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Content strategy for AI search | SearchScore

How to structure, write and position your content so AI engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity and Google AI Overviews treat your website as an authoritative source worth citing.

Content strategy for AI search | SearchScore

Content strategy for AI search: how to write content AI engines cite

Getting cited by AI search engines is not about gaming an algorithm. It is about being genuinely the best source for a given question - and making that obvious to machines. This guide covers how to structure, write and position content for maximum AI search visibility.

Key Takeaway

Content intended for AI citation must prioritise clear declarative statements, factual depth, author authority signals and structured formatting, as persuasive or keyword-stuffed writing is seldom cited by AI models.

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How AI engines select what to cite

When a user asks ChatGPT, Perplexity or Google AI Overviews a question, the AI does not simply return the highest-ranked page from its training data. It evaluates multiple candidate sources against a set of criteria - then synthesises an answer and attributes selected sources.

The core factors that determine citation are:

- Relevance - does the content directly answer the query?

- Credibility - does the source have verifiable authority in this topic?

- Clarity - is the answer stated clearly enough for an AI to extract and quote?

- Recency - especially for news, data and fast-moving topics

- Uniqueness - does this source offer information not found elsewhere?

Content that wins citations typically excels across all five dimensions. Generic content that covers the same ground as ten other websites rarely gets cited - even if it ranks in Google.

Content structure AI engines prefer

AI engines parse content differently to human readers. They are looking for clear answers to specific questions, well-labelled information, and content they can extract without ambiguity. Structure is not just good UX - it is a direct GEO signal.

Lead with the answer

Traditional blog intros build up to an answer. For GEO, put the core answer in the first paragraph. AI engines frequently extract the opening of an article as the cited response. If your answer is buried in paragraph eight, it may never be used.

Use question-format headings

Structure your H2 and H3 headings as questions - “What is X?”, “How does Y work?”, “Why does Z matter?” - and answer each question directly below the heading. This mirrors how AI models retrieve information: they match user questions to content headings, then extract the answer that follows.

Use tables, lists and comparisons

Structured content formats are highly citation-friendly. A comparison table, a numbered list of steps, or a quick-reference summary is far more likely to be extracted and used in an AI answer than a dense paragraph. Whenever you can present information in a structured format, do so.

Include definition boxes

For any technical or specialised term, add a clear definition early in the content. Phrasing like “X is defined as…” or “X means…” gives AI engines a clean, extractable definition they can cite verbatim.

EEAT signals for GEO

Google’s EEAT framework - Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness - was designed to evaluate content quality for search. The same signals translate directly to GEO. AI engines model credibility in similar ways.

| EEAT signal | What it means for GEO | | Experience | First-hand accounts, case studies, practical demonstrations - content that shows real-world experience, not theoretical knowledge | | Expertise | Named authors with verifiable credentials, topic-specific depth, accurate technical details | | Authoritativeness | Being cited by others, mentioned in reputable publications, linked to by authoritative sources | | Trustworthiness | Transparent sourcing, accurate claims, consistent factual accuracy, HTTPS, clear contact information |

Key insight: AI engines increasingly have access to signals about how trustworthy a source is - not just whether it ranks. A brand frequently cited in established publications is treated differently from one that has never been mentioned anywhere else on the web.

Author and brand authority

Anonymous content performs significantly worse in GEO than content attributed to real, credentialled people. This is because AI engines use author identity as a credibility proxy - a named author with a verifiable track record in a subject signals that the content has a human expert behind it.

Practical steps to improve author authority signals:

- Create detailed author bio pages with credentials, publications and links to social profiles

- Add Person schema markup to author pages

- Ensure your brand appears consistently across Wikipedia, industry directories, press coverage and social platforms

- Add sameAs links in your Organisation schema pointing to all your verified profiles

- Build a pattern of being quoted and cited by third-party publications in your niche

Original data and primary research

One of the highest-impact things you can do for GEO is publish original data. Statistics, survey results, benchmark reports and proprietary datasets are exactly what AI engines are looking for - unique, citable facts that cannot be found elsewhere.

When you produce original data:

- State the methodology clearly (sample size, date, scope)

- Present data in scannable tables and charts with descriptive labels

- Write a summary sentence for each key finding - these become highly citable extracts

- Include a “key findings” section at the top of any research piece

- Update data annually so the content stays fresh and relevant

Even modest original research - a survey of 200 customers, an analysis of your own dataset - is more citable than repeating what everyone else has already published.

Content formats most likely to be cited

Not all content types are equally likely to attract AI citations. Based on our analysis of how AI engines retrieve and attribute information, these formats consistently perform well:

- Definitive guides - comprehensive, single-source answers to broad questions

- Comparison articles - structured head-to-head comparisons that AI engines can easily extract

- Original research and data - unique statistics that other sources will reference

- FAQ pages - especially with FAQPage schema markup

- How-to guides - step-by-step structured content, ideally with HowTo schema

- Glossary and definition pages - clear, authoritative definitions of terms in your domain

Content GEO checklist

- ☐ Core answer stated in the first paragraph

- ☐ H2/H3 headings written as questions where possible

- ☐ Key terms clearly defined (“X is…”)

- ☐ Named author with credentials on every piece

- ☐ Author bio page with Person schema markup

- ☐ Article schema on every post with datePublished and author

- ☐ FAQPage schema on pages with Q&A content

- ☐ Original data or unique insight in every major piece

- ☐ External sources cited with links

- ☐ Comparison tables and structured lists used where possible

- ☐ Content regularly reviewed and updated for accuracy

- ☐ Brand mentioned consistently across external sources

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Explore All Categories

- What is GEO? →

- Technical GEO →

- Content for AI Search →

- Measuring GEO →

- AI Visibility Strategy →

- AI Search for Businesses →

Sources & further reading

- Ofcom (ofcom.org.uk) – UK Digital Communications Research

- UK Government (gov.uk) – National AI Strategy

- Academic Research – Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO), arXiv 2024

- Reuters Technology – AI & Search Industry News

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