GEA vs SEO
vs GEO.

Four disciplines, one goal: visibility. Here is what each one means, how they relate to each other, and why the distinction matters more than ever in 2026.

Last updated: May 2026 · 8 min read

Four disciplines. Two axes.

The simplest way to understand the difference is a two-by-two grid. There are two types of channel, search engines and generative AI engines: and two types of approach, organic and paid. Each combination has a name.

Organic
Paid
Traditional search
SEO
Search Engine Optimization
Rank organically in Google, Bing. Drive clicks to your website.
SEA
Search Engine Advertising
Pay for placement above or beside search results. Google Ads, Microsoft Ads.
Generative AI
GEO
Generative Engine Optimization
Be cited organically inside AI-generated answers. No click required.
GEA
Generative Engine Advertising
Pay for placement inside AI-generated responses. ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, Bing Copilot.

The search landscape has
already shifted.

SEO and SEA dominated digital marketing for over two decades. That is not wrong, they still matter. But the ground has moved under them. Here is what the data shows.

60%
of all searches are now zero-click, users get their answer without visiting any website
SparkToro / SimilarWeb, 2026
48%
of all Google searches now trigger an AI Overview, up 58% since December 2025
Search Engine Land, March 2026
−35%
organic traffic decline reported by e-commerce brands that have not adapted to AI search
Metricus, 2026
23×
higher conversion rate from AI-referred visitors compared to traditional organic search
Multiple sources incl. Ahrefs, 2026

The pattern is clear: traditional search is sending fewer visitors to websites, while AI platforms are sending fewer but dramatically more valuable ones. A strategy that relies only on SEO and SEA is optimising for a shrinking surface. GEO and GEA cover the growing one.

Each discipline, explained.

Traditional · Organic

SEO: Search Engine Optimization

SEO is the practice of making your content rank highly in traditional search engines, primarily Google. You optimise pages for keywords, build authority through backlinks, and improve technical performance. When users search, your page appears in a list of results and they click through to your site.

SEO remains essential. Google still processes roughly 8.5 billion searches per day. But its effectiveness is being eroded from two sides: AI Overviews intercept more queries before users reach organic results, and zero-click behaviour means ranking #1 no longer guarantees a visit.

GoalRank in search results, drive website traffic
CostTime and resource investment, no direct media spend
TimelineMonths to years for meaningful results
Risk in 2026AI Overviews reduce click-through on even top-ranked pages
Traditional · Paid

SEA: Search Engine Advertising

SEA is paid placement in traditional search results, Google Ads, Microsoft Ads. You bid on keywords and pay per click. Your ad appears above or beside organic results when users search relevant terms. SEA provides speed and precision that SEO cannot: you can be visible within hours and target exactly the queries you want.

SEA is not going away. But like SEO, it faces structural pressure as AI Overviews push organic and paid results further down the page, or replace them entirely for certain query types. The response from Google has been to integrate ads directly into AI Overviews, which is where GEA begins.

GoalImmediate paid visibility in search results
CostCost-per-click, varies widely by industry and keyword
TimelineImmediate, live within hours of campaign launch
Risk in 2026Declining CTR as AI Overviews occupy more SERP real estate
Generative AI · Organic

GEO: Generative Engine Optimization

GEO is the practice of making your content visible inside AI-generated answers, being cited, summarised, or recommended by ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, or similar platforms. Instead of optimising for a keyword ranking, you optimise for being included in a synthesised response.

The tactics differ from SEO. AI models favour content that is authoritative, clearly structured, factually precise, and easy to parse. Schema markup, clear definitions, cited statistics, and well-organised headings all improve the likelihood of being included in an AI-generated answer. The goal is not a click, it is a citation.

GoalBe cited organically inside AI-generated answers
CostContent and technical investment, no direct media spend
TimelineWeeks to months, depends on domain authority and content quality
Opportunity in 2026Low competition, most brands have not yet invested in GEO
Generative AI · Paid

GEA: Generative Engine Advertising

GEA is paid placement inside AI-generated responses. Where GEO earns organic citations, GEA buys them. A clearly labelled sponsored element, a product card, a contextual recommendation, a brand mention, appears within or directly adjacent to the AI's response, at the exact moment a user is asking a decision-stage question.

As of 2026, GEA is available on Google AI Overviews (through existing campaigns), Microsoft Bing Copilot, and ChatGPT (US beta, $200K minimum). The channel is early, access is uneven, and formats are still evolving, but the intent quality is unlike anything available in traditional advertising.

GoalPaid visibility inside AI-generated responses at decision-stage
Cost~$60 CPM for ChatGPT beta; Google AI Overviews via existing campaigns
TimelineImmediate where available, Google AI Overviews accessible today
Opportunity in 2026First-mover window, most advertisers are not yet active in this channel

All four, compared.

SEO
SEA
GEO
GEA
Channel
Traditional search
Traditional search
AI engines
AI engines
Approach
Organic
Paid
Organic
Paid
Outcome
Website click
Website click
Citation / mention
Sponsored placement in AI answer
Intent level
High
High
Very high
Decision-stage
Speed
Slow (months)
Immediate
Moderate (weeks)
Immediate where available
Access in 2026
Open to all
Open to all
Open to all
Limited, varies by platform
Competition
Very high
Very high
Low (still early)
Very low (nascent)

Do you need all four?

In short: yes, but the priority depends on where you are now. Here is a practical way to think about it.

01

Start with GEO if you are already doing SEO

The content you create for SEO can be optimised for GEO simultaneously, it is additive work, not a replacement. Structure your existing content more clearly, add authoritative sources, use schema markup. The content is the same; the optimisation target expands.

02

Add GEA through Google AI Overviews today

If your Search and Performance Max campaigns are already live, you are already eligible for Google AI Overviews ad placements. No separate setup required. This is the lowest-friction entry point into GEA for most advertisers.

03

Watch ChatGPT and Copilot closely

ChatGPT's ad programme is US-only and expensive today. That will change. Brands that are monitoring these platforms now, understanding the formats, the intent patterns, the performance benchmarks, will be ready to scale when access opens up. The window for first-mover advantage is still open.

04

Do not abandon SEO and SEA

GEO and GEA complement existing channels, they do not replace them. Traditional search still drives the majority of commercial traffic. The smart move is a portfolio approach: SEO and SEA for the traffic that exists today, GEO and GEA for the surface that is growing fastest.

Common questions.

No, though they share some foundations. SEO optimises for keyword rankings and click-through rates. GEO optimises for being included in a synthesised response that may never generate a click. The signals AI models use to select content differ from Google's ranking factors: clarity of explanation, factual accuracy, authoritative sourcing, and structured formatting matter more than keyword density or domain authority alone. That said, a strong SEO foundation, good content, technical health, authoritative backlinks, does help with GEO too.

Not in the foreseeable future. Google Ads still reach billions of users across Search, YouTube, Display, and now AI Overviews. GEA expands the advertising surface, it does not replace existing channels. The more likely scenario is that Google Ads evolves to include more GEA formats (which is already happening through AI Overviews integration), while ChatGPT and Copilot develop as additional channels alongside it.

This is one of the genuine challenges of GEO in 2026. There is no equivalent of Google Search Console for AI citations, no official tool that tells you when ChatGPT or Perplexity includes your content in a response. The practical approach is manual monitoring: test relevant queries across AI platforms regularly and track whether your brand or content appears. Tools like Ahrefs and Semrush are beginning to add AI citation tracking features, but the tooling is still early.

Content that AI models can easily parse and trust: clear definitions, structured headings (H2/H3), cited statistics from credible sources, comparison tables, step-by-step explanations, and FAQ sections with precise answers. Content that is authoritative on a specific topic, rather than broad and generic, tends to be cited more consistently. Schema markup (FAQPage, HowTo, Article) helps AI systems understand and structure your content correctly.

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