Updated June 2026 · 11 min read · By Vincent Wesley Couey
Last reviewed: June 10, 2026 Next review due: September 2026 Snapshot data: June 7, 2026

Is GEO Real, or Just SEO Repackaged? The Honest Answer

Are the cynics right that GEO is just SEO repackaged?

Partially yes, and the vendors will never say so. Most GEO tactics overlap with foundational SEO: structured content, named authors, original data, schema markup, and citations from credible third parties lift you in both Google organic and AI answer engines. A community thread on Indie Hackers that circulated widely in early 2026 put the cynics' case bluntly: roughly eight in ten GEO agencies are selling the same deliverables under a new acronym, and there is no mechanism in the vendor landscape to distinguish them from the two that are not.

We are conceding that point. It is accurate. The shared tactics exist because the underlying quality signals that Google's organic index and AI engines reward are similar: a page that is well-structured, recently dated, named-author, and cites original data is more likely to be cited in an AI answer for the same reason it ranks in search. The Princeton GEO framework (Aggarwal et al., 2023) demonstrated this in a controlled benchmark on a single engine: adding statistics, quotations, and citations to a source raised its generative-engine visibility by up to roughly 40 percent. The tactics are not invented. They work.

But the cynic's case stops short of the actual structural difference, and that difference is where GEO becomes a real, distinct lever rather than a rebrand. That difference is the citation economy.

Eight out of ten GEO agencies are, in fact, repackaging SEO.The honest answer

Just SEO Repackaged

the cynics' case, partly correct

overlapping tactics8 in 10 agencies

Eight in ten GEO agencies sell the same deliverables under a new acronym.

structured contentnamed authorsschema markup

A Real, Distinct Lever

where GEO stops being a rebrand

off-domain citation economy

Roughly 4 in 5 citations point off your own domain.

third-party pages6 to 12 month lag4.4x to 23x conversion

The overlapping tactics are real, but the off-domain citation economy is the structural difference that classical SEO does not have.

What is empirically real about GEO, and what is noise?

The conversion rate differential is real. The citation timeline is real and worse than agencies admit. The off-domain citation economy is real and most teams underinvest in it.

Three things in GEO are empirically grounded and not hype. Start with conversion rates. Multiple practitioners publishing verified Google Analytics 4 data in 2025 and 2026 have reported that visitors arriving from AI engine citations convert at significantly higher rates than organic search visitors, with figures between 4.4x and 23x depending on the category and intent type. The mechanism is not mysterious: a buyer who asked an AI engine "what is the best tool for X" and then clicked a cited source is further down the purchase funnel than a typical organic visitor who found a listicle. Higher declared intent at the point of click produces higher conversion rates.

The second real thing is the citation timeline. Our own build experience produced zero measurable citations in under 60 days on AEO-optimized content. Six to twelve months is the honest expected range before you should expect consistent AI citation presence, and only if you have also earned off-domain coverage. This is the GEO Eligibility-vs-Citation gap: you can be perfectly eligible for citation (structured pages, schema, named author, original data) and remain uncited for 6 to 12 months if the third-party review coverage, forum discussion, and comparison roundups that AI engines pull from most heavily have not yet pointed to you.

Stage 1
On-page eligibility
Schema, named author, original data, structured content. Achievable in weeks.
The Gap (6-12 mo)
Off-domain seeding
Third-party reviews, forum mentions, comparison roundups pointing at you. This is what decides most citations.
Stage 3
Consistent citation
Named by 2+ engines on category queries. Measurable on AECI Engine-Consensus flag.

The GEO Eligibility-vs-Citation gap: on-page quality is necessary but not sufficient. Off-domain seeding is the slow variable that separates eligible from cited. Source: Lucreya field observation, June 2026.

The third real thing is the off-domain citation economy, and it is the most underappreciated finding in our June 2026 measurement. We captured 60 AI answers across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews on 20 GTM buying-intent queries, and logged 162 Perplexity citations by hand. The source-type breakdown shows the problem clearly.

Third-party review / listicle
~58%
Vendor first-party
~20%
Forum / UGC (Reddit, YouTube, LinkedIn)
~16%
Comparison aggregator (G2, TrustRadius)
~6%

Source type mix across approximately 162 Perplexity citations, classified from domain signatures. Lucreya original measurement, data.json sourceTypeMix_perplexity_estimate. Snapshot 2026-06-07. Proportions are estimates.

Reddit alone was cited in 15 of 20 Perplexity answers (75 percent), the single most-cited domain by a significant margin. Zapier.com appeared in 30 percent of answers, YouTube in 25 percent. Vendor first-party content accounted for roughly 20 percent of citations. The practical implication: a GEO program that only publishes on its own domain is optimizing for the 20 percent slice of the citation surface that was already most likely to point to it. The 80 percent that decides most AI answers lives on third-party pages that someone else has to write.

The structural exemplar: The single most-instructive cited page we coded in our study was zapier.com/blog/jasper-vs-copy-ai/. It carries Article and BreadcrumbList schema, a comparison table, current pricing data, 2026 freshness signals, and approximately 2,600 words. It is not published by Jasper or Copy.ai. It is a third-party comparison written by a publisher with accumulated authority in the tools category. The cited set is dominated by this pattern: structured, priced, dated, independent. Original first-party measurement was nearly absent from the 162 citations we logged. Source: Lucreya original measurement, data.json structuralExemplar_coded. Snapshot 2026-06-07.

When is GEO actually worth investing in?

When your category is contested: three engines naming three different top tools means the winner is still being decided, and content plus off-domain seeding can influence that decision.

The most important finding in our June 2026 study is the cross-engine divergence data. We submitted 20 GTM buying-intent queries to ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews. Across the 14 category and intent queries (excluding head-to-head comparisons), the three engines named the same top tool on only 5 (36 percent), agreed two-of-three on 6 (43 percent), and named three completely different top tools on 3 (21 percent). All three full-divergence queries fall in the GEO and AI-search-visibility category itself.

Category signal What we observed (June 2026 data) GEO verdict
Full 3-engine consensus Apollo.io (prospecting, all 3 engines). Clay (enrichment, all 3). Surfer SEO (SEO content optimization, all 3). Opus Clip (video repurposing, 2-3). Wait / Defend
2-of-3 agreement Instantly.ai (cold email, 2 of 3). 11x (AI SDR, 2 of 3). Jasper (copywriting, 2 of 3). Selective
Full divergence (contested) GEO visibility tools: Profound / Semrush AI Visibility / Goodie AI named by different engines on 3 of 3 GEO-category queries. Invest Now
No AI Overview triggered Best AI SDR tool 2026: AI Overview did not trigger on timed re-run (had shown on earlier probe). Volatile / Monitor

Source: Lucreya original measurement, data.json crossEngineAnalysis + headlineFindings. Snapshot 2026-06-07. AI answers are volatile; re-run before acting on this table.

The category-level table is the decision frame. In settled categories, GEO investment mostly defends a position you may already hold, or tries to displace a consensus winner with a 12-plus-month horizon. The AI engines converged on Apollo for prospecting the same way Google organic converged on a handful of named authoritative domains: slowly, then all at once, and then very hard to dislodge. That is a brand-authority problem with a long timeline, not a content-optimization problem with a short one.

In contested categories, specifically the GEO and AI-visibility tooling space in our data, the three engines named different tools on all three of the category queries we ran. That is the signal a strategist looks for: the AI has not made up its mind yet. A brand that earns third-party review coverage, structured comparison pages, and forum presence in a contested category is influencing an unsettled consensus, not fighting a settled one.

This is why the GEO category is the one Lucreya operates in and tracks most closely. Our own data flags our own category as the most winnable in the set. We are not exempt from the finding, and the finding is why we publish it. For the full engine-by-engine breakdown of who is named and by which engine, the CONSENSUS Protocol study is the primary source, part of our ongoing CONSENSUS Protocol method.

When should you NOT invest in GEO?

We will tell you when you do not need GEO. Three conditions disqualify it as a near-term play, and honest agencies will say so.

We will tell you when you do not need GEO. That sentence converts harder than any pitch.When not to invest

This is the sentence that converts harder than any pitch deck. GEO agencies structurally cannot say it because they sell the product whether the conditions are right or not. We can say it because our business model is the audit first, and the retainer only when the audit returns a contestable category.

Do not invest in GEO as a near-term pipeline play if any of the following three conditions apply:

1. Your category already has a three-engine consensus winner. In our data, Apollo.io was named by all three engines as the top prospecting tool. Clay was named by all three for enrichment. Surfer SEO was named by all three for SEO content optimization. If you are competing in those categories, GEO is a long-horizon brand-authority program, not a 90-day pipeline play. The AI has made up its mind. You are fighting a settled consensus with content tactics, and that fight takes years, not months.

2. You have under 60 days. Our own AEO-optimized content produced zero measurable citations in under 60 days. The real citation timeline is 6 to 12 months, and that range only applies if off-domain seeding is already in motion. An agency promising GEO results in 30 to 60 days is selling eligibility improvements (which are real and fast) as citation improvements (which are slow). Those are different things.

3. You have no off-domain presence and no plan to earn it. With roughly 4 in 5 citations going to third-party pages, a GEO program that only publishes to its own domain is operating on about 20 percent of the citation surface. The other 80 percent requires earning coverage: comparison roundups written by independent publishers, Reddit threads where your tool comes up organically, G2 and TrustRadius reviews with depth, YouTube walkthroughs by creators who use your product. These are not things you publish; they are things you earn, and the earning takes time and an external outreach program, not just content production.

If none of those three conditions applies, your category is contested, you have time, and you are prepared to earn off-domain coverage, GEO is worth a structured investment. The right entry point is an AI Visibility Audit that runs the CONSENSUS Protocol on your category first and returns your Engine-Consensus flag before you commit retainer spend.

Find out if your category is contested enough to be worth it

The free AI Visibility Audit runs the CONSENSUS Protocol on your brand: we submit your category's buying-intent queries to ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews, and return your Engine-Consensus flag with a snapshot date. If your category is settled, we will say so. If it is contested, we will show you the gap. No blended score. No pitch before the data.

Run my free AI Visibility Audit ›

How do AI engines actually decide who to cite?

In our data, third-party authority beats vendor self-publication 4-to-1, Reddit beats every other single domain, and Google AI Overviews showed up on 19 of 20 queries.

This section is about what the citation data shows, not what the GEO frameworks predict. We logged 162 Perplexity citations across 20 queries, classified them from domain signatures, and coded one structurally as a formal exemplar. The patterns are consistent enough to treat as operational signals rather than anomalies.

Reddit was cited in 15 of the 20 Perplexity answers (75 percent), more than any other domain. No other domain appeared in more than 30 percent of queries (Zapier at 30 percent, YouTube at 25 percent). Beyond those three, citations spread across 100-plus distinct domains, most appearing in only one query. The concentration is in coverage breadth, not in a single dominant publisher, except for Reddit's structural presence across the entire dataset.

What that tells a strategist: Reddit threads where your product comes up naturally in user discussion are not optional for AI citation presence in the GTM category. They are the dominant citation surface. This is also why authentic community presence (genuine customer advocates discussing your product in forums) is more valuable than any amount of branded publishing, and why manufactured Reddit threads get detected and punished while organic community discussions persist and compound.

Google AI Overviews triggered on 19 of the 20 queries (95 percent) in our run. The one miss, best AI SDR tool 2026, had shown an AI Overview on an earlier probe, illustrating how volatile the trigger is. AI Overviews are nearly universal on GTM buying-intent queries, which means the answer surface is almost always present and the citation fight is worth having, but any individual query's Overview may not trigger on any given day.

For the full cross-engine divergence analysis and the specific tools named per engine per query, see the CONSENSUS Protocol measurement, which is part of our broader CONSENSUS Protocol method, and the companion Who AI Recommends: GTM 2026 study. For specific tactics on structural page improvements that raise citation eligibility, the execution guide at how to rank in AI answers runs through the page-level playbook. The AI tools landscape that feeds these citation pools is tracked in depth at Nesyona's AI SEO tools index.

Frequently asked questions

Is GEO just SEO repackaged?
Partially. Most GEO tactics overlap with foundational SEO (structured content, named authors, original data, schema, credible third-party citations). But GEO has a structurally different citation economy: roughly 4 in 5 citations in our June 2026 study went to third-party pages, not the vendor's own site. AI recommends the tool but cites someone else to justify it. That off-domain dynamic does not exist in classical SEO, so GEO is not wholly new but it is not the same lever either.
Is GEO worth it for my business?
It depends on whether your category is contested. In settled categories the engines already agree on a winner. In contested categories, specifically GEO and AI-visibility tooling in our June 2026 data, three engines named three completely different top tools on three queries. Run the CONSENSUS Protocol on your brand first to find out which situation you are in before committing retainer spend.
How long does GEO take to produce citations?
Longer than most agencies admit. Our own build experience produced zero measurable citations in under 60 days. The honest range is 6 to 12 months before consistent citation presence, and only if off-domain seeding is also in motion. On-page eligibility and actual citation presence are two different states, separated by the GEO Eligibility-vs-Citation gap.
What categories are most contested in AI search in 2026?
GEO and AI-search-visibility tools are the most contested category in our June 2026 data. All three full-divergence queries fall there: best GEO tool to track AI search visibility (S2), how to track brand mentions in ChatGPT (S4), and best AI search optimization platform 2026 (S7). Mature categories like prospecting (Apollo), enrichment (Clay), and SEO optimization (Surfer) are settled.
What does 'AI traffic converts 4.4x to 23x organic' mean?
Multiple practitioners publishing verified GA4 data in 2025 and 2026 report that visitors from AI engine citations convert at significantly higher rates than organic search visitors, with figures between 4.4x and 23x. The mechanism is higher declared intent: a user who got a recommendation from an AI engine before clicking is further down the decision funnel. These are external published figures; Lucreya has not yet generated sufficient AI-referred traffic volume to publish our own verified rate.
When should a team NOT invest in GEO?
Three conditions disqualify it as a near-term play: (1) your category already has a three-engine consensus winner; (2) you have under 60 days (citation lag is 6 to 12 months minimum); (3) you have no off-domain presence and no plan to earn it (roughly 80 percent of citations go to third-party pages, not your own site). If none of those apply, GEO is worth a structured investment starting with an audit.

Bottom line

GEO is empirically real as a distinct lever, not just SEO repackaged. The conversion rate differential is real (4.4x to 23x organic in published practitioner data), the off-domain citation economy is real and decisive (roughly 80 percent of citations in our study went to third-party pages), and the citation timeline is real and worse than most agencies will tell you (zero citations under 60 days in our own build; 6 to 12 months is honest). The cynics are right that most agencies repackage SEO, and those agencies cannot write the sentence we just wrote: eight in ten GEO agencies are selling SEO under a new name. But the two that are not are operating on a distinct insight, which is that the leverage for AI citation presence lives mostly off your own domain, in the forum threads and comparison roundups and review pages written by people who are not you. That is not a content production problem. It is a community and earned-media problem, and it takes different tactics and a longer timeline. If your category is contested (three engines, three different tools), GEO is a real strategic window. If your category is settled, wait. Run the audit first and find out which one you are in.

  1. Lucreya original measurement. Who AI Recommends: GTM Tool and Source Citations Across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews (2026). 20 queries, 3 engines, 60 answers, 162 Perplexity citations. Snapshot date 2026-06-07. lucreya.com/research/who-ai-recommends-gtm-2026/. CC BY 4.0. Dataset DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20632768 (Zenodo, CC BY 4.0). verified 2026-06-07
  2. Aggarwal, P., Murahari, V., Rajpurohit, T., Kalyan, A., Narasimhan, K., Deshpande, A. GEO: Generative Engine Optimization. 2023. arxiv.org/abs/2311.09735. Princeton framework establishing that statistic, quotation, and citation additions can raise generative-engine visibility by up to roughly 40 percent in a controlled single-engine benchmark.
  3. AI traffic conversion rate figures (4.4x to 23x organic). External practitioner reports published in 2025 and 2026 citing verified GA4 data on AI-referred visitor conversion rates. Lucreya does not currently have sufficient AI-referred traffic volume to publish an independent verified rate; these figures are cited as external findings and should be confirmed against the originating sources before reuse.
  4. Lucreya CONSENSUS Protocol and AECI definitions. lucreya.com/articles/the-consensus-protocol. The open 8-step standard for honest AI visibility measurement, defining AECI, Share of Voice, and the Engine-Consensus flag as named terms.
  5. Google AI Overviews. blog.google/products/search/generative-ai-search/. Reference for AI Overview behavior; triggered on 19 of 20 GTM queries in our June 2026 run.
  6. Perplexity AI. perplexity.ai. Primary citation-source engine; exposes a native numbered citation list used for the source autopsy in this study.
  7. Indie Hackers community. Discussion threads on GEO agency credibility, 2026. The "8 of 10 GEO agencies are repackaging SEO" characterization reflects a persistent community-level assessment, not a single attributed quote; verify the current community thread before citing as a primary source.
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