Why GEO is a Reputation Problem, Not a Tactics Problem
Summarize this article with AI
A client calls me with an AI visibility problem
A client calls me on a Thursday afternoon. B2B SaaS, 4,200 organic sessions per month, solid positioning on classic Google.
He invested $6,500 in a GEO service. Result: zero citations in ChatGPT, one single mention in Perplexity across 47 tested queries.
The agency had delivered:
- A dedicated « AI info » page with structured markdown
- FAQs inserted across 120 pages of content
- An auto-generated llms.txt file
- « Key takeaways » added to the top of every article
Everything was technically correct. Everything was useless.
The problem wasn’t technical. It was a reputation problem.
No third party validated the legitimacy of this brand in its category. No signal gave LLMs reason to justify a recommendation. The content was optimized but invisible.
According to the analysis published by Search Engine Land on April 24, 2026, most widely promoted GEO tactics have marginal impact because they don’t address the real decision mechanism for LLMs: reputation consensus.
I’m going to show you why tactics fail, what actually works, and how to structure your GEO approach around reputation, not optimization.
Why viral GEO tactics don’t move the needle
Scroll LinkedIn for 30 seconds. You’ll hit the next viral GEO hack.
« Create an AI info page so LLMs understand your brand. »
« Convert your content to markdown to explode AI visibility. »
« Launch an automated Claude audit to generate your llms.txt. »
These recommendations aren’t wrong. They’re just insufficient.
They assume LLMs decide to recommend a brand based on technical signals. But according to Search Engine Land, the decision rests on how your brand is positioned, categorized, and validated across the web.
Here are the 4 most overrated GEO tactics I’ve observed over the past 8 months:
1. FAQs inserted without user logic
Google recommends FAQ implementation with schema markup. Result: brands insert useless FAQs at the bottom of pages because they think it « helps GEO. »
Example I observed on a client site (e-commerce, furniture):
« Why choose our brand? »
« What are our shipping times? »
« How do I contact customer service? »
These questions add nothing for the user. They answer no real intent. They clutter the expérience.
Result in ChatGPT: 0 citations across 23 tested queries.
2. Systematic « key takeaways » at the top of every article
Another glorified tactic: add a « Key Points » box at the top of each article to make it easier for LLMs to read.
It’s not a bad idea per se. It can improve readability for humans. But there’s no public evidence that a « key takeaways » block materially improves AI visibility on its own.
Search Engine Land confirms it: over-formatting for LLMs has no measurable impact without a reputational foundation.
3. Over-formatting HTML to « help LLMs »
Some force rigid patterns on every page: mandatory Q&A, bullet points in every section, HTML tables inserted where they don’t belong.
The assumption: LLMs need help extracting your content. So you complicate the editorial process with « chunking » and forced formatting.
Result: content becomes artificial. User expérience degrades. And LLMs still don’t recommend your brand.
4. The Reddit rush for GEO
Reddit became the GEO obsession of 2025-2026. Brands spam threads because they think « Reddit = AI visibility. »
It’s true that Reddit carries the voice of real users. It’s true ChatGPT cites Reddit. But Reddit spam is counterproductive.
Moderators actively hunt astroturfing and « SEO shaping » attempts in product review threads. Eli Schwartz documented this in detail.
Again: the problem isn’t technical. It’s legitimacy.
GEO is a reputation problem, not a technical problem
Here’s what Search Engine Land highlights, and what I validate in the field: GEO is a strategic problem at the executive level, not an operational problem at the SEO level.
LLMs don’t recommend your brand because your content is well-formatted. They recommend it because it’s validated by third parties.
Three signals structure this validation:
1. Brand positioning
Is your brand clearly associated with a specific category in the sources LLMs ingest?
Example client (SaaS, project management, 8,700 organic sessions per month):
- Fuzzy positioning: « collaboration and productivity platform »
- Result: 2 citations across 38 tested queries in Perplexity
We tightened positioning: « project management tool for technical teams. » We aligned messaging across the site, in press releases, in customer testimonials.
Six months later: 19 citations across 38 queries. Same content, same technical structure.
2. Category alignment
LLMs classify brands by category. If you’re miscategorized in third-party sources (directories, comparators, media), you don’t appear in the right answers.
Case observed: an e-commerce client (high-end furniture, 12,400 sessions per month) was categorized as « général décor » in 6 out of 9 directories.
Result: 0 citations in ChatGPT on queries like « best high-end contemporary furniture. »
We corrected directory listings. We published 3 guest articles in design media. We got 2 mentions in sector-specific buying guides.
Four months later: 7 citations across 15 tested queries.
3. Third-party signals
LLMs rely on what others say about you. Not what you say about yourself.
If no one mentions you, you don’t exist in the LLM universe. No matter the quality of your content.
Search Engine Land puts it this way: « GEO performance is shaped less by technical tweaks and more by how consistently your brand is positioned, categorized, and validated across the web. »
That’s exactly what I see with my clients. Brands that accumulate third-party mentions (press, niche blogs, comparators, moderated forums) gain AI visibility. Others stagnate.
How to build a reputational foundation for GEO
If GEO rests on reputation, how do you build that reputation systematically?
Here’s the framework I’ve applied with my clients since October 2025. No hacks. No viral tactics. Just a structured approach.
Step 1: Audit your current positioning
Ask yourself 3 questions:
- What category do third parties associate with your brand?
- How many third-party sources mention you in that category?
- Are these mentions consistent with your strategic positioning?
Test manually. Search your brand + your category in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini. Note the sources cited.
If you don’t appear, your reputation doesn’t exist yet in the LLM universe.
Step 2: Align internal and external messaging
Your positioning must be identical everywhere:
- On your site
- In directory listings (Google Business Profile, sector directories)
- In press releases
- In customer testimonials you distribute
A SaaS client (fleet management, 5,900 sessions per month) used 4 different descriptions for their product. Result: no clear categorization by LLMs.
We standardized to: « fleet management software for small transport companies. » Everywhere. Site, listings, press, testimonials.
Three months later: citation rate went from 5% to 34% across a panel of 29 queries.
Step 3: Produce third-party signals
You can’t force LLMs to cite you. But you can increase the odds by multiplying third-party mentions.
Concrete actions:
- Guest articles in sector media (not generic SEO blogs—real editorial publications)
- Participation in buying guides or comparators (contact authors, offer your data)
- Customer testimonials published on third-party sites (not just yours)
- Interviews, podcasts, webinars where you’re cited as a reference
Case client (e-commerce, sports equipment, 9,200 sessions per month):
- 0 third-party mentions in August 2025
- 8 guest articles published September-January
- 3 mentions in sector comparators
- AI citation rate went from 0% to 41% across 22 queries in 5 months
Step 4: Optimize semantic structure (after, not before)
Once the reputational foundation is laid, technical optimization becomes useful.
Then, yes, you can:
- Create an « AI info » page with a structured summary of your positioning
- Add relevant FAQs (answering real user questions)
- Structure content with clear headers and lists
- Implement an llms.txt file if your site is complex
But these optimizations only matter if LLMs already have reason to consider you legitimate.
Search Engine Land sums it up well: technical tactics amplify an existing signal, they don’t create it.
How to measure your reputation in the AI universe
Reputation isn’t measured with Google Analytics. It’s measured with manual tests and specialized tools.
Here’s how I work with my clients:
1. Representative query panel
Build a list of 20-40 queries matching your category and use cases.
Example for a project management SaaS:
- « best project management tool for technical teams »
- « sprint tracking software for developers »
- « Jira alternative for small teams »
- « collaborative product roadmap tool »
Test these queries in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini. Note if your brand is cited, at what rank, with which source.
2. Citation rate
Calculate the percentage of queries where your brand appears.
Example client (HR SaaS, 6,800 sessions per month):
- January 2026: 3 citations across 31 queries = 9.7%
- April 2026: 18 citations across 31 queries = 58.1%
Progress: +498%. Without changing the site’s technical structure. Only by building third-party reputation.
3. Sources cited by LLMs
Analyze which sources LLMs use to mention you (or your competitors).
If competitors are cited via comparators or sector guides, that’s where you need to invest.
If you’re cited nowhere, your reputation doesn’t exist in the sources LLMs ingest.
4. Monthly tracking
Retest every month with the same query panel. Track citation rate evolution, average rank, sources used.
It’s the only way to know if your reputational efforts are working.
With an e-commerce client (organic cosmetics, 14,200 sessions per month), we tracked progress over 6 months:
| Month | Citation rate | New third-party mentions |
|---|---|---|
| October 2025 | 11% | 0 |
| November 2025 | 14% | 2 |
| December 2025 | 23% | 5 |
| January 2026 | 31% | 3 |
| February 2026 | 39% | 4 |
| March 2026 | 47% | 6 |
Direct correlation between new third-party mentions and citation rate progress.
The 5 mistakes sabotaging your GEO strategy
Here are the 5 most frequent errors I see with clients who come to me after failing with a standard GEO service.
Mistake 1: Starting with technique
Creating an llms.txt file before you have third-party mentions is like building a conversion funnel before you have traffic.
It’s pointless.
Technique amplifies an existing signal. It doesn’t create the signal.
Mistake 2: Duplicating classic SEO tactics
GEO isn’t SEO 2.0. The mechanisms are different.
In SEO, you optimize for algorithms that crawl and index your content. In GEO, you build reputational consensus in sources you don’t control.
On-page tactics (density, internal linking, silos) have marginal impact in GEO.
Mistake 3: Ignoring strategic positioning
If your positioning is fuzzy, your categorization will be fuzzy. If your categorization is fuzzy, LLMs won’t know when to recommend you.
A SaaS client (CRM, 7,100 sessions per month) positioned itself as « all-in-one customer relationship platform. » Too vague.
We tightened it: « CRM for real estate agencies. » Citation rate went from 8% to 52% in 4 months.
Mistake 4: Neglecting third-party sources LLMs prioritize
Not all backlinks are equal in GEO. A link from a no-name directory has zero impact. A mention in a sector comparator from a recognized media changes everything.
Identify the sources LLMs cite for your competitors. That’s where you need to appear.
Mistake 5: Measuring only organic traffic
Google organic traffic tells you nothing about your AI visibility.
You can have 50,000 organic sessions per month and 0 citations in ChatGPT. They’re separate universes.
Measure your AI reputation with a manual query panel. It’s the only reliable indicator for now.
What GEO will become in 2026 and beyond
GEO is still shifting terrain. LLMs evolve fast. The sources they prioritize change. Citation mechanisms refine.
But one thing stays stable: reputation trumps technique.
Here’s what I anticipate for the next 12 months, based on what I’m observing with my clients and analyses like Search Engine Land’s:
1. Brands without third-party reputation will become invisible
LLMs will keep prioritizing validated third-party sources. If no one talks about you, you don’t exist in their universe.
Result: brands investing in press relations, editorial partnerships, and sector mentions will pull ahead.
2. Technical tactics will become commoditized
llms.txt files, AI info pages, structured FAQs—everyone will adopt them. They’ll become the norm.
So competitive advantage won’t come from there. It’ll come from positioning quality and consistency across third-party sources.
3. Comparators and buying guides will become strategic
LLMs love comparators. Why? Because they structure information by catégories and criteria.
If you’re not present in your sector’s main comparators, you’re losing major AI visibility leverage.
4. Reddit will either professionalize or die in GEO
Reddit spam is killing Reddit’s value for LLMs. Moderators are tightening rules. LLMs will probably adjust their weighting.
Likely result: Reddit stays relevant but only for brands participating authentically and long-term.
5. AI reputation measurement will industrialize
Right now we measure GEO manually. It’s artisanal. Tools will emerge to automate citation tracking, source monitoring, position tracking.
Search Engine Land actually launched an « AI Visibility Checker » in 2026. Others will follow.
But the logic will stay the same: measure your reputation in the LLM universe, not your technical performance.
My take: brands winning in GEO over the next 2 years will understand that GEO isn’t a channel. It’s the reflection of your legitimacy in your category.
If you’re legitimate, recognized, validated by third parties: you’re visible.
If you’re unknown, fuzzy, or miscategorized: no technical tactic will save you.
How to apply this approach right now
You can’t rebuild your reputation in 48 hours. But you can start structuring your approach today.
Here’s the action plan I recommend to clients in our first session:
Week 1: Audit your positioning
- Test 20 representative queries in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini
- Note if you’re cited, at what rank, with which sources
- Identify the sources LLMs use for your competitors
Week 2: Clarify your strategic positioning
- Write your precise category in a single sentence
- Verify this phrasing is consistent across your site, listings, materials
- Fix inconsistencies (directories, bios, releases)
Week 3-4: Produce your first third-party signals
- Identify 3-5 relevant sector media or comparators
- Contact authors, pitch guest articles or data contributions
- Publish a customer testimonial on a third-party site (not just yours)
Month 2-3: Iterate and measure
- Retest citations every 4 weeks
- Track citation rate, average rank, sources
- Adjust messaging if LLMs miscategorize you
Month 4+: Optimize technical structure
- Once you have third-party mentions and citation rate > 30%, invest in technical optimization
- Create your AI info page, structure FAQs, implement llms.txt if needed
This plan works regardless of sector, size, budget. Because it tackles the cause (reputation), not the symptom (visibility).
I’ve applied it with 23 clients between August 2025 and March 2026. All progressed. Some by +820% in citation rate. Others by +140%. But all moved forward.
Because all built a reputational foundation before optimizing technique.
Your site might already be well-optimized technically. But if no one validates your legitimacy, LLMs won’t recommend you.
The question isn’t « how do I optimize my content for LLMs? »
The question is: « how do I build consensus around my legitimacy in my category? »
Answer that, and GEO follows.
Audit your GEO positioning in 60 minutes
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Why don’t classic GEO tactics work?
Because they treat a symptom (lack of AI visibility) instead of the cause (lack of reputational consensus). LLMs recommend brands validated by third parties, not technically optimized brands.
What is a third-party signal in GEO?
It’s a mention of your brand in a third-party source: press article, sector comparator, buying guide, customer testimonial published elsewhere than your site. LLMs use these signals to validate your legitimacy.
How do I measure my reputation in the AI universe?
Test 20-40 representative queries manually in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini. Note if your brand is cited, at what rank, with which sources. Calculate your citation rate and track it monthly.
How long does it take to see GEO results?
3-6 months if you build a reputational foundation (third-party mentions, category alignment). Technical optimization alone gives marginal results, regardless of timeline.
Does GEO replace classic SEO?
No. They’re separate universes. SEO optimizes for crawl and indexing algorithms. GEO builds reputational consensus in third-party sources. Both coexist and complément each other.

