We’ve spent years as an industry obsessed with what people search for.
Now, it’s time to be just as focused on where they search.
Generative engine optimization (GEO) isn’t just another tactic – it’s a new lens, a new mindset that’s reshaping how we think about search, content, and customer discovery.
This article will help you:
Plan financially and strategically for GEO in 2026.
Understand what it means for your team, your content, your data, and, most importantly, your audience.
Follow the user: From what to where
Search isn’t a single destination anymore.
It’s a journey made up of moments, typed, spoken, tapped, prompted.
Over the past nine months, we’ve been tracking how people search, and one thing’s obvious:
And we’ve seen that users under 44 use, on average, five platforms to search.
From TikTok to ChatGPT to review sites and Reddit, discovery is diversifying, and your strategy must follow.
The most exciting aspect of this is that it is still in its early days. You have the opportunity to lead, but you need to be willing to adapt.
Why multi-platform searching offers such an opportunity
The mere exposure effect shows us that familiarity builds trust.
If your audience sees your brand in multiple, relevant touchpoints, your perceived credibility increases, even before they land on your site.
But that can’t happen if your strategy still treats search as a single-channel activity.
So, where to begin?
Start with audience research – deep, layered, and behavior-led.
Combine surveys, social listening, focus groups, and analytics to find out:
Where your audience is searching.
What they’re trying to do.
What motivates them in that moment.
Map against four core human search drivers:
Fact-finding: Rational, objective answers.
Crowd-sourcing: Validation from peers and communities.
Taste-tuning: Inspiration that fits their identity.
Habit-driven: Shortcuts based on trust and familiarity.
If your budget planning doesn’t start with this understanding, you’re essentially building a strategy in the dark.
Rethink ranking: Optimize your search real estate
The SEO industry has rightly been fixated on AI Overviews, but many brands are missing the wider picture.
Search real estate has never been more diverse, with images, sitelinks, video carousels, reviews, forum answers, shopping links, and AI-powered responses all competing for attention.
We need to think beyond ranking and instead focus on occupying the spaces where our audience is actively looking for reassurance, answers, or inspiration.
Here’s a simple content format framework to cover the full spectrum of search intent:
Shape perspectives: Opinion-led, expert content
Mindset: Curious, reflective, exploring ideas.
Brand opportunity: Build thought leadership and spark category conversations.
Example formats and platforms: Opinion pieces, newsletters, blogs – X, Medium, Threads.
Inspire and engage: Short-form and visual, emotionally resonant
Mindset: Seeking emotion, identity, and connection often through entertainment.
Brand opportunity: Build affinity through authentic, visual storytelling.
Example formats and platforms: Short-form video, UGC, reels – TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts.
Inform and reassure: Long-form, detail-rich content
Mindset: Seeking facts, clarity, and confidence before deciding.
Brand opportunity: Build trust with expertise and transparency.
Example formats and platforms: Guides, FAQs, whitepapers – Google, Bing, specialist AI tools.
Simplify and empower: Explainer and how-to formats
Mindset: Wants practical help and easy steps to act.
Brand opportunity: Remove friction with visual learning and demonstration.
Example formats and platforms: How-tos, demos, webinars – YouTube, LinkedIn Live.
Your GEO budget should be allocated across all these types of content, not just to rank but to show up where your audience is looking in the format that suits their mindset.
In a GEO-led world, your brand needs to be understood, not just crawled or linked to.
Large language models (LLMs) don’t see your brand the way a search engine does.
They need structured clarity to learn who you are, what you do, and why you’re credible.
That means treating your business like an entity:
Brand.
People.
Products.
Expertise.
Processes.
Yes, most businesses already have some of these assets, like author bios, about pages, product descriptions, and awards, but they’re often fragmented or buried.
Here’s the behavioral point: humans (and machines) trust logic they can see.
Your internal recommendation engine? Your customer support process? Your buying guide?
If any of this logic lives in code or internal tools but never gets surfaced, LLMs and users can’t trust what they don’t understand.
So make your decision-making visible:
Use “How we choose” content.
Add explainer videos or structured markup.
Link related resources in a way that mimics how your business and team think, not just how your website flows.
Create transparent, traceable journeys that allow both users and machines to understand your brand’s logic, not just your pages.
Invest in trust and credibility
We’re not in the game of chasing algorithms.
We’re in the business of earning trust, and GEO makes that more important than ever.
In 2026, E-E-A-T is going nowhere. It needs to be your strategic cornerstone.
That means your budget should include:
Always-on digital PR: Fresh mentions and citations in high-authority sources.
Data storytelling: Reports, whitepapers, research built to be referenced.
Customer review strategies: Reputation, sentiment, and response.
Awards and accreditations: Third-party trust signals.
Behavioral insight: To frame your messaging in line with audience values.
Your digital PR strategy should be mapped like this:
Once you know what to say and where to say it, the final piece of the trust puzzle is who says it.
It’s not enough to understand where to show up and what to say. You also need to think about who has the best voice.
There is a behavioral bias known as the messenger effect, which means humans evaluate information based on the source.
This offers a huge opportunity when we consider who should say what for our brand.
There are four key voices to consider:
Brand: Your voice
What you stand for and want to be remembered for.
UGC: Their voice
What your audience is saying and sharing about you.
Influencer: A trusted voice
People who add credibility and humanize your brand story.
Media: An amplified voice
Platforms and publications that extend your reach and authority.
Planning this early in your strategy will ensure you have the budget available to get this bit right, alongside all of the other activities you need to cover.