and that no links have broken due to URL changes or content migrations.
  • Answer summaries: Re-read the lead paragraph of each high-priority page. AI models may extract more reliably from the beginning and end of a long context, per the “lost in the middle” research, so a lead that no longer opens with a direct answer to the page’s target query is a fast fix.

What AI Search Behavior Means for Sales and Service

How AI Search Behavior Changes Sales Conversations

AI search behavior compresses the sales cycle before reps ever pick up the phone. Prospects now arrive at first calls having already read AI summaries comparing your category, competitors, and pricing.

Outreach timing and messaging have to evolve for AI-informed buyers. Generic discovery questions like “what’s your current stack?” or “what are your pain points?” often land flat with a prospect who has already walked a chatbot through those details. Reps who lead with the specific competitors and tradeoffs AI surfaced for that buyer’s category can skip past the surface-level questions that end up being redundant.

But sales reps need tools to understand what AI is saying about their brand. AEO in Marketing Hub surfaces prompts and citations that are shaping these conversations, making those signals visible to sales and marketing teams.

How AI Search Behavior Changes Service Content

Service content is great answer-engine source material. Knowledge base articles and help center documentation feed the same answer engines buyers consult during evaluation. A well-structured support article on “how do I export X from your tool” is exactly the kind of extractable, question-format content models prefer to cite. Service teams optimizing their docs for clarity are also, by extension, optimizing for AI visibility.

Here’s a real-life example: I asked ChatGPT, “Can I export my website from Wix?” (a common buyer evaluation question), and its answer cites a Wix help center article.

ChatGPT conversation about exporting websites from Wix with cited source highlighted in red box

How Sales and Service Teams Inform AEO Content

Feedback loops between sales, service, and marketing turn buyer language into answer-engine source content. Sales and service teams hear the actual questions buyers and customers ask before those questions show up in keyword tools. A shared doc, a Slack channel, or a quarterly review routes that language back to the people creating content for AI search.

An AEO Playbook You Can Run Today

This AEO playbook covers four phases of adapting to AI search behavior: mapping buyer questions, building extractable answers, applying technical signals, and iterating against tracked data.

Step 1: Uncover the questions your customers are asking AI.

Discovering the prompts that potential customers ask AI about your brand is what anchors the rest of this playbook. You can source questions by prompting answer engines with your category’s seed queries, noting the follow-ups that AI generates in response, and asking your sales team what they’re actually hearing during calls.

Marketers who are serious about optimizing for AI search behavior benefit from using a specialized AEO tool for prompt discovery and tracking. Subscribers of Marketing Hub Professional or Enterprise plans have an advantage because they can access AEO, which can suggest prompts based on business context within the CRM.

HubSpot AEO tool prompts tab showing salon booking software queries with visibility percentage scores

Source

Step 2: Build extractive answers and entities.

Now take the questions you identified in step one and create new content (or optimize existing content) to address them. Structure each page to answer the main question in its introduction, then reinforce the brand entity behind it. AI answer engines favor content that resolves the query immediately and identifies the source clearly, and as a March 2026 preprint from Junwei Yu et al. showed, structural changes — heading hierarchy, paragraph chunking, and visual emphasis — can lift citation rates by double digits across the six engines they tested.

  • Direct-answer openers answer the target query inside the first sentence of each paragraph; anything else is preamble that pushes the answer lower than it needs to be.
  • Q&A, definition, and decision-guide formats map cleanly to the response shapes answer engines reuse when composing summaries.
  • Brand entity consistency across your domain, LinkedIn company page, Crunchbase profile, and review listings (G2, Capterra) strengthens recognition when answer engines compose responses.

Step 3: Apply schema markup and internal links.

Schema markup and internal linking give answer engines structural cues to help them interpret pages and rank source quality.

HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026 found that pages with FAQ sections are more likely to be cited in AI Overviews, and FAQ sections paired with schema markup correlate with higher citation rates in Gemini, Google AI Mode, and Perplexity. The combination that performed best in the dataset: a descriptive H2 like “Frequently Asked Questions About [Topic]” with each question formatted as an H3 below it. Generic “FAQ” headings produced weaker results.

Heading structure carries its own citation signal in the same dataset. Keyword-rich H1s correlate with more citations. Including the year in H1s and meta titles helps, and more headings overall — particularly H3s and H4s — track with higher citation rates. The sweet spot is pages with 7 to 15 H2s.

Adding schema to optimize webpages is a debated topic in AEO. “It’s not a bad idea, but it’s not going to move the needle that much,” says AEO strategist Kaleigh Moore, who prefers to focus on off-site signals on platforms like LinkedIn and YouTube. “Those kind of off-site, third-party sources that are getting really in-depth are really great at earning citations,” she adds.

Elie Berreby, head of SEO and AI search at Adorama, takes a different view on schema markup. “100% I would recommend using it,” he told me, “but not like most people use structured data — in a smart way, by interconnecting the different entities.” Schema’s value, in Berreby’s framing, is building the knowledge graphs that help answer engines map entity relationships. Even when schema is injected via JavaScript (which many AI crawlers can’t render), Googlebot can still process it, which has downstream effects. “If you have good structured data and this leads to a richer search result, it now feeds the AI scraper, which then feeds the AI-generated answer,” Berreby explains. “It’s an indirect mechanism.”

My take: Implement schema, but don’t expect it to be the single lever that wins you citations. The State of AEO 2026 data is correlational, and the citation lift only shows up reliably in combination with a well-structured FAQ section.

Lastly, don’t forget internal links; they reinforce topical authority and route ranking signals between related pages.

Step 4: Publish, monitor, and iterate.

After you publish content, make changes based on what the data tells you. Keep a spreadsheet or create a dashboard to track citation shifts, lost prompts, and competitor gains, and review this on a weekly to monthly basis. Here’s what to log:

  • Baseline snapshots capture where your brand stands at the moment of publication; without them, later movement is impossible to interpret.
  • Loss logs record which prompts your brand stopped appearing in and which competitor replaced you, surfacing the patterns worth fixing first.
  • Win logs track which new prompts your brand started showing up in after edits, helping you reverse-engineer what worked.

AEO Grader generates the baseline snapshot in minutes; HubSpot AEO handles ongoing tracking, competitor monitoring, and prompt-level reporting so you can iterate without manually prompting.

Frequently Asked Questions About AI Search Behavior

How do I measure AI visibility without relying on clicks?

AI visibility measurement tracks two metrics invisible to GA4 and Search Console: brand mentions (answers naming your brand without a link) and share of voice (how often your brand surfaces versus competitors for category questions). You can manually enter your highest-priority prompts in ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity on a fixed cadence and log which sources get cited. But HubSpot AEO automatically tracks prompts and monitors shifts in those signals over time.

How often should we update AI-optimized content?

Update top-performing pages whenever you see a major drop in citations in your AEO software. Otherwise, AI-optimized content needs a monthly visibility re-check, a quarterly content audit, and an immediate re-test after any major model release. Models update often enough that it could affect your key content considerably (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and Perplexity all publish release notes worth watching).

How can we increase our chances of being cited by LLMs?

LLM citation likelihood rises through four content disciplines: answer-first writing, parseable structure, entity consistency, and topical authority. The Yu et al. study found that structural rewrites alone — without changing the content’s meaning — lifted citation rates across six engines by 17.3% on average

Here are four changes worth making to your content to increase LLM citations:

  • Answer-first content opens with the direct response to the query in the first paragraph, then supports it with clear definitions, original data, expert quotes, examples, and up-to-date sources. Stanford research shows language models pull most heavily from the beginning of a passage, which is why a buried answer might not earn a citation.
  • Parseable structure uses descriptive H2s and H3s, concise summaries, comparison tables, and FAQ-style sections where appropriate, paired with valid Article, Organization, Product, or FAQPage schema. Structured formats like lists and tables outperformed prose on extraction accuracy by 43% in the Yu et al. cross-engine testing.
  • Entity consistency means ensuring the same brand, product, author, and executive names across your site and others. This might include your about page, author bios, LinkedIn, Crunchbase, G2, and other trusted third-party profiles.
  • Topical authority builds through internally linked content clusters and a refresh cadence that updates high-priority pages when facts, products, pricing, rankings, or model behavior change.

Do we need to change link-building for answer engines?

No, you don’t need to change link-building for answer engines, but you do need to understand why it still matters for AEO. Backlinks help with SEO, and because answer engines use search indexes, they matter for AEO too. However, what’s different in AEO is that unlinked brand mentions influence AI answers: YouTube videos, Reddit threads, comparison roundups, and third-party reviews. So diversifying into the formats and platforms answer engines actually quote matters more than chasing raw link counts.

What’s the best way to align teams around these changes?

Sales, service, and marketing teams can align around AI search behavior changes by creating a shared dashboard and a feedback loop. Sales reps hear the AI-surfaced objections shaping early conversations, and service teams see which questions land in chat first — both signals belong in the marketing content team’s roadmap. HubSpot AEO surfaces citation and competitor data in one workspace, making it easier to pair AI search signals with the questions sales and service heard that month.

Categories B2B

The Recall Gap: Why the Brain Forgets Your Brand

We’ve established what the Recall Gap is and the three core problems that make it nearly inevitable under most current follow-up models.

Now it’s time to get into why, from a neurological perspective. 

What’s Happening Inside Your Prospect’s Brain?

In the hours between registration and the moment your SDR attempts to make first contact, life doesn’t stop. A lot can happen in just a few minutes, let alone 48 hours (the average amount of time it takes for B2B registrants to consume the content they’ve requested).  

So, what is actually happening inside your prospect’s brain? 

The answer draws from six bodies of peer-reviewed research, none of which is new science. All of it is directly applicable to what’s happening at scale across B2B demand generation, and almost none of it has been applied to this context before.

The Cognitive Forces Affecting Your Prospect

While most of us are on our phones from the moment we wake til the moment we sleep, most B2B content registrations happen at a homebase—a laptop or desktop, complete with a browser full of “I’ll definitely come back to this later” tabs. 

That context matters enormously: the cognitive forces that determine whether a buyer remembers you overwhelmingly occur at a desktop.

And memory doesn’t wait politely for your follow-up.

That’s just for general memory, mind you. What about something more closely associated with business? Glad you asked.

  • A 2017 Nielsen study bridged memory and marketing research, showing participants video ads, then tested a separate group 24 hours later. Their findings revealed that branded recognition dropped by roughly half in the first 24 hours after exposure. 

Half the brand memory evaporated overnight.

Image: Amplifire

Now map that onto the 48-hour Consumption Gap, and by the time your prospect finally opens the content they registered for, roughly half of whatever brand memory formed at registration is already gone. 

When your SDR calls after that, they’re reaching someone whose brain has already cut your brand loose.

“Cold lead” is still the wrong diagnosis… but let’s keep digging into the why.

01 / The Google Effect

In 2011, Columbia and Harvard researchers Sparrow, Liu, and Wegner published a landmark study in Science that should have fundamentally changed how every B2B marketer thinks about lead follow-up. (Emphasis on should.)

It demonstrated three findings that, taken together, are pretty uncomfortable:

  • People instinctively reach for search engines first. 
    • When confronted with a difficult question—even one they already know the answer to—the default behavior is to search. This is automatically and deeply conditioned. (Generative AI tools almost certainly fall into this same category now.)
  • People don’t remember what they expect to find later. 
    • When the brain believes information will be retrievable, it deprioritizes encoding it. It’s not negligence. It’s efficient cognitive resource allocation.
  • People remember where over what. 
    • The internet has become a vast external hard drive for human memory. People are more likely to remember the access route than the information itself.

The original experiments were conducted on desktop computers, by the way.

Now, let’s apply this to a B2B registration:

Your prospect fills out your gated form → Their brain tags your vendor name as “findable later” → Encoding of your company name is deprioritized immediately → Your SDR calls 48 hours later → “Who are you again?”

The Google Effect describes exactly what happens to a focused knowledge worker sitting at their own machine—the same environment in which nearly all B2B content registrations occur.

Hit button. Get content. Move on.

Your brand never had a real chance to stick.

02 / Source Memory Failure

Photo by Tim Mossholder on Unsplash

This is the finding that tends to land hardest.

Harvard memory researcher Daniel Schacter’s “Seven Sins of Memory” framework identifies one failure mode that matters enormously for gated content: Misattribution.

Misattribution in this context is the failure to remember the source of something you genuinely remember learning correctly.

  • In his 2021 paper Media, Technology, and the Sins of Memory (Cambridge University Press), Schacter reviewed decades of evidence showing that digital media consumption produces reliable source-memory errors.

People absorb a fact, a statistic, or an idea—and genuinely forget where they got it.

A finding from your white paper may, a week later, feel like something they read “somewhere, maybe on LinkedIn.” Your insight travels. Your brand doesn’t always come with it.

Misattribution doesn’t mean the content failed. It means the brand memory failed independently of the content memory.

These are two separate encoding events. They don’t always succeed or fail together—which is the part that stings. It gets worse when competitive brand salience enters the picture. 

  • Research by Braun-LaTour & LaTour (2004) and Holden & Vanhuele (1999) documented that consumers will sometimes “remember” encountering a well-known brand when they actually encountered a lesser-known one. The brain, searching for a plausible source to attach to a half-encoded memory, defaults to whichever brand in the category has the strongest existing mental availability.

For B2B marketers, this is the worst-case version of the Recall Gap.

Your prospect remembers the insight; great. They may be quoting it in internal meetings right now; fantastic! But the credit—in their mental model of the category—has quietly migrated to whichever competitor they’ve heard of more often; brutal.

Your content did the work. Their brand got the credit.

03 / Desktop Attention Fragmentation

Photo by Unseen Studio on Unsplash

If the Google Effect explains why brand names get deprioritized, Dr. Gloria Mark’s two-decade research program at UC Irvine explains why anything struggles to get encoded in the first place.

Mark has tracked attention spans on computer screens since 2004. The numbers are stark:

  • In 2004: the average knowledge worker stayed on a single screen for 2.5 minutes before switching.
  • By 2012: 75 seconds.
  • From 2016 to 2020: 47 seconds on average. The median was 40 seconds—meaning half of all observed focus sessions were shorter than that.

A 2022 Harvard Business Review analysis by Soroco researchers quantified the switching itself: the average Fortune 500 employee toggles between applications and browser windows approximately 1,200 times per day

Each meaningful interruption costs roughly 23 minutes to fully recover from.

Your prospect registered for your content inside that environment.

The form submission was one of over a thousand micro-switches that day, competing for encoding against Slack, email, and whatever else was open in the next tab. 

Frankly, it’s a minor miracle if your registration becomes fully encoded.

Because, more likely than not, they probably will not remember you.

What Else is Causing Brand Blindness?

The three findings above carry the most practical weight. But the complete picture of the Recall Gap requires three more.

Banner Blindness and the Goal-Directed Eye

Photo by Ion Fet on Unsplash

When a desktop user is in task mode—actively searching for a specific resource—their visual system filters out anything that looks peripheral. 

This is known as banner blindness, documented since 1998 and confirmed across dozens of eye-tracking studies. Even among users who do fixate on a branded element, only about 8% could accurately recall what was advertised.

Under goal-directed browsing, the brain screens out logos, company names, and branded headers sitting at the edge of a form before they’re ever encoded. Your prospect may have technically seen your brand. They almost certainly didn’t notice it in a way that lasts.

Competitive Interference

Photo by Michael Dziedzic on Unsplash

The likelihood that your prospect registered for your asset and only your asset is low. Burke & Srull (1988) established that the presence of competing brands actively erodes recall, and that simple repetition is a poor defense against it. 

Teixeira et al. (2014) extended the finding to digital environments: in cluttered content spaces, consumers encode fewer brands and retain them more weakly.

Every other vendor your prospect encountered in the same 48-hour window was compounding the problem. Unsurprisingly, your brand isn’t only fighting the forgetting curve and all the other cognitive noise. Your competition is also looking for its shot.

The Memorability Effect

Photo by s j on Unsplash

Here’s the one finding that puts something in your control.

In 2011, MIT researchers demonstrated that images have a measurable, intrinsic property called memorability—and that it’s consistent across viewers. Some images are reliably remembered; others are reliably forgotten. 

The key takeaway is that polish does not equate to memorability. Convention is essentially the opposite of it.

The research identified predictable signals: human faces over objects, unusual over conventional, specific over generic. 

Most B2B content defaults to clean gradients, abstract geometric patterns, and stock imagery of people in conference rooms. These visuals are professional. They are also boring and interchangeable.

The Von Restorff effect documents that items deviating from their surroundings get encoded more distinctly than items that blend in. This is why “action” colors are so crucial whenever there is a call-to-action.

Image: Laws of UX

In a cognitively hostile registration environment (which is basically daily life), interchangeable means invisible.

A quick self-check: pull the cover images for your five most-registered assets. Ask honestly whether a prospect could recognize any of them 48 hours later—or whether they could belong to any competitor in your category. The assets where the answer is “any competitor” are your highest-priority redesigns.

The cognitive environment at registration is working against your prospect’s ability to remember you. Your visual design doesn’t have to make it worse.

What This Looks Like in Sequence

Fortunately, each of these findings can be stacked together so that we can strategically address the Recall Gap. 

At the moment of registration…

…attention averages 47 seconds on screen. Working memory is split across multiple open tasks. The Google Effect fires, tagging your vendor as findable-later and deprioritizing encoding. Banner blindness filters out peripheral brand elements. Encoding strength—before any time has passed—is already weak.

In the 47.7 hours that follow…

…1,200 more daily app switches accumulate. The forgetting curve’s steepest section passes. Source attribution decays faster than content memory. Competitive interference builds as your prospect continues researching the category.

When your SDR calls…

…your prospect may remember the insight from your asset. They are unlikely to remember where it came from. And if a more familiar competitor lives in the same mental neighborhood, misattribution may have already done its work.

This Is a Design Problem, Not a Performance Problem

As we have established, “Who are you?” is not evasion. 

It is simply the most likely outcome of a cognitively fragmented desktop environment operating on a neurologically normal person.

The six findings above shift the framing of the Recall Gap from a performance problem to a design problem.

It’s not a lead quality problem—the lead was real, and their brain responded exactly as any normal brain would to that environment. 

It’s not a follow-up speed problem, at least not primarily—speed helps at the margins, but it doesn’t address the structural encoding failure that happened before your team entered the picture. 

And it’s not a content quality problem—source misattribution makes clear that strong content and strong brand recall are independent outcomes that require independent design decisions.

What it is, is a memory architecture problem.

And memory architecture can be designed for.

The next article turns to one of the most underused signals in demand generation: the format your registrant chose. That single choice—Playbook versus eBook, Trend Report versus Cheat Sheet—predicts not just their intent level, but the likely width of their Recall Gap. And once you know that, your entire follow-up strategy changes.

Categories B2B

The role of citations in AEO: Why citations matter more than backlinks for AI visibility

For years, the SEO playbook was straightforward: earn backlinks, climb rankings, capture clicks. But as AI reshapes how traditional SEO works, a different mechanism is determining which content gets seen — and it’s not backlinks. It’s citations. The role of citations in AEO is fundamentally different from link-building: instead of other publishers vouching for your page, AI answer engines are selecting your content as the direct source behind their generated answers.

Get Started with HubSpot's AEO Tool

This shift matters because the stakes are tangible. When ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google’s AI Overviews cite your page, that’s not a ranking boost in a list of blue links. It’s your content becoming the answer for a growing share of buyers who never scroll to traditional results. And with AEO tools and best practices now available to measure and optimize this visibility, citations in AEO are no longer theoretical. It’s trackable, improvable, and directly tied to the pipeline.

In this guide, I’ll break down exactly how AI engines select citations, what type of content earns them, and how to build a citation strategy that drives measurable AI visibility using generative engine optimization tools and HubSpot’s integrated platform.

Table of Contents:

Why Citations Matter for Answer Engine Optimization (AEO)

First, let me be direct: Citations aren’t the entire point of winning AEO. They are, however, one of the clearest signals that your content is working inside the systems that now shape how buyers find answers.

The search landscape has fundamentally shifted. According to HubSpot’s 2026 State of Marketing Report, 49% of marketers agree that web traffic from search has decreased due to AI-generated answers. Yet, 58% note that AI referral traffic carries much higher intent than traditional search.

As an Associate Content Writer and Marketer at HubSpot, I’ve witnessed this firsthand: while blog traffic has declined, leads from LLMs are up 1,850% and convert 3x better. That conversion gap is why citations deserve serious attention from every marketing team allocating resources right now.

Meanwhile, 42% of CRM software buyers now use AI search as part of their evaluation process. When nearly half your potential buyers are asking ChatGPT or Perplexity instead of Google, being cited in those AI-generated answers becomes a direct pipeline driver rather than a vanity metric.

What do citations actually do in AEO?

AI answer engines select citations based on:

  • Clarity
  • Authority
  • Structure
  • Content freshness

When an LLM like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity generates a response, it draws on sources it considers trustworthy, well-structured, and semantically clear. A citation in that context means your content was the answer… or part of it.

The role of citations in AEO becomes clearer when you compare how AI engines evaluate content versus how traditional search engines do:

  • Backlinks in SEO signal domain authority through link volume, anchor text, and the quality of referring domains. They tell Google, “Other sites vouch for this page.”
  • Citations in AEO signal source reliability through content structure, factual density, and semantic clarity. They tell an LLM, “This content directly and accurately answers the user’s question.”

Both matter. But 41% of marketers say updating their SEO strategy for search changes is the top trend they’re exploring. The distinction is critical: You can have strong backlinks and still never appear in an AI-generated answer if your content isn’t structured for machine readability.

Citations are only one metric in the AEO era.

A complete picture of AEO success includes multiple signals beyond citation counts:

  • AI visibility score: How frequently and prominently your brand or content surfaces in AI-generated responses. (Tools like HubSpot’s AEO Grader let you benchmark this directly.)
  • LLM referral traffic: The volume and quality of visitors arriving from AI platforms (trackable in Marketing Hub alongside your traditional organic channels).
  • Conversion rate from AI referrals: As HubSpot’s own data shows, these visitors convert at significantly higher rates, making this a revenue-tier metric.
  • Brand mention frequency: Whether AI engines reference your brand by name, even without a clickable link.
  • Answer inclusion rate: How often your content appears in synthesized AI answers for your target queries.

Citations serve as a proof point that your content strategy aligns with how AI engines discover, process, and surface information.

How AI Engines Select Citations and Sources

 hubspot-branded image explaining, in plain english, how AI engines select citations and sources

AI answer engines select citations based on:

  • Clarity
  • Authority
  • Structure
  • Freshness of content (not on backlink volume)

Understanding this distinction is the single most important shift for teams moving from traditional SEO to an AEO-first strategy.

When a user asks ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity a question, the underlying process differs significantly from how Google ranks a list of blue links.

To help you understand how AI engines decide what to cite, I’ve broken down exactly what actually happens when an AI engine generates an answer and assigns sources:

  • Retrieval. The AI engine queries an index (or the live web, in Perplexity’s case) to pull a set of candidate sources that match the user’s intent. Content that uses clear headings, direct definitions, and structured data is more likely to surface during this step.
  • Evaluation. The model assesses each candidate for factual density, source authority, semantic clarity, and how directly the content answers the query. Vague, keyword-stuffed pages get filtered out, even if they have thousands of backlinks.
  • Synthesis. The engine combines information from its top-evaluated sources into a single generated response and attributes citations to the specific pages it drew from.
  • Citation assignment. Not every source used during synthesis earns a visible citation. The model selects the sources that contributed the most direct, verifiable claims to the final answer.

Each AI agent type handles this process slightly differently:

  • Perplexity cites inline with numbered references on every response.
  • ChatGPT (with browsing enabled) links to sources selectively.
  • Google’s AI Overviews pull from indexed pages and feature expandable source cards.

But across all of them, the underlying selection criteria converge on the same core signals. The five signals AI engines weigh most heavily when selecting citations are:

  • Topical authority and depth. Does this source demonstrate comprehensive expertise on the subject, or is it a surface-level overview? Pages that cover a topic with rich factual detail, supporting data, and clear entity relationships get cited more often.
  • Structural clarity. Content organized with descriptive H2s/H3s, definition-style opening sentences, and logical hierarchy is easier for models to parse and quote accurately.
  • Factual specificity. AI engines prefer content that states verifiable claims (statistics, named frameworks, dated research) over content that hedges with phrases like “some experts say” or “it’s generally believed.”
  • Freshness. Regular content updates help signal freshness to AI citation systems.
  • Source reputation. Domain-level trust still matters, but it’s evaluated differently than Domain Authority in SEO. AI engines weigh whether a source is consistently accurate, frequently referenced across the web, and recognized within its subject area.

Pro Tip: You don’t need to guess which of these signals your content is hitting or missing. Run your priority pages through HubSpot’s AEO Grader to benchmark your AI visibility and identify specific structural or content gaps that may be costing you citations.

Citation Types and What They Prioritize

Citations become especially clear when you compare what earns visibility across different engines.

Below, I’ve created a chart that categorizes citations by type, AI engine, and what each citation style prioritizes. Take a look:

However, structured data and schema markup increase the likelihood of being cited by AI. If your pages lack the following, you’re making it harder for AI engines to confidently extract and attribute your content, even if the written content itself is excellent:

  • FAQ schema
  • HowTo schema
  • Article structured data

This is a best practice for AI search visibility that carries over directly from SGE optimization into broader AEO work.

Overall, citations within AEO ultimately come down to this: AI engines aren’t counting who links to you. They’re evaluating whether your content is the most clear, structured, authoritative, and current answer to the question being asked.

Pro Tip: Teams that internalize this shift and track it through tools like HubSpot AEO will capture the high-intent AI referral traffic that’s already reshaping how buyers discover solutions.

a screenshot of hubspot’s AEO product

The Role of Citations in AEO

The way people find information is splitting in two, and citations are the connective tissue between your content and AI-generated answers.

Understanding citations in AEO starts with understanding just how fast this shift is happening, and why the old playbook of chasing backlinks alone no longer covers the full picture.

Here’s what you need to know:

1. AI search adoption is accelerating faster than most teams realize.

The numbers paint a clear trajectory. Gartner projects that traditional search engine volume will drop by 25% by 2026, as search marketing loses market share to AI chatbots and virtual agents. That’s not a distant forecast. It’s happening right now, right before our eyes.

On the consumer side, adoption is already mainstream. Here’s the data to prove it:

  • 34% of U.S. adults said they had used ChatGPT as of June 2025, roughly double the figure from 2023, according to Pew Research Center.
  • As shared by Stan Ventures, Google’s AI Overviews reached over 1.5 billion users per month in Q1 2025 (that’s 26.6% of all internet users worldwide).
  • AIOs now appear for 9.46% of all keywords on desktop (16% in the U.S.) and 12.8% or more of all Google searches by volume, according to Amsive research.

2. Citations are your content’s entry point into AI answers.

In traditional SEO, backlinks function as votes of confidence. Other sites linking to yours signal authority to Google’s ranking algorithm.

Citations in AEO work differently. They are direct attributions: An AI engine selecting your content as the source behind a specific claim in a generated answer.

Citations in AEO differ from backlinks in SEO in several important ways:

  • Backlinks are created by other publishers linking to your page. You earn them through outreach, PR, and content quality over time. They influence rank position in a list of results.
  • Citations are assigned by AI models during answer generation. You earn them through structural clarity, factual specificity, and topical authority. They influence whether your content is the answer.

AEO citations matter because when ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google’s AIO cites your page, the answer engine is telling the user: “This is where this information comes from.” That’s a trust signal with direct downstream impact on brand visibility, referral traffic, and conversion.

Pro Tip: Use HubSpot’s AEO Grader to check whether your priority pages are currently being cited (or even surfaced) in AI-generated answers. Many teams assume their top-ranking SEO pages also perform well in AEO. They’re often not.

a screenshot of hubspot’s AEO grader, demonstrating how to track AEO visibility and citations effectively

3. AI Overviews (AIOs) are reshaping click behavior, and citations are the new click-drivers.

2026 Amsive data reveals a nuanced picture of how AIOs are changing search behavior:

  • AIOs are reducing clicks by 34.5% on queries where they appear.
  • They show up disproportionately for informational queries, longer search queries, and queries with higher search volumes (exactly the kind of top-of-funnel content most marketing teams invest heavily in).
  • They appear less frequently for branded and local queries, as well as for shorter search queries.
  • They predominantly surface on non-monetized searches, meaning the queries they’re reshaping are the informational ones people weren’t bidding on anyway.

Here’s why this matters specifically for citations: “When an AIO lowers clicks to regular search results, the sources it cites are most likely to get the remaining clicks.”

Citation concentration — the degree to which a small number of sources dominate AI-generated citations — is high (according to 2026 research from an Ahrefs study, the top 50 domains account for 28.90% of all AIO mentions). If your content earns a citation in an AIO, you’re capturing visibility that would otherwise be lost entirely.

4. The role of citations in AEO is measurable, not theoretical.

One of the biggest barriers teams face is the perception that AEO is vague or unmeasurable. However, I’d like to propose a different, perhaps controversial argument: It’s not.

AEO citations connect directly to trackable outcomes, such as:

  • Citation presence: Is your content appearing as a source in AI-generated answers? HubSpot’s AEO Grader measures this directly against your target queries.
  • LLM referral traffic: Marketing Hub lets you segment traffic arriving from AI platforms separately from organic search, so you can see exactly how much pipeline AI visibility is driving.
  • Click-through from citations: When your page is cited in a Perplexity answer or Google AIO, you can track the resulting visits and conversions just like any other referral channel.
  • Brand mention frequency: Even when citations don’t include a clickable link, brand mentions in AI answers build recognition and trust that influences downstream search and direct traffic.

5. Freshness and depth determine citation durability.

Earning a citation once ain’t the same as keeping it. Regular content updates support freshness signals for AI citations, meaning stale content is replaced by competitors who publish more current data, frameworks, or examples.

AI engines re-evaluate sources continuously. A page that was cited in March may lose that citation by June if a competitor publishes a more current, more comprehensive version of the same answer. (This is especially true for data-driven content, industry benchmarks, and anything tied to evolving best practices, which describes most B2B marketing content.)

Citations in AEO depends on maintaining two things over time:

  • Depth: Content that covers a topic comprehensively, with specific data points, named frameworks, and clear entity relationships, earns citations more consistently than surface-level overviews.
  • Freshness: Scheduling and content audit tools (like HubSpot’s Content Hub) let teams systematize update cycles so that high-priority pages stay current without relying on manual memory.

This is where AEO diverges most clearly from traditional SEO maintenance. In SEO, a well-linked evergreen page can hold its ranking for years with minimal updates. Conversely, in AEO, FAQs and knowledge graphs help AI engines extract and cite accurate information, provided that the information reflects the current reality.

That said, outdated statistics, deprecated tools, and old screenshots are citation killers.

Citation is the mechanism, visibility is the outcome.

The reason citations in AEO deserve dedicated strategic attention comes down to a simple pipeline reality: A quarter of internet users already interact with AI-generated answers monthly.

With traditional search volume declining, the AI answers replacing clicks reward a fundamentally different set of content attributes than those most SEO programs were built around.

Citations are the mechanism through which your content earns visibility in this new layer of search. But they’re not the only AEO metric that matters. These other signals carry weight, too:

  • Brand mentions
  • AI referral conversion rates
  • Answer inclusion rates

These metrics all contribute to the full picture. But citations are the most tangible proof point that your content is structured, authoritative, and current enough to be selected as an AI engine’s source of truth.

What type of content gets cited the most in LLMs?

a hubspot-branded image explaining the types of content that gets cited the most in LLMs

Here’s the thing: Hyper-specific content that demonstrates true expertise gets visibility across LLMs. Generic, AI-generated fluff won’t achieve meaningful visibility in the new search ecosystem, and the data backs this up clearly.

You see, we’re entering a period in which the bar for “good enough” content has risen. When AI engines can generate passable surface-level answers on their own, they don’t need to cite your page for restating what they already know.

They cite sources that add something they can’t generate independently, which happens to be:

  • Original data
  • Specific frameworks
  • Named methodologies (like Loop Marketing, wink wink)
  • Expert analysis grounded in real experience

Citations reward depth, not volume.

1. Earned content dominates AI citations; owned content alone isn’t enough.

2026 research from Search Engine Journal reveals a finding that should reshape how teams think about content strategy: across all AI platforms, earned content accounts for the largest share of citations, while user-generated content (UGC) is increasingly represented. (TLDR — “earned content” is content about your brand that other people create — press mentions, reviews, third-party coverage, and organic social posts you didn’t pay for or publish yourself..)

This means the content most likely to be cited by AI engines isn’t just what you publish on your own domain. More specifically, it’s:

  • Coverage
  • Mentions
  • Reviews
  • Discussions happening about your brand on third-party sites

Thus, the implication for citations in AEO is significant:

  • Earned content (press coverage, industry publications, expert roundups, third-party reviews) gets cited most frequently across LLMs.
  • UGC (forum discussions, community posts, user reviews) is growing as a citation source. AI engines increasingly treat authentic user perspectives as valuable reference material.
  • Owned content (your blog, your resource center, your landing pages) still matters, but it’s not sufficient on its own.

Pro Tip: Earning mentions on trusted third-party sites may be even more valuable than optimizing your domain content alone. Invest in a mix of owned content, third-party coverage, and presence on relevant UGC platforms to increase the likelihood of being cited by AI search engines. Then, track which third-party mentions are driving AI visibility alongside your owned content performance in Marketing Hub.

2. You don’t need to be a top-tier domain to earn citations.

One of the most encouraging findings from Search Engine Journal’s quality distribution analysis is that AI engines cite across a wide quality spectrum — not just from elite publishers:

  • High-quality sources: ~31.5% of citations
  • Upper-mid quality sources: ~15.3% of citations
  • Mid-quality sources: ~26.3% of citations
  • Lower-mid quality sources: ~22.1% of citations
  • Low-quality sources: ~4.8% of citations

The big takeaway here? AI engines prefer higher-quality sources, but they often cite middle-tier sources when those sources provide the clearest, most specific answers.

So, here’s what this means for your team: If you’re not the New York Times or Harvard Business Review, you can still earn citations by producing content that is more specific, better structured, and more factually dense than what larger competitors publish on the same topic.

3. The content attributes that earn citations vs. the ones that don’t.

Based on citation quality distributions and earned content data, a clear pattern emerges about the types of content LLMs actually select as sources.

Here’s what separates content that earns AI citations from content that gets ignored:

Building a Citation-Earning Content Strategy

Citations within AEO depend on a deliberate strategy that spans owned, earned, and community-driven content.

After all the data I’ve shared within this post thus far, here’s what to decipher from it and prioritize in your evolving AEO content strategy:

  • Lead with original insight. Every piece of content should contain at least one data point, framework, or perspective that doesn’t exist anywhere else on the web. This is the single strongest citation driver.
  • Invest in earned coverage. PR, guest contributions to industry publications, participation in expert roundups, and podcast appearances all create third-party content that AI engines can cite, often more readily than your owned pages.
  • Show up where UGC happens. Community forums, LinkedIn discussions, Reddit threads, and review platforms are increasingly cited by LLMs. Having your brand or team members present in these spaces (contributing value, not just promoting) builds the kind of distributed authority that AI engines reward.
  • Structure for extraction. Use Content Hub to implement schema markup, clear heading hierarchies, and definition-style lead sentences that make it easy for AI engines to identify and attribute your claims.

AEO citations ultimately come down to whether your content adds to the knowledge landscape or just restates it. AI engines have access to the sum of published information; they cite sources that contribute something distinct.

The teams that internalize this standard and build it into their editorial workflow will consistently earn citations, while those producing interchangeable content will remain invisible, regardless of how many backlinks they accumulate.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about the Role of Citations in AEO

Do citations replace backlinks?

No. Citations in AEO differ from backlinks in SEO. They serve different functions within different systems, and both remain valuable.

Backlinks tell traditional search engines that other sites endorse your content, which influences your rank position in a list of results. Oppositely, citations tell AI answer engines that your content is the direct source behind a specific claim in a generated answer. But, you see, you need both because your audience is split across both discovery channels.

That said, here’s how they work together:

  • Backlinks build domain authority that still drives organic rankings in Google’s traditional results. A strong backlink profile also contributes to the domain-level trust signals that AI engines consider when evaluating source quality.
  • Citations earn you inclusion in AI-generated answers, where a growing share of buyers now start their research. They’re driven by content clarity, factual specificity, and structural readability, which are factors that backlinks alone can’t guarantee.

Citations in AEO are additive, not a replacement. Teams that abandon link-building in favor of citation-only strategies lose traditional search visibility. Teams that ignore citations while doubling down on backlinks become invisible in AI answers. The right approach is to run both in parallel.

Pro Tip: Use Marketing Hub with HubSpot AEO simultaneously to track performance across both channels — organic search traffic from traditional rankings alongside LLM referral traffic from AI citations. That dual view prevents you from over-indexing on either signal.

a screenshot of hubspot’s AEO product, showcasing how to track answer engine optimization (AEO) and search engine optimization (AEO) simultaneously

How long does it take to earn AI citations?

There’s no fixed timeline, but most teams can expect to see initial citation appearances within 4 to 8 weeks of publishing optimized content, with significant variation depending on three factors:

  • Topical competition. Niche, specific queries with fewer competing sources get cited faster than high-volume, heavily covered topics. A detailed guide on AEO audit workflows will earn citations sooner than a generic “what is SEO” explainer.
  • Content structure. Pages that use clear heading hierarchies, definition-style lead sentences, FAQ schema, and structured data are easier to discover.
  • Domain trust baseline. Sites with existing authority and a track record of accurate, well-cited content get evaluated faster by AI engines. But the citation-quality data show that mid-tier sources account for nearly half of all citations, so a smaller domain with exceptional content specificity can outperform a larger one.

Can AI cite content behind a paywall?

In most cases, no. AI answer engines need to access and process your content to cite it, but hard paywalls block that access for both web crawlers and AI retrieval systems.

Here’s how different content access models interact with AI citation:

  • Fully paywalled content (no access without login/payment) is effectively invisible to AI engines. It won’t be crawled, indexed for AI retrieval, or cited in generated answers.
  • Metered paywalls (first few articles free, then gated) may allow AI engines to access and cite the free content, but anything behind the gate is excluded.
  • Freemium models (full article visible, premium features gated) perform best for citation visibility because the core content is accessible while the conversion mechanism remains intact.
  • Registration walls (free but requires email) vary; some AI crawlers can access this content, but many cannot.

Citations in AEO depend on your content being accessible to the systems generating answers. If your highest-value content is behind a hard paywall, it will not earn AI citations regardless of its quality.

Should I write for AI or humans first?

Write for humans first. Always.

The content attributes that AI engines reward are the same ones that make content genuinely useful to humans.

Every one of those qualities also makes content better for the person reading it:

  • Clarity means a human can understand your point without re-reading the paragraph.
  • Authority means you’re backing claims with data, experience, and specificity that a reader trusts.
  • Structure means scannable headings, logical flow, and direct answers that respect a reader’s time.
  • Freshness means current information that actually helps someone make a decision today.

The teams that try to “write for AI” are wasting their time by stuffing structured data, keyword-loading headers, and formatting content in ways that read awkwardly to humans, and end up producing pages that underperform with both audiences. AI engines are increasingly sophisticated at identifying content that prioritizes manipulation over genuine usefulness.

Write naturally for your human reader, then optimize the structure (headings, schema, lead sentences, factual density) for machine readability.

Pro Tip: Want a reliable gut-check test? Read your content aloud. If it sounds like a human expert explaining something to a colleague, it’s structured well for both audiences. If it sounds like a keyword list wearing a paragraph costume, AI engines will skip it just as quickly as human readers will.

How do I know if an answer engine cited my brand?

Tracking AI citations requires dedicated monitoring because they don’t appear in traditional SEO tools like Google Search Console or standard rank trackers. Here’s a full breakdown of what to track and how:

  • HubSpot’s AEO Grader lets you input your target queries and see whether your content appears in AI-generated answers. This is the fastest way to benchmark your current citation visibility and identify gaps.
  • Manual spot-checking across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI Overviews for your priority queries. Run your top 10-15 target questions through each engine monthly and document which sources are cited.
  • Brand mention monitoring across AI answers. Even when a citation doesn’t include a clickable link, AI engines may reference your brand by name. Tracking named mentions gives you a fuller picture of AI visibility than link-based citation tracking alone.

Citations in AEO make this tracking essential, not optional. Build citation tracking into your monthly reporting cadence alongside organic keyword rankings and traffic metrics.

Citations Are Just the Beginning of AEO Success

Citations are the most direct proof that your content is structured, authoritative, and current enough to be selected as an AI engine’s source of truth. But citations alone don’t capture the full picture.

Citations sit within a broader ecosystem of AI visibility metrics, which are:

  • Brand mentions
  • LLM referral traffic
  • Answer inclusion rates
  • Conversion from AI-driven visits

Together, they determine whether your content strategy is built for how buyers actually find answers today.

The good news? You don’t have to build this from scratch. HubSpot’s AEO Grader enables measurement of AI citation visibility, Content Hub gives you the structural foundation to publish citation-ready content at scale, and Marketing Hub connects AI referral traffic to the actual pipeline so you can prove ROI, not just report impressions. The infrastructure exists. The shift is happening. The only question is whether your content strategy moves with it.

Ready to see how your content performs in AI search? Get started with HubSpot’s AEO Grader today.

Categories B2B

Introducing the HubSpot Agent CLI

A few weeks ago, I wrote about our vision for the agent era: agents should be able to run on HubSpot, and to run HubSpot. I want to go a level deeper on what “run HubSpot” actually means, and our latest step in bringing this vision to life.

Businesses aren’t just sending employees into HubSpot to do work. They’re sending agents. And those agents need to be able to act as effectively as possible on your behalf, wherever they’re operating.

That last part is important. An agent isn’t always running in one place, on one infrastructure.

With AI Connectors, HubSpot context and actions are already available in Claude, ChatGPT, and other environments where teams work. Now, we’re adding another agent infrastructure: Command Line Interface (CLI).

Introducing the HubSpot Agent CLI

The HubSpot Agent CLI brings HubSpot’s data and intelligence into the environments where GTM and ops teams are composing their own workflows – Codex, Claude Cowork, and Claude Code – and allows agents to automate repetitive, bulk, and scheduled work.

The simplest way to think about it: take the questions you’ve been asking or the tasks you’ve been completing repeatedly in chat, and automate them. Build automations in Codex or schedule them in Cowork, and the work happens on its own before you even get to your desk.

It’s built on the same foundation as our public APIs and MCP server that already power our AI Connectors — and it’s designed to complement them, not replace them. AI Connectors are great for work where a human is in the loop, talking to an agent: questions, insights, conversations, campaign analytics. The Agent CLI can help agents accomplish those tasks, too, but it’s particularly useful for the repetitive, bulk, and scheduled work that needs to run without a human in the loop.

Diagram showing the Agentic Customer Platform at the center, connected to three surrounding components labeled MCP, API, and CLI, with small robot icons arranged around the platform.

How the Agent CLI strengthens agents working on HubSpot

The HubSpot Agent CLI will help GTM and ops teams automate and schedule routine tasks, reports, and actions so they get more time back to do the work that matters. No more asking for the same thing multiple times. For example:

  • A marketer could ask for a report every Monday at 8 a.m. that delivers high-fit contacts with no associated deal, no recent sales activity, or missing key enrichment fields, then send RevOps a prioritized cleanup list with suggested next actions.
  • Sales and RevOps could have a daily scan of the pipeline for deals closing this week that have had no activity in the past five days, and ask for a summary.
  • Customer Success could get an automated account review that summarizes open deals, recent support activity, and last NPS score for each account in the book of business.
  • Support could set up an automation for whenever a new ticket comes in from a top tier account, the agent pulls the last five tickets from the contact, summarizes each resolution, and flags recurring issue patterns.

The work happens in the background, ready when you need it.

Why agent infrastructure optionality matters

We’re building a platform where agent infrastructure is a choice your agents make based on what’s right for your workflow.

An agent constrained to one infrastructure is less effective than it could be. Just as customers should have the freedom to choose the best tools for their business, agents should have the same. Optionality enables agents to choose the best infrastructure for the task at hand so they can operate most efficiently, whether they’re running a scheduled automation, processing a bulk operation, or acting on a real-time signal.

The direction is clear: wherever agents are working, and whatever infrastructure they’re running on, HubSpot supports it. That’s what building for the agent era looks like.

The HubSpot Agent CLI is available in private beta now, and anyone interested can sign up here.

Categories B2B

A master class in persuasion from an unlikely place

Walk down a suburban street, and you might stumble across a following sign. It’s probably messy with poor formatting and inconsistent font size. Here’s one that I saw in Houston.

social proof, window cleaning sign

Source

One line stuck out to me. It reads, “Window cleaning in progress.” I love this board because it showcases something that most marketers forget. K&C Window Cleaning doesn’t try to persuade you with flashing slogans or in-your-face claims. They’re far more subtle, and that subtly makes them more effective.

Download the free introductory guide to marketing psychology here. 

While ads are about influence, no one wants to be sold to. Instead, this sign uses psychology to get people thinking, “Other people are using the service, so maybe it’s time to clean my windows.” The idea feels organic and nothing feels forced.

Table of Contents

We follow the actions of others

Back in 2008, the legendary researcher Robert Cialdini ran a notorious study. Set up over 80 days in a mid-priced hotel in the American Southwest, the three researchers ran tests in 190 rooms. Their goal was to encourage visitors to reuse their towels. Inside the room, they tested different signs with over 1,058 guests.

First, they tested a standard environmental message saying, “Help save the environment.” Guests said this message would be most likely to persuade them. But the researchers also tested a message that read “most guests reuse their towels.” The results were surprising. socail proof, reusing towels

The environmental plea encouraged 35% reuse, but the suggestion that the majority of guests reused their towels boosted reuse to 44%. But, then they added a third message: “Most guests in this room reuse their towels.”

social proof, resuing towels messaging

This had an even greater impact. Now, almost 50% of guests reused old towels, up from 35% in the control. The takeaway is simple: we follow the actions of others.

So, if a neighbor pays for window cleaning, we’ll consider doing the same. But marketers forget one important element: Consumers don’t like to feel forced.

We don’t like to feel forced

Messages like “we’re the most popular” and “we’re number one” work, but they’re not perfect. Nicolas Guéguen in 2000 showed that people are more likely to act if they feel autonomous, not forced.

The study attempted to persuade French commuters to spare some coins for a bus ticket. The researchers tried two messages, which yielded surprisingly different results:

  1. “Sorry, would you have some coins for me to take the bus, please?10% agree
  2. “Sorry, would you have some coins for me to take the bus please? But, you are free to accept or refuse.” 47.5% agree

social proof, coin reuse messaging

This method, coined the “but you are free to refuse” technique, has been proven in multiple different domains, both online and offline. A 2013 meta-analysis found that the effect worked across 42 different domains.

That brings us back to K&C Window Cleaning’s sign. It takes all this advice to heart. It showcases the actions others take, but doesn’t force the reader into a corner.

  • It doesn’t say, “We’re the most popular window cleaners in Houston.”
  • It says, “Window cleaning in progress.”

And plenty of other companies do the same. They don’t say they’re popular; they prove it.

My favorite example comes from Sam Tatam’s wonderful book, Evolutionary Ideas. At his favorite cafe in Sydney, Australia, the owners don’t say, “We’re popular.” Instead, they show it by sticking the loyalty cards of their customers on the wall.

social proof, cafe wall

Don’t say it. Show it. It’ll make your message far more effective.

Make decisions feel natural

If you believe in your offering, you’ll want to brand it as the best, brightest, and most popular. Resist the urge. The best marketers let customers make their own decisions by showing value. The most persuasive thing you can do is make your customer feel like the idea was theirs all along, backed by peers who have also reaped benefits.

Categories B2B

What AI Overviews mean for SEO & website traffic

If you’re worried about what AI Overviews mean for SEO, let me remind you of the panic over featured snippets circa 2017. Remember how that turned out? At first, bloggers and SEOs bristled over these quick-glance summaries at the top of the Google SERPs, fearing they’d steal all our traffic. Eventually, however, we adapted and started optimizing content to get mentioned in them. I believe the same will be true of AI Overviews. I mean, it’s already happening: The internet is now filled with the latest advice on how to get cited in AI Overviews (including this article).

Get Started with HubSpot's AEO Tool

I wrote this guide for SEO and marketing leaders seeking practical frameworks to overcome declining clicks and optimize content for Google AI Overviews. Find out what triggers an AI Overview, how AIOs will change SEO playbooks, and where AI Overview optimization fits inside an existing SEO program. I’ll include lots of research and examples, too.

Reddit post from 8 years ago showing the poster's concern about featured snippets taking traffic

Source

A 2018 Reddit post about how featured snippets could “kill the regular internet”

Facebook post from 2023 from a blogger happy that featured snippets are sending him traffic

A 2023 Facebook post from a blogger praising featured snippets and sharing how to capture them

Table of Contents

What are AI overviews?

AI Overviews are AI-generated summaries that appear at the top of the Google search results page, giving a direct answer to your query, synthesized from multiple websites. There may be a few images, links, and a “show more” button you can click to get more details. You can also click the cited sources to read those webpages.

Here’s an example of an AI Overview that the HubSpot Blog shows up in. Notice that HubSpot is featured four times above the fold: as two in-line citations within the AI Overview’s summary, as a clickable snippet to the right of the summary, and as the first blue link in the traditional search results below. Winning the AIO and first position means a brand can multiply the surface area it occupies in Google’s new SERP design.

Google SERP for “inbound marketing” showing what AI Overviews mean for SEO, with HubSpot cited four times across the AI Overview, knowledge panel, and top organic result

AI Mode, on the other hand, is the full AI chatbot experience of Google Search. You can access it by clicking the “AI Mode” tab at the top of Google. Unlike the one-shot nature of AI Overview, AI Mode allows you to continue the conversation in multiple turns, similar to ChatGPT or Claude. The rest of this article will focus specifically on AI Overviews.

Google AI Mode interface showing a conversational response to the “inbound marketing” query with cited sources and a follow-up “Ask anything” input

Importantly, the links that show up as sources in an AI Overview do not always overlap with the top 10 results on the SERP. That means your webpage can rank number one in Google and still get overlooked for an AI Overview. In fact, a Semrush study of 200,000 AI Overviews found that the number one search result appeared in the AIO only 34% of the time on mobile and 46% of the time on desktop.

Because AI overviews seek to instantly and directly answer the query, searchers often do not need to scroll or click further to get their answer. Their query is immediately satisfied. As you can imagine, this can have a devastating effect on click-through rates (CTR) and website traffic.

What AI Overviews Mean for SEO

AI Overviews correlate with lower click-through rates and higher zero-click searches, meaning you can expect to see less organic traffic from Google. On queries where AI Overviews appear, average outbound organic clicks dropped 38% and zero-click searches rose from 54% to 72%, according to a working paper published in April 2026 by researchers from the Indian School of Business and Carnegie Mellon University.

And AI Overviews are increasingly the norm: As of February 2026, they triggered on nearly half (48%) of tracked queries, according to BrightEdge. And when broken down by industry, that rate could be even higher: AI Overviews triggered on 84% of 1,000 B2B queries analyzed by AEO agency Fan Out.

From our own data, HubSpot customer organic traffic was down 27% year-over-year globally as of February 2026 (though I don’t know how much of that, if any, was due to Google AI Overviews). But what I’m saying is this: If you’re seeing consistent declines in traffic, you’re definitely not alone.

So, what do AI Overviews mean for SEO?

  • Success metrics have to shift. With the rise of zero-click searches, clicks are a poor measure of success. Now, it’s about influencing buyers even when they never click through to your site. Instead of obsessing over keyword optimization, positions, and traffic, focus on brand visibility score, mentions, and citations.
  • Traditional SEO still matters. AI Overviews are heavily influenced by the SEO fundamentals you already know: technical SEO, quality content, and topical authority. After all, Google has explained that “AI Overviews use a customized Gemini model, which works in tandem with our existing Search systems.” Ranking well in Google’s SERP will help you win AI Overviews (though it’s not guaranteed).
  • Adding AEO is essential. Answer engine optimization (AEO) is separate from but complementary to SEO. Some AEO tactics have no SEO equivalent. For example, SEO has historically optimized for ranking on specific keywords, while AEO emphasizes topical breadth across the conversational, fan-out queries that answer engines generate behind the scenes. And while SEO is primarily focused on driving traffic to your site, AEO leans heavily on off-site presence — building entity signals through authentic mentions on platforms like Reddit, YouTube, and industry publications — so your brand surfaces in AI answers even when no one clicks through.

What Triggers an AI Overview

Not every query will trigger an AI Overview in Google Search. Here’s what we know triggers an AI Overview, based on large-scale studies from Ahrefs and Semrush.

1. Informational Intent Keywords

Google AI Overview for the informational query “lara bar ingredients” summarizing what LARABAR products are made of and listing popular flavors

The majority of AI Overviews come from informational intent keywords (from top-of-funnel users who just want to learn), but over the past year, AIOs have been moving down the funnel, according to the latest Semrush data. Semrush’s analysis of 10M+ keywords found that the share of informational queries triggering AI Overviews dropped from 91.3% in January 2025 to 57.1% by October 2025. Over the course of 13 months:

  • Commercial queries grew from 8.15% to 18.57%. These indicate mid- to bottom-of-funnel users evaluating a potential purchase.
  • Transactional queries grew from 1.98% to 13.94%. These indicate bottom-of-funnel users looking to make a purchase immediately.
  • Navigational queries skyrocketed from 0.84% to 10.33%. These are typically from users who are Googling a name to reach a website.

Informational pages are still the most likely AIO targets, but the gap is closing fast. Don’t assume your comparison, pricing, or branded pages are safe from AIO disruption because, increasingly, they aren’t.

2. Questions, Especially Those Starting With “What,” “How,” and “Is”

Google AI Overview answering the question query “is today a holiday” with key observances listed for May 13, 2026

Ahrefs found that 57.9% of all question queries triggered an AIO. Further, Semrush found that among the question keywords that triggered AI Overviews in its sample, those starting with “what,” “how,” and “is” appeared most frequently.

3. Queries about Science and People & Society

Google AI Overview for the science query “double blind experiment” defining the research design with cited Wikipedia, National Institutes of Health, and Verywell Mind sources

Science and People & Society are consistently among the industries most likely to trigger an AI Overview, per both Ahrefs and Semrush. Ahrefs found that 43.6% of Science queries and 43.0% of Health queries triggered an AIO — more than double the 21% baseline across all keywords. Semrush’s analysis of November 2025 data placed Science, Computers & Electronics, and People & Society among its top-cited industries.

4. Long Queries (7+ words)

Google AI Overview triggered by the long-tail query “do you have to prove you have health insurance when filing taxes” with citations from IRS.gov and HealthCare.gov

The longer a query, the more likely it is that an AI Overview will appear. Forty-six percent of queries that are seven or more words trigger an AI Overview, according to Ahrefs data. The research also found that the chances of an AIO appearing increase incrementally as query length increases, starting at 9.5% for one word and maxing out at 46.4% at 7+ words.

5. Non-Branded Queries

Ahrefs found that non-branded queries are 1.9x more likely to trigger an AIO than branded queries (24.9% versus 13.1%). Here’s an example: When I enter the non-branded query of “calorie tracking app,” I get this AIO:

Google AI Overview for the non-branded query “calorie tracking app” recommending Noom and MyFitnessPal as top picks for 2026

But when I enter the branded query of “MacroFactor,” I don’t get an AIO at all. Instead, I get MacroFactor’s website.

Google search results for the branded query “macrofactor” showing the MacroFactor website at the top with no AI Overview displayed

This makes sense when you think about intent (which we talked about earlier): Someone typing in “MacroFactor” probably has navigational intent — they’re trying to get to that specific brand’s website. But someone typing in “calorie tracking app” likely has informational or maybe even commercial intent — they’re trying to get more information about an app and/or they’re considering buying.

Overall, if an AI Overview appears for a query, users are far less likely to click any links. That means the goal now is to get cited in the AI Overview to win the visibility and traffic you can. The next section will show you how to do just that.

How to Get Cited in Google AI Overviews

Let’s start with the bare minimum, without which you won’t be able to show up in AI Overviews or Google Search at all:

  • Your site can’t be blocking GoogleBot, Google’s crawler.
  • Your content shouldn’t be in violation of any of Google’s policies.
  • The page should load (return an HTTP 200 success code as opposed to, for example, a 404 error).

Google insists that, beyond those listed above, there are no further technical requirements to be eligible for an AI Overview. However, what the search giant does not explicitly share is how to optimize for AI Overviews (i.e., increase your chances of getting chosen for an AIO).

For that, we’ll need to turn to industry experiments and best practices for AI search content. Most of the evidence below is based on actual analysis of thousands of AI citation data points reported in HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026. I’ll also cite more of the research from the report I mentioned earlier from AEO agency Fan Out.

1. Focus on publishing blog content.

Across eight content types, blog posts/informative articles are the most-cited for AI Overviews, with a 42% citation rate, according to HubSpot’s State of AEO 2026. The least cited content types in AI Overviews are news (non-evergreen articles) at 5% and PR at 6%.

HubSpot State of AEO 2026 chart showing AI engine citation rates by content type, with blog posts leading AI Overview citations at 42%

This makes sense based on the other content types analyzed in the report and what we already know about what triggers AI Overviews: 57.1% of queries that trigger AIOs are informational, and compared to other content types — like comparisons, which lean toward commercial intent and are favored by ChatGPT — blog posts are highly informational. So, if you’re specifically trying to win AIOs, blog posts should be your focus.

2. Optimize your titles.

Across eight title patterns, “What is [X]” is the top performer for AI Overviews, while “Best [X]” lists and How-tos work well too. Including the year in H1s and meta titles also correlates with higher citation rates in AIOs.

HubSpot State of AEO 2026 matrix of best title patterns for answer engines, with “What is [X]” marked as the top performer for AI Overviews

Ideal title for AI Overview: “What is the best website builder for beginners in 2026?”

Not ideal title for AI Overview: “The complete guide to website builders for beginners”

3. Add FAQ sections to your pages.

Pages with FAQ sections are more likely to be cited in AI Overviews, according to the State of AEO 2026. Adding schema markup (a type of structured data you add as code snippets) to those FAQ sections correlates with higher citations in Google AI Mode, Gemini, and Perplexity. Now, having said that, let me be clear: AI Overviews do not require schema markup.

Below is what a good FAQ section looks like, courtesy of HubSpot’s Content Hub pricing guide. Notice the descriptive H2 heading (“Frequently Asked Questions About Content Hub Pricing”) and the questions formatted as H3s — the State of AEO report found that this combination could provide a citation boost.

HubSpot Content Hub pricing page FAQ section with a descriptive H2 (“Frequently Asked Questions About Content Hub Pricing”) and individual questions formatted as H3s

4. Build EEAT signals in each page.

AI Overview is among the most responsive to EEAT signals compared to any of the other answer engines the State of AEO report analyzed. It makes sense, given that the EEAT framework came from Google.

Specifically, the State of AEO found the following page elements are tied to an increase in AI citations (so adding these to your content might help you get cited in more AIOs):

  • Outbound links (especially true for AIOs and Gemini)
  • Statistics and data (especially true for AIOs and ChatGPT)
  • Author bio on page (slightly higher citation impact than the author name alone)
  • A visible “Last updated” date (a stronger citation predictor than the original publish date)

Let’s dissect an excellent example of building EEAT signals into a page from NerdWallet, a company that State of AEO’s analysis identified as one of the most cited B2C brands in its dataset. NerdWallet wins the AIO for the highly competitive query “how to track expenses,” showing up not once, but twice.

Google AI Overview for “how to track expenses” citing NerdWallet twice, demonstrating what AI Overviews mean for SEO when a single site wins multiple AIO citations

Now, let’s click through to the blog post and see how NerdWallet nails EEAT signals on-page. First, there’s an author byline which, upon hover, triggers a pop-up with the author bio (the author bio is also available at the bottom of the article). Within that bio, there’s a wealth of credibility signals: the author’s years of experience, areas of expertise, and even the publications she’s been published in. On top of that, the page clearly displays when the post was last updated.

NerdWallet article on tracking monthly expenses showing an expanded author bio pop-up for Courtney Neidel and a visible “Updated Jan 6, 2026” date — EEAT signals that help win AI Overviews

Source

5. Apply traditional SEO principles too.

And last but certainly not least is our old friend, SEO. No, it hasn’t gone anywhere. In fact, a strong SEO foundation is essential to building a successful AEO program — and SEO expert predictions point to that same overlap between traditional ranking and AI visibility.

I spoke with Elie Berreby, head of SEO and AI search at Adorama, which was named “Top Overachiever” in consumer electronics AI brand visibility by Similarweb in 2026. This means Adorama “ranks significantly higher in AI visibility than in branded search demand,” according to Similarweb’s report. Berreby reiterated the interdependence of traditional search and AI Overviews. “If you are not optimizing for Googlebot, obviously, you are ignoring the entire Google ecosystem, and you’re going to suffer in Gemini, in AI Mode, and in the AI Overviews.”

According to the State of AEO report:

  • From the dataset, HubSpot found that pages that rank high in Google are more likely to be cited in an AI Overview than other answer engines.
  • Pages that rank for more Google search terms and rank highly in SERPs are more likely to be cited by answer engines in general.
  • With an ideal keyword range of 50+, AIO was tied with Perplexity for the highest preferred number of keywords of any of the AI answer engines in the dataset (including Gemini, AI Mode, Copilot, ChatGPT, and SearchGPT).

Takeaway: If you want a page to win an AI Overview, cover more subtopics and answer more subquestions in that one piece than you would have before.

Pro tip: To write a comprehensive piece that’s AIO-worthy, AEO strategist Kaleigh Moore recommends owning the topic by thinking holistically about the questions your buyers might ask. “How do we think about topical ownership for our specific customer trying to solve this very specific problem?” Moore says. “What are the types of questions they’re asking at this stage of the buyer’s journey? And how do we create content that proactively answers those questions?”

6. Create content for and get mentioned on Reddit and YouTube.

For off-site strategy, YouTube is the first place marketers interested in appearing in more AI Overviews should invest. Sixty-one percent of YouTube citations in Fan Out’s analysis came from AIOs. And given that Google owns YouTube, I’m not at all surprised that AIO prefers this platform most. To put that favoritism in perspective, of the 1,000 queries in Fan Out’s dataset, ChatGPT Plus cited no YouTube links at all.

Here’s some of what Fan Out’s report reveals and recommends for optimizing YouTube for AEO:

  • Comparisons and tutorials dominate, so create content in these categories. Specifically, Fan Out names problem-solution, comparison, and best-of as the top three YouTube video types.
  • 13.7% of the YouTube citations had timestamps, so Fan Out recommends adding chapter markers and timestamps to your videos.
  • Optimize your video descriptions to help LLMs understand what your video is about.

In my own experience, AIOs almost always cite a YouTube video for “how to” queries, whether that’s “how to bake banana bread:”

Google AI Overview for “how to bake banana bread” featuring an embedded YouTube video alongside a written recipe summary

Or “how to use a crm for sales.”

Google AI Overview for “how to use a crm for sales” surfacing two YouTube videos

Therefore, I recommend that if you want more AIO citations, create YouTube content targeting “how to” queries, or even partner with YouTube influencers to create content on behalf of your brand.

Reddit is the second-best place to optimize for AIOs. In Fan Out’s analysis of over 33,000 AI citations across Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and ChatGPT Plus, Reddit surfaced as the #1-cited off-site platform overall. However, Reddit was by far most favored by AIO, which made up a 51% share of the Reddit citations (substantial, but still less than YouTube).

Fan Out data reveals this about Reddit:

  • Posts are far more likely to be cited by AI engines than comments.
  • The top three content types are best-of, alternative-seeking, and review-opinion.
  • Engagement on a Reddit post doesn’t matter nearly as much as content structure and topical relevance.

Here’s the power of Reddit on AIOs in real life: I Googled “best crms for small business” and HubSpot was recommended first, thanks to a Reddit post that HubSpot didn’t even create or comment on.

Google AI Overview for “best crms for small business” recommending HubSpot as the top pick, sourced from a Reddit post — an example of what AI Overviews mean for SEO and off-site signals

Measuring and Diagnosing AI Overview Impact

Queries that led to AI Overviews are included in the overall performance report in Google Search Console, but they’re aggregated with the rest of your SEO keywords, so you cannot filter to see only the metrics related to AIOs. To do that, you’ll have to use a third-party tool. Here are two that I recommend.

Ahrefs Brand Radar

Best for: answering the question, “What queries are triggering AI Overviews for this specific page or domain?”

Ahrefs Brand Radar dashboard showing AI Overview share of voice, search demand, web visibility, and YouTube visibility metrics across competing brands

Enter any URL and Ahrefs Brand Radar shows you the queries where it was cited in an AI Overview, including an estimated average monthly search volume for the query, the content of the AI Overview, and a list of the cited domains included in that AIO.

If you’re already using Ahrefs for SEO research and tracking, then it makes sense to use its Brand Radar too for the AEO piece.

Pricing: Brand Radar is included in paid Ahrefs subscriptions, which start at $129/mo, but there are limitations on the number of prompts you can track. Alternatively, Brand Radar is available as a standalone tool starting at $199/mo for one AI platform (such as AI Overviews/AI Mode) but doesn’t include custom prompt tracking. To get custom prompt tracking, you can purchase an add-on package.

Otterly

Best for: answering the question, “Is this domain getting cited in AI Overviews for the tracked prompts I care about?”

Otterly brand report for IBM showing AI Overview citation tracking with brand mentions, average position, and a drop-down engine filter set to Google AI Overview

Otterly tracks prompts across six answer engines, including Google AI Overviews, surfacing both citation data and brand sentiment. I’ve tested Otterly quite a few times for other articles, including one on the best AEO rank trackers, and I really appreciate its ease of use and the fact that it’s a dedicated AEO tool (as opposed to doing both AEO and SEO). For brands focused on AI visibility, Otterly will be more straightforward and affordable than Ahrefs Brand Radar.

Pricing: Otterly pricing starts at $29/mo for 15 tracked prompts across ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, and Microsoft Copilot.

Frequently Asked Questions About AI Overviews and SEO

Can you fully opt out of appearing in AI Overviews?

No, you cannot opt out of having your website appear in AI Overviews specifically, but there is a workaround: Inserting the “nosnippet” robots meta tag prevents pages from being included in snippets not only for AI Overviews/AI Mode but also for Google’s traditional search (e.g., it wouldn’t show up for a featured snippet).

  • Page-specific. Paste this code between <head> and </head> of the HTML on every individual page that you don’t want appearing in AI Overviews.

    Code: <meta name=”googlebot” content=”nosnippet”>

  • Sitewide: If your site uses a template, you can paste this code in the template header if you don’t want any of the pages that use that template to appear in AI Overviews:

    Code: <meta name=”googlebot” content=”nosnippet”>

Pro tip: Do not mix up “nosnippet” with “noindex.” Adding the “noindex” robots meta tag would prevent the affected pages from showing up in all of Google Search (not just AI Overviews), so it is extreme, ill-advised, and would hurt the affected pages’ SEO.

Now, on the flip side, as a searcher, you can’t really opt out of seeing AI Overviews when you perform a search in Google. Here’s what Google says in its help center: “AI Overviews are a core Google Search feature, like knowledge panels. Features cannot be turned off.” However, there are a couple of workarounds:

  1. Add “-ai” at the end of your query. This usually prevents AI Overviews from appearing in your Google search results, but it’s not guaranteed.
  2. Click the “Web” tab filter at the top of the Google results page. This will show you only the web results, minus the AI Overviews.

How do you track clicks from AI Overviews specifically?

Right now, it isn’t possible to reliably isolate clicks from AI Overviews in Google Search Console. The best you can do at the moment is track AIO visibility, and to do that, you’ll need a third-party tool. Ahrefs Brand Radar supports AI Overview coverage and can help you find queries where AI Overviews mention your brand, cite your website, or both. From there, you can compare those visibility signals with GSC and analytics data to estimate the impact AIOs are having on your organic traffic.

Should you create pages specifically for AI Overviews?

No. Google says there are no additional requirements or special optimizations needed to appear in AI Overviews, and both Google and Bing representatives have cautioned against creating separate Markdown, JSON, or bot-facing versions of pages just for LLMs. Instead, focus on improving your existing content using the practices covered above: clear definition-style answers, FAQ sections, EEAT signals, and a visible “Last updated” date. That means optimizing for both traditional SEO and AI search visibility simultaneously, without creating separate “AI-only” pages.

How do you brief executives on AI Overview impact?

When briefing executives on the impact of AI Overviews on your website and business, reframe the challenge as an opportunity to win mindshare and shift the success metrics from clicks to visibility.

“Our site is losing traffic” is a bad look for any marketing org. But ultimately, leadership cares about the bottom line: Is this earning the business money or not? Clicks used to be a proxy for that, but they’re not anymore. It doesn’t matter if your site is losing clicks if the business is actually gaining customers.

Studies show that LLM traffic converts at a higher rate than traditional Google-referred traffic. Ahrefs found that its AI search traffic converts 23x better than traffic from traditional organic search. Semrush concluded that LLM visitors converted 4.4x better than traditional organic search visitors, after analyzing over 500 digital marketing and SEO topics.

Suggest a shift from traffic to share of voice; that’s the metric that shows how your brand stacks up against competitors in AI visibility. Because sure, your site might be losing traffic, but there’s a good chance that across the board in your category, competitors are losing traffic too. What matters, then, is that when a potential customer asks about your category, whether they consult Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, or Perplexity — your brand is the one they see. Communicate to leadership that by winning more AI Overviews (even if your brand isn’t linked or your site isn’t clicked), you’re actually winning mindshare.

Beyond AI Overviews: Tracking Your Visibility Across All Answer Engines

By now, I hope you see that AI Overviews, like the featured snippets that preceded them, represent a push-and-pull that has always existed between content creators and Google: The search engine constantly changes its algorithm and SERP design, and what else can we do besides adapt? AI Overviews could be an exciting opportunity to be the recommended answer to a potential customer’s question — even if they never click on your website.

I do want to caution against taking a myopic view of AEO and focusing only on AI Overviews, however. They are just one surface in the AI search landscape. You can’t forget about the opportunities for your brand to show up in answers from other LLMs, such as ChatGPT and Perplexity.

HubSpot AEO is a specialized tool that tracks citations in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini and provides recommendations to increase your visibility in each. Pricing starts at $50/month with no other HubSpot subscription required.

For teams running marketing in HubSpot already, AEO is included in Marketing Hub Pro and Enterprise. The integrated version uses your CRM data to suggest which prompts to track from day one, so tracking is grounded in your actual business context rather than generic category guesses. And because the recommendations connect to HubSpot’s content tools, you can take action on AEO insights within the same tool.

The takeaway: AI Overviews matter, but they’re only one slice of the bigger AEO opportunity. Once you broaden the lens to every major answer engine, you can stop guessing where your visibility is leaking and start closing those gaps systematically.