How to Analyze and Improve Your AI Visibility
I. Why this guide was updated
This guide was updated because more companies are asking the same question:
Why is our brand not showing up in ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Copilot, Grok, or Perplexity?
Many teams try to solve this by testing a few prompts manually.
They ask AI tools some questions, check whether their brand appears, and then make assumptions.
That approach is not enough.
AI visibility is not random, but it is also not simple. Brands appear or disappear based on entity clarity, context relevance, category association, competitor strength, and how AI systems construct answers.
That is why companies need a GEO audit.
A GEO audit helps identify where your brand appears, where it is missing, why competitors are selected, and what needs to be improved.
II. What is a GEO audit?
A GEO audit is a structured analysis of how AI systems see, select, mention, and represent your brand in generated answers.
GEO stands for Generative Engine Optimization.
A GEO audit helps answer:
- Does AI mention your brand?
- Which AI systems mention you?
- Which prompts include or exclude your brand?
- Which competitors appear instead?
- How does AI describe your company?
- Is your category positioning clear?
- What visibility gaps need to be fixed?
In simple terms:
An SEO audit checks how your website performs in search engines.
A GEO audit checks how your brand performs in AI-generated answers.
III. Why a GEO audit matters
A GEO audit matters because AI systems increasingly influence user decisions before users visit websites.
If a user asks:
- “What are the best tools for this problem?”
- “Which brand should I choose?”
- “What are the top alternatives to this competitor?”
- “Which companies are leading this category?”
The AI-generated answer may shape the shortlist.
If your brand is not included, you may lose visibility before the click happens.
That is why GEO audits are important for:
- AI visibility analysis
- LLM brand monitoring
- Competitor intelligence
- Brand positioning
- Content strategy
- GEO strategy
- AI search optimization
IV. GEO audit vs SEO audit
A GEO audit is different from an SEO audit.
| SEO Audit | GEO Audit |
|---|---|
| Checks website performance in search engines | Checks brand visibility in AI answers |
| Focuses on pages | Focuses on entities and brand representation |
| Measures rankings and traffic | Measures mentions and inclusion |
| Analyzes keywords | Analyzes prompts and contexts |
| Looks at technical SEO | Looks at AI interpretation |
| Competes on SERPs | Competes inside generated answers |
SEO audits are still useful.
But they cannot fully explain why ChatGPT or Gemini recommends competitors instead of your brand.
V. The 7-step GEO Audit Framework
A strong GEO audit should include seven layers:
- Query audit
- Multi-LLM audit
- Inclusion audit
- Context audit
- Competitor audit
- Positioning audit
- Entity and association audit
Together, these steps provide a clear view of your AI visibility.
VI. Step 1: Query audit
The first step is to define where your brand should appear.
This is called a query audit.
You need to identify important AI search prompts such as:
- Best [category] tools
- Top [category] platforms
- Alternatives to [competitor]
- Best tools for [use case]
- How to solve [problem]
- [Brand] vs [competitor]
- What tools help with [specific task]?
For example, a GEO analytics platform may want to appear in prompts like:
- Best GEO tools
- AI visibility tracking tools
- How to track ChatGPT brand mentions
- Best tools for LLM visibility
- AI search analytics platforms
- Generative Engine Optimization tools
What to check
- Does your brand appear?
- Which prompts include your brand?
- Which prompts exclude your brand?
- Are you visible in high-intent prompts?
- Are you visible only in narrow or branded prompts?
Red flag
Your brand is missing from high-intent category prompts.
VII. Step 2: Multi-LLM audit
The second step is to test visibility across multiple AI systems.
Do not check only one model.
Different AI systems may produce different answers.
Check visibility across platforms such as:
- ChatGPT
- Gemini
- Claude
- Perplexity
- Copilot
- Grok
- Other relevant LLM-based systems
What to check
- Does your brand appear across multiple AI systems?
- Are results consistent?
- Which platform understands your brand better?
- Which platform ignores your brand?
- Do competitors dominate across all systems?
Red flag
Your brand appears in one AI system but is missing from others.
This suggests weak or inconsistent AI visibility.
VIII. Step 3: Inclusion audit
The third step is to measure how often your brand is selected.
This is the inclusion audit.
Inclusion answers:
Does AI include your brand in relevant answers?
Useful metrics include:
- Inclusion rate
- Mention frequency
- Prompt coverage
- AI system coverage
- Mention share vs competitors
What to check
- What percentage of tested prompts mention your brand?
- How often do competitors appear?
- Is your brand a primary mention or secondary mention?
- Is your brand included in recommendation prompts?
Red flag
Your inclusion rate is low across important prompts.
If your brand appears in fewer than 20 to 30 percent of relevant prompts, you likely have a serious AI visibility gap.
IX. Step 4: Context audit
The fourth step is to analyze where your brand appears and where it does not.
AI visibility is context-specific.
A brand may appear in one type of prompt but disappear in another.
Useful context types include:
- Category prompts
- Competitor alternative prompts
- Comparison prompts
- Use-case prompts
- Problem-solving prompts
- Buying-intent prompts
- Beginner prompts
- Enterprise prompts
What to check
- Which contexts trigger your brand?
- Which contexts exclude your brand?
- Are you visible in high-value contexts?
- Are you only visible in low-intent or niche contexts?
- Does AI connect your brand to the right use cases?
Red flag
Your brand appears only in branded or niche prompts, but not in broad category or buying-intent prompts.
X. Step 5: Competitor audit
The fifth step is to identify which competitors replace you.
This is one of the most important parts of a GEO audit.
AI visibility is competitive.
If your brand is missing, another brand is often taking that space.
What to check
- Which competitors appear most often?
- Which competitors appear in your target prompts?
- Are the same competitors repeatedly recommended?
- How are competitors described?
- Are competitors framed as leaders, alternatives, or niche tools?
- Which competitor has the strongest mention share?
Red flag
The same competitors appear repeatedly while your brand is missing.
This indicates competitor dominance in AI-generated answers.
XI. Step 6: Positioning audit
The sixth step is to analyze how AI describes your brand.
Being mentioned is not enough.
You need to understand how your brand is framed.
AI may describe your brand as:
- A leader
- A niche solution
- A beginner-friendly tool
- A premium platform
- A technical product
- An alternative
- A limited solution
- A less known option
What to check
- Is the description accurate?
- Is the positioning strong or weak?
- Does AI understand your product?
- Is the category correct?
- Does AI mention your key differentiators?
- Are competitors described more strongly?
Red flag
AI mentions your brand but describes it vaguely, incorrectly, or weakly.
XII. Step 7: Entity and association audit
The seventh step is to evaluate whether AI systems clearly understand your brand entity.
Entity clarity is the foundation of GEO.
AI needs to understand:
- What your brand is
- What category it belongs to
- What problem it solves
- Who it serves
- What use cases it supports
- Which competitors it relates to
- What makes it different
What to check
- Is your brand consistently defined?
- Is your product category clear?
- Are your use cases obvious?
- Are your associations strong?
- Does AI connect your brand to the right topics?
- Is your website easy for AI systems to interpret?
Red flag
AI gives inconsistent, confused, or generic descriptions of your brand.
XIII. GEO Audit Scorecard
A simple GEO audit scorecard can help prioritize problems.
| Audit area | What it measures | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Query coverage | Where your brand should appear | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
| Multi-LLM visibility | Visibility across AI systems | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
| Inclusion rate | How often your brand appears | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
| Context coverage | Where your brand appears | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
| Competitor visibility | Who appears instead of you | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
| Positioning quality | How AI describes your brand | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
| Entity clarity | Whether AI understands your brand | Strong / Moderate / Weak |
Use this scorecard to identify priority areas.
For example:
- Query coverage: Weak
- Inclusion rate: Moderate
- Competitor visibility: Weak
- Entity clarity: Weak
This would suggest the main issue is not just content volume.
It may be category positioning, association strength, and competitive visibility.
XIV. Common GEO audit mistakes
Mistake 1: Testing too few prompts
Testing five prompts is not enough.
AI visibility changes across query types, contexts, and intent levels.
Mistake 2: Using only one AI system
Checking only ChatGPT gives an incomplete view.
A real GEO audit should compare multiple AI systems.
Mistake 3: Focusing only on mentions
Mentions are important, but context and framing matter too.
A weak mention may not create real visibility.
Mistake 4: Ignoring competitors
If competitors dominate AI answers, you need to know why.
Competitor analysis is essential.
Mistake 5: No structured scoring
Without a scorecard, it is hard to prioritize what to fix first.
XV. Manual GEO audit vs system-driven GEO audit
A manual GEO audit can help you get started.
But manual testing has limitations.
Manual audit limitations
- Limited number of prompts
- Inconsistent testing
- Hard to compare over time
- Difficult to detect patterns
- No scalable competitor tracking
System-driven audit advantages
- Larger prompt coverage
- Multi-LLM tracking
- Pattern detection
- Competitor benchmarking
- More reliable insights
- Repeatable measurement
For serious GEO strategy, manual testing is not enough.
You need repeatable measurement.
XVI. When should you run a GEO audit?
You should run a GEO audit when:
- Your brand is not showing in ChatGPT
- Competitors dominate AI answers
- Your brand is described incorrectly
- You launch a new product category
- You reposition your company
- You notice a drop in leads or visibility
- You want to measure AI search performance
- You are investing in GEO strategy
A GEO audit is especially important before making major content or positioning changes.
XVII. What to do after a GEO audit
A GEO audit should lead to action.
After the audit, prioritize improvements such as:
1. Fix entity clarity
Make your brand definition clear and consistent.
2. Improve category positioning
Use precise category language across your website and public profiles.
3. Expand context coverage
Create content for use cases, alternatives, comparisons, and buying-intent prompts.
4. Strengthen associations
Connect your brand to the right topics, problems, competitors, and use cases.
5. Improve comparison content
Help AI systems understand how your brand differs from competitors.
6. Track and iterate
Repeat the audit regularly to see whether AI visibility improves.
XVIII. Where SpyderBot fits
SpyderBot helps companies run GEO audits by analyzing how AI systems mention, interpret, and compare brands.
SpyderBot helps answer:
- Where does our brand appear?
- Where are we missing?
- Which competitors are recommended instead?
- How does AI describe our brand?
- Which prompts trigger visibility?
- What category does AI associate with us?
- What visibility gaps should we fix first?
SpyderBot turns GEO from guesswork into a structured diagnostic process.
XIX. Final conclusion
A GEO audit is the first step toward improving AI visibility.
It helps companies understand how AI systems see their brand, where visibility gaps exist, and why competitors may be selected instead.
Without a GEO audit, teams often guess.
With a GEO audit, teams can prioritize.
The goal is not only to appear in AI-generated answers.
The goal is to be selected, described accurately, and positioned strongly in the contexts that matter.

