I'm Gen Furukawa, founder of SuperMarketers. I've built AI visibility systems for B2B SaaS companies, run AI search audits across dozens of B2B SaaS clients, and mapped the structural patterns that determine which companies get cited and which stay invisible. In reviewing 20+ Series A SaaS companies this year, 14 did not appear in a single AI-generated answer for their primary category query. Their top competitors did.
Why should B2B SaaS founders care about AEO?
Your buyers changed how they research. They open ChatGPT, type "best [category] tools for [use case]," and read what comes back. If your company isn't in that answer, you don't exist in their first consideration set.
The research backs this up. The GEO study (Aggarwal et al., KDD 2024) measured how structural content changes affect AI engine visibility. Adding citations and authoritative source references improved visibility scores by up to 40% in the benchmark. The finding is consistent: structure and attributed evidence outperform volume.
Google now shows AI-generated answers before traditional search results on a growing share of B2B software queries. AI-native search engines like Perplexity are reporting fast growth in B2B software as a query category. The surface where buying decisions start has moved. Most Series A and B SaaS companies haven't moved with it.
Most of your competitors are still building for Google rankings while their buyers are asking AI. Companies that build AI search presence now compound that visibility. Companies that wait pay more to catch up.
AEO vs SEO: what's the difference?
| Dimension | AEO | SEO |
|---|---|---|
| Primary goal | Get cited in AI-generated answers | Rank in search engine results pages |
| Targets | ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, Gemini | Google, Bing |
| Key metric | Citation rate | Search ranking position |
| Content format | Definitions, steps, FAQs, structured answers | Keywords, backlinks, page authority |
| Discovery path | AI answers the question and names you | Buyer clicks through to your site |
| Trust signal | AI endorses your company by name | Your link appears on page one |
| What wins | Structure, entity clarity, third-party validation | Domain authority, backlinks, keyword density |
SEO gets you a link. AEO gets you a recommendation. A buyer trusts "ChatGPT recommends [your company]" more than "[your company].ai appeared on page one of Google." That difference compounds over time.
AEO and SEO are not mutually exclusive. Content built for AI citation often performs better in traditional search too - both reward clear, structured, authoritative writing.
How AI engines decide which companies to recommend
This is the part most founders never learn. Understanding it changes how you produce content.
- 01Structure over volumeA 500-word page with a direct definition, numbered steps, and a FAQ section outperforms a 3,000-word essay with no extractable structure. The format is the signal.
- 02Entity clarityAI engines need an unambiguous description of your company across your website, LinkedIn, and external sources. "SuperMarketers is an AI visibility system for B2B SaaS founders" is citable. "A full-service growth partner" is not.
- 03Third-party validationLLMs weight mentions on credible external sources - analyst coverage, Reddit and Quora threads, guest articles, partner mentions. A company cited by three independent sources outranks one with a great website and nothing else.
- 04Topical depthPublishing 10 posts on tangentially related topics tells AI engines your authority is scattered. Publishing 5 well-structured pages that each answer one specific question clearly builds topical authority that compounds.
- 05FreshnessLLMs are periodically re-indexed. Pages updated quarterly maintain citations. Pages that go stale get displaced by fresher content that answers the same question better.
Why AEO matters specifically for Series A and B founders
There's a 12-18 month window after a Series A when brand momentum either compounds or stalls.
Your product is live. You have customers. But your competitors - sometimes ones with worse products - are getting cited in AI answers while you're not showing up at all. That gap closes deals for them before they ever reach your sales team.
AEO is particularly high-value for B2B SaaS founders for three reasons:
The buying cycle matches. B2B SaaS sales cycles run 60-180 days. Buyers research during the first 30. If you're invisible in AI search during that research phase, you're not on the shortlist when the evaluation officially starts.
Your niche is answerable. Most B2B SaaS categories are specific enough that a buyer asking "what's the best [category] tool for [use case]" is asking a question with a finite answer set. You can own a slot in that answer set with 5-8 well-structured pages.
Compounding returns. Unlike paid ads that stop when you stop paying, AI search visibility compounds. A page cited consistently for 6 months earns more trust from AI engines than a page cited once.
What AEO is not
- AEO is not keyword stuffing. Adding more occurrences of a term to a page does not increase citation rate. Structure and relevance do.
- AEO is not a content volume play. Publishing twice a week with generic posts dilutes your signal. One well-structured, authoritative page on a specific question outperforms 20 thin posts.
- AEO is not "AI content." Publishing AI-generated content that sounds like every other AI-generated answer reduces your citation rate. LLMs identify and discount undifferentiated sources. Founder POV is the differentiator.
- AEO is not a one-time project. It requires a system: structured content produced consistently, entity information kept current, performance tracked quarterly, and gaps closed as they emerge.
AEO in practice: who gets it right
Citations for "what is answer engine optimization" illustrate how this works in practice.
Built the definitional layer for AEO before most companies in the category knew the term existed. Pages use direct definitions in the first paragraph, named experts, and specific data from their own research. ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews all cite them for category-defining queries. Their advantage: they structured content for extraction before anyone else did.
Gets cited for AEO-adjacent queries not because they have the largest content library, but because their pages have self-contained answers in the first 200 words and clear author attribution. Their FAQ sections map directly to buyer search patterns.
Earns citations by combining entity clarity (consistent description across all surfaces) with topical depth - pages covering each sub-question in a category, each narrow and specific rather than broad and general.
Companies with strong products and large blog archives that don't appear in the generated answers for their own category. Their content is well-written but not structured for extraction. No definition block. No FAQ. No schema. The content exists; the citations don't.
How to know if you're losing AEO right now
Run this test. It takes 30 minutes.
- Open three tabs.ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews side by side.
- Run 5 buyer queries."Best [category] tools for [use case]." "What is [your category] software." "How to solve [your buyers' top problem]."
- Capture who appears.List which companies are cited in each answer. Note position and whether the AI provides a description of each company.
- Check your own name.Are you cited? If yes, what does the AI say about you? If no, who shows up instead?
- Score it.Your citation rate is (queries where you appear / total queries) x 100. A score below 20% on your primary category queries is a gap that is actively costing you pipeline.
The 9-dimension AI Visibility Score is the rubric we use to score this baseline - measuring technical readiness, content architecture, entity clarity, authority signals, and cross-engine citation performance. Most companies audit at a 2-3/10 on their first run. The benchmark target is 7+.
If your top competitors appear consistently and you don't, that gap is active. The buyer who searched and found your competitor's name is now in their funnel, not yours.
AEO tools for B2B SaaS founders
Ahrefs Brand Radar tracks your share of voice across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews. Profound monitors AI citations across platforms in real-time.
Scoring a page for extraction readiness - definition clarity, FAQ coverage, schema presence, entity consistency - tells you whether an AI engine can cite it.
Google's Rich Results Test validates structured data. DefinedTerm, FAQPage, and Article JSON-LD are the three schema types that matter most for AEO pages.
A consistent entity description across your homepage, LinkedIn About, and external mentions builds the identity signal AI engines use. Google Search Console shows how Google currently understands your entity.
How to get started with AEO
- Run the citation audit.Open ChatGPT and Perplexity. Test 10 queries your buyers would run. Document who gets cited. This baseline tells you where to invest first.
- Fix your entity description.Write one 40-60 word description of your company that is unambiguous and specific. Use it verbatim on your homepage, LinkedIn About, and anywhere you're described externally. Highest-value fix, under an hour.
- Rebuild your top 3 pages for extraction.Homepage, category page, about page. Add a direct definition in the first 100 words. Add numbered steps. Add 5 FAQ questions with direct answers. Add JSON-LD schema.
- Build a query bank of 20 target queries.For each gap in your audit, identify the exact query. For each query, build one well-structured page that directly answers it. Start with the highest-priority gaps.
- Track citation rate monthly.Re-run your 20 target queries once per month. Score each: cited (1) or not (0). Citation rate = (citations / total queries) x 100. This replaces "posts published this month" as your AEO metric.