AI search fix
How to choose a generative engine optimization tool
A generative engine optimization (GEO) tool should audit whether AI crawlers can reach your site, whether robots.txt and CDN rules block GPTBot and similar bots, and whether schema.org JSON-LD is valid on key URLs. Strong tools surface fixes in plain language and separate Google Search readiness from optional llms.txt. They do not guarantee citations in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, or Google AI Overviews.
Many products labeled AI SEO overlap with GEO but skip edge cases: Cloudflare Bot Fight Mode, Wordfence, Shopify robots limits, or a missing llms.txt after crawl works. Prefer a tool that starts with HTTP and robots evidence, then content structure, then optional files. You can run the same checks manually with server logs and schema validators if budget is tight.
What to look for in a GEO tool
- Crawl and robots.txt: which AI user-agents are allowed or blocked.
- Edge and WAF: Cloudflare, Wordfence, or host rules that still return 403 to bots.
- Structured data: Organization, Product, or FAQPage JSON-LD on money pages.
- Clear report: prioritized fixes without promising rankings or guaranteed citations.
You'll get an HTML report on AI crawler access, robots.txt, llms.txt, and schema signals on your domain.
Run Express CheckRelated questions
- What is generative engine optimization (GEO)?Pillar: crawl access, schema, llms.txt, and citable copy for AI search.
- AI search visibility checklist for small businessOrdered crawl, structure, and content steps a good tool should mirror.
- Schema markup missing for AI search — how to fix itJSON-LD gaps that GEO audits should flag on key pages.
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