Generative Engine Optimisation for Ecommerce: What You Need to Know
Generative engine optimisation is how your products get named inside an AI answer instead of being left out of one.
Generative engine optimisation is how your products get named inside an AI answer instead of being left out of one.
Most ecommerce brands are about to learn they are being left out.
You can already see the early version of it. Ask ChatGPT, Perplexity or Google’s AI Mode the question a buyer actually types, something like best waterproof hiking boots for wide feet, and you get a short answer naming three or four brands. Run a category you rank well for on Google. Your brand is often missing from the answer entirely.
That gap is what GEO is about. The reason it exists is usually misread.
Across the brands we audit, the pattern is consistent. Solid Google rankings. Years of SEO spend behind them. And then near-silence when we run their core buyer queries through the AI engines their customers are starting to use.
The instinct is to treat this as a content gap, something a few AI-focused articles will fix. It rarely is. The engines are reading the same product data, the same page structure and the same authority signals the brand already has. They are simply far less forgiving about it.
The commercial stakes are clear enough. Gartner predicted that traditional search engine volume would fall 25% by 2026 as buyers move to AI chatbots and virtual agents. We are now inside that window. AI Overviews already appear on roughly half of Google searches, and organic click-through falls by about 61% when one is present, according to Seer Interactive. The traffic does not vanish. It moves to a layer that behaves nothing like a ranking, which is part of how AI will change SEO for good.
A classic search result is a list. An AI answer is a decision. The difference starts with how the answer gets built.
When someone asks an AI engine a shopping question, four things happen.
Every one of those steps reads infrastructure. Fan-out rewards genuine topical coverage. Retrieval rewards crawlable pages and clean feeds. Trust ranking rewards structured data, consistent brand information across the web and third-party corroboration. None of it is a marketing layer you add at the end.
That is why weak foundations now cost twice. The same gaps that hold a brand back in ecommerce SEO now keep it out of AI answers, so the brand loses ground in both places at once. AI does not rescue a weak setup. It exposes it faster, in a format with no second page to hide on. We have written separately on why AI search for weak ecommerce search infrastructure doesn’t work.
The decoupling is measurable. BrightEdge found that only about 17% of the sources cited in Google’s AI Overviews also rank in the organic top ten, which means roughly five in six citations come from content that is not on page one at all. Ranking and being cited have become two different jobs, which is the heart of the traditional SEO versus GEO question.
For ecommerce specifically, the gap is wider than the headlines suggest.
In that same BrightEdge study, verticals like healthcare and education saw AI citations converge strongly with organic rankings. Ecommerce was the exception. The overlap stayed flat, and AI Overview coverage for ecommerce queries actually fell. A strong Google ranking predicts AI visibility even less reliably for an ecommerce brand than it does for almost anyone else.
The reason is structural. Most of a store’s commercial value sits on product and category pages, and those are the pages AI struggles with most. Adobe, analysing over a trillion retail visits, scored retail page types on how machine-readable they are. Product detail pages came last, at around 66%, well behind text-heavy pages like FAQs and returns policies, which scored above 80%.
The most important pages you own are the ones AI can read least well. Three patterns cause most of it.
Each of these is an infrastructure problem, and none of them is solved by writing more content.
The good news is that what works is not mysterious, and much of it is unglamorous.
The original GEO research from Princeton tested which content changes improved visibility inside AI answers. The methods that worked were adding specific statistics, including attributable quotes, and citing credible sources, which together lifted visibility by up to 40%. Keyword tactics, the staple of old-school SEO, performed worse than doing nothing.
For an ecommerce catalogue, that points to a few priorities. Accurate, specific product data an engine can extract without guessing. Clean structured data and product feeds. Consistent brand and entity information wherever you appear online. And content that answers the precise questions buyers ask before they buy, the kind an engine can lift a sentence from and attribute to you.
What it ignores is the padding. Vague benefit-led copy, hidden specifications and thin pages give an AI nothing to hold onto.
You do not fix this all at once, and the order matters.
First, make sure they can see you. Before optimising anything, check that AI crawlers can reach your site. Look at your server logs for AI user agents, review your robots.txt, and check your content delivery network settings. There is no point improving a page an engine is being blocked from reading.
Second, make your product data parseable and complete. Surface specifications and answers in the page itself rather than behind clicks, and tighten the accuracy of your structured data and feeds. An engine can only cite what it can read, and it can only recommend what it can describe correctly.
Third, strengthen the trust signals. Keep your brand information consistent across the web, build credible third-party corroboration, and publish content SEO that answers real buyer questions in specific terms. This is the slowest of the three and the hardest to fake, which is exactly why it works.
That is the direction of travel. Once you are visible, the next question is whether you can measure any of it, which is where ecommerce KPIs for the AI search era come in.
Generative engine optimisation is the same question about your infrastructure that search has always asked, put to a stricter examiner: one that names only a few sources and shows no second page.
The brands winning visibility in AI did not run a GEO campaign. Their foundations were already clean enough that an engine citing a handful of sources still trusted them.
The upside is worth being honest about. Adobe found AI-referred shoppers converting better and spending more per visit than other channels, and Shopify’s own data shows the same, with AI-referred orders up sharply year on year. The channel is still small today, and that advantage only holds when the AI can describe your products accurately. Which lands in the same place: the brands that get the data and the structure right will keep compounding the lead, and the gap widens every month for the ones that wait.
If your products rank on Google but go unmentioned in ChatGPT, Perplexity and AI Overviews, the cause is almost always structural, sitting in your product data, your page structure and the signals around your brand.
Our AI SEO for ecommerce work diagnoses exactly where AI engines lose sight of your store, quantifies what it is costing you, and gives you a prioritised plan to fix it.
See how AI SEO for ecommerce works.
Generative engine optimisation is the practice of structuring your products, content and brand signals so AI engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity and Google AI Overviews name and cite you inside their answers, rather than leaving you out of them.
They overlap. SEO still feeds GEO, because most AI engines draw on search indexes and clean structure. The difference is the target. GEO aims to get you cited inside an AI answer, which a strong Google ranking no longer guarantees.
Because ranking and being cited are now two different jobs. BrightEdge found only about 17% of AI Overview citations also rank in Google’s top ten, and in ecommerce specifically that overlap is lower still.
They break the question into smaller queries, retrieve candidate sources, then favour the ones that are clear, consistent and corroborated elsewhere. Accurate product data, clean structured data and consistent brand signals across the web make you safer to cite.
Start by checking that AI crawlers can reach your site, since a blocked robots.txt or CDN setting stops everything else. Then make your product data complete and parseable, and strengthen consistent brand signals and reviews across the web.