Every few years a headline declares SEO dead. Voice search was going to end it. So were apps, then social, then the featured snippet. SEO is still here. What is different this time is that the thing reading your website is increasingly a language model, and the place your customer lands is increasingly an AI answer rather than a list of ten blue links. That is a real shift, but it is a shift in the surface, not in the substance.
The substance has always been the same: be the credible, easy-to-find, easy-to-trust answer when someone is looking for what you sell. AI engines like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Perplexity, and Microsoft Copilot still build their answers from web pages, business listings, reviews, and structured data. Those are the exact assets SEO has produced for two decades. So the honest answer to “will AI kill SEO” is no, but it will retire the version of SEO that was about gaming rankings, and reward the version that was about actually being the best answer.
Why people think AI is killing SEO
The fear is reasonable on the surface. When a buyer asks ChatGPT “who is the best mortgage broker in Seattle” and gets a confident, conversational answer with two or three names, they may never visit a search results page at all. No results page can mean no clicks, and no clicks can feel like the end of search marketing.
But look closer at where that AI answer comes from. The model did not invent those names. It pulled them from content, citations, reviews, and listings it judged trustworthy. Whoever shows up in that answer earned it through signals that look a lot like good SEO. The traffic does not disappear; it concentrates. The businesses that are cited get the attention, and the ones that are not become invisible. That is the real risk of AI search, and it is the opposite of SEO dying. It raises the stakes on doing it well.
There is also a quieter reason the “SEO is dead” story keeps coming back: it is easier to declare a thing over than to relearn it. Each time the search landscape shifts, a wave of businesses freezes, waits for clarity, and loses ground to the competitors who kept moving. The pattern with AI is the same. The companies treating this as an extinction event tend to do nothing, while the ones treating it as an evolution quietly take the citations that used to be up for grabs.
What actually changes when AI search takes over
It helps to separate what is changing from what is staying the same. Across the audits we run, the same pattern shows up: the foundations carry over, the tactics shift.
| What stays the same | What changes |
|---|---|
| You need a crawlable, accurate website | The crawler is now an AI model, not just Googlebot |
| Trust signals (reviews, citations) decide who wins | Trust is read by a model and summarized, not ranked in a list |
| Clear, helpful content gets rewarded | Answer-first phrasing matters more than keyword density |
| Consistent business information builds credibility | Inconsistencies confuse models and get you left out entirely |
| The goal is to be the chosen answer | You are chosen inside a sentence, not on a results page |
This is why the discipline is getting new names. The work of being quoted by AI is often called answer engine optimization, or AEO, and its sibling generative engine optimization (GEO) focuses on being woven into AI-generated text. They are not replacements for SEO so much as the next chapter of it.
Will SEO and AEO both matter, or just one?
Both, for now. Google still sends a large volume of traffic, and many AI engines cite the very pages Google ranks well. Treating SEO and AEO as enemies is a mistake. They share a foundation, and investing in one tends to lift the other.
Here is the practical way to think about it:
- SEO still earns you blue-link traffic and feeds the index that AI models read from.
- AEO makes your content easy for a model to extract, quote, and attribute to you.
- GEO works to get your business named inside the generated answer itself.
- All three rest on the same base: accurate listings, real reviews, structured data, and genuinely helpful content.
If you want the deeper breakdown of where the two diverge, our explainer on the difference between AEO and SEO walks through it without the jargon.
What businesses should do now
You do not need to throw out your SEO. You need to extend it so AI engines can find you, trust you, and quote you. Here is the order of operations we recommend.
1. Find out if AI already mentions you
Before you change anything, see where you stand. Ask the major engines the questions your customers ask: “who is the best [your service] in [your city]” and “recommend a [your profession] for [common need].” If you are not named, you have a visibility gap. If a competitor is, you have a benchmark.
2. Fix your business information everywhere
Inconsistent names, addresses, and phone numbers are one of the fastest ways to get filtered out of an AI answer. Models cross-reference your details across your site, Google Business Profile, and directories. When the data conflicts, the safest move for the model is to recommend someone clearer. Clean this up first.
3. Rewrite your top pages to answer first
Lead with the answer, then explain. State plainly what you do, who you serve, where you operate, and what makes you the right choice in the first sentence or two of each key page. Use real customer questions as headings. This answer-first structure is what makes content easy for a model to lift and attribute.
4. Earn reviews and add structured data
Genuine reviews are among the strongest trust signals an AI engine reads, and schema markup tells engines exactly what your business is, where it is, and what it offers. Together they move you from “a website that exists” to “a source worth recommending.”
5. Get into the sources AI trusts
Models lean on reputable directories, publications, and citations. Being listed and mentioned in the right places is the modern version of link building, and it is often what tips a model toward naming you over a competitor.
Proof that the new approach works
This is not theory. One example we can point to publicly is Keith Akada, a Seattle mortgage broker who was effectively invisible in AI search. After focusing on the fundamentals above, he went from not appearing at all to being the number one AI-recommended broker in his market, which produced roughly 30 leads and four closed deals in about six weeks. Nothing about that required killing his SEO. It required making his existing presence legible and trustworthy to the engines now doing the recommending.
That is the pattern we see again and again. The businesses winning in AI search are rarely the ones with the biggest budgets. They are the ones who got specific, consistent, and easy to cite before their competitors did. A model has no loyalty and no memory of your years in business. It recommends whoever it can verify and summarize most confidently in the moment, which means a smaller, sharper presence often beats a larger but messier one.
It also means the window is open right now. Most of your competitors are still treating AI search as a curiosity rather than a channel. The work to become the cited answer in your category is rarely glamorous, but it compounds, and the lead it builds is hard for a latecomer to close once the engines have already settled on who to trust.
The bottom line on AI and SEO
Will AI kill SEO? No. It is retiring the tricks and rewarding the substance. The goal has not moved: be the answer people, and now AI, choose. The path to it has simply broadened from ranking pages to being recommended inside conversations. Keep your foundation, add answer engine optimization on top, and you will show up in both the blue links and the AI answers your customers actually read. The businesses that wait for the dust to settle will find the recommendations already going to someone else.