In an environment where half of all B2B technology queries now rely on AI-generated answers, ensuring visibility on these platforms is a critical strategic imperative. Understanding each engine’s unique logic and adapting your Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) strategy is essential to managing your reputation and fueling your lead pipeline.
This article provides a practical guide for IT Directors, CIOs/CTOs, digital transformation managers, and executives to map, audit, build, and govern a multi-layered GEO approach tailored to the specifics of the Swiss market.
Map Optimization Logic for Each Platform
Each AI engine uses distinct criteria to select its sources and structure its answers. Without this analysis, any GEO initiative risks being ineffective, scattered, or misaligned.
ChatGPT and Perplexity Logic
ChatGPT favors depth, coherence, and content authority. Detailed texts supported by references and a solid internal structure are preferred for complex questions. These answers leverage documentary richness and the added value of cited sources, highlighting long-form guides and comprehensive case studies.
Perplexity, by contrast, emphasizes information freshness and community validation. Answers that include quotes from forums, recent articles, or expert opinions surface more often. The algorithm also factors in external engagement signals such as shares and backlinks to cited sources.
For GEO, it’s therefore important to segment content production: on one side, detailed dossiers for ChatGPT; on the other, up-to-date, participatory summaries for Perplexity, ensuring each publication fits its reference universe.
Criteria for Google AI Overviews and AI Mode
Google AI Overviews relies on traditional E-E-A-T signals (experience, expertise, authority, trustworthiness) and schema.org markup. Structured content types (FAQPage, HowTo, Article) and rich snippets are crucial for appearing in AI Overview panels.
AI Mode combines the E-E-A-T approach with data freshness. Its Query Fan-out architecture performs a simultaneous web search, then ranks responses by authority and publication date. It also values content segmented into logical blocks to address multi-turn queries.
In both cases, optimizing your HTML structure, using strict semantic markup, and scheduling regular updates is vital to maintain your place in Google’s AI responses.
Gemini, LinkedIn, and Grok Specifics
Gemini bets on multimodal and structured data: content combining text, images, and videos is prioritized, provided it’s correctly indexed via ALT attributes, JSON-LD schemas, and contextual cues.
LinkedIn, thanks to verified profiles and high sector activity, has become a major source for AI citations. Expert posts, industry testimonials, and well-tagged Pulse articles generate share signals and backlinks that boost AI visibility.
Grok, for its part, prioritizes real-time conversations on X (formerly Twitter). Active accounts engaging their audience with documented threads and links to detailed resources see their content picked up more often by Grok.
Example: A Swiss industrial SME found that by simultaneously publishing a schema.org-optimized in-depth blog article and an X thread summarizing its key points, it quadrupled its “share of model” on Grok and increased AI-driven contact inquiries by 35%. This case demonstrates the effectiveness of a multimodal, synchronized approach to capture the attention of emerging engines.
Audit Your “Share of Model” and Prioritize GEO Investments
Measuring your AI citation share (“share of model”) is the key to identifying where to focus your content and technical efforts. This data-driven approach replaces costly guesses and directs your resources to the platforms with the highest business impact.
Conduct a Multi-Platform Audit
The initial audit should cover ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, AI Mode, Claude, Gemini, LinkedIn, and Grok. For each engine, record how often your brand appears and the placement of AI-generated responses.
Concretely, query each platform on a set of your sector’s key topics and measure the share of your content in the top results. Also note external signals (backlinks, social shares) and internal ones (click-through rates, session duration).
Then organize this data in a comparative chart to easily visualize your relative performance across channels and identify the most significant gaps.
Language Analysis and Swiss Segmentation
For the Swiss market, it’s essential to repeat the audit in the four national languages: French, German, Italian, and Romansh. Each linguistic version may offer specific opportunities or reveal gaps.
Results can vary dramatically. For example, a technical query in German might place your content at the top on ChatGPT, while the same question in French struggles to surface on Perplexity.
Example: After a multilingual audit, a Swiss public agency discovered its visibility on Google AI Overviews was three times higher in German than in French. This analysis highlighted the importance of localized content production and led to a rebalancing of editorial resources by language market.
This fine segmentation allows you to calibrate future content and AI SEO investments according to performance by language and platform.
Investment Prioritization
Once the audit is complete, prioritize actions based on two criteria: potential lead generation impact and competitive risk on each platform. Avoid spreading your budget uniformly.
Allocate writing, technical, and design resources to the channels offering the best “visibility vs. competition” ratio. This pragmatic approach maximizes ROI and prevents visibility silos.
Also document quarterly changes in your “share of model” to quickly adjust your roadmap and continuously steer your spending.
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Build a Content Plan for Each AI Channel
Each platform requires a distinct format and editorial angle: the same information must be adapted to meet AI-specific expectations. A channel-by-channel content plan ensures consistency and performance.
Long-Form Guides and Case Studies for ChatGPT
For ChatGPT, focus on in-depth guides or detailed case studies. Structure your content in chapters, include quantified references and reliable sources to establish authority.
Each guide should answer questions end-to-end, anticipate possible follow-ups, and provide internal links to strengthen navigation and coherence.
Plan regular updates to enrich these materials and keep pace with rapidly evolving technologies, maintaining your ranking on complex queries.
Synthesis and Sharing for Perplexity
On Perplexity, convert each topic into 300- to 500-word summary sheets organized in numbered key points. Encourage sharing in specialized communities and forums to generate citations.
Accompany these summaries with validated source URLs to enhance credibility and facilitate community validation. Every backlink counts toward improving your “share of model.”
Example: A Swiss financial services company published a series of Perplexity sheets and launched a distribution campaign in industry groups. In under two months, its citation share doubled and AI-driven contact forms rose by 25%. This case illustrates the power of concise, participatory formats to capture attention on Perplexity.
Be sure to refresh these sheets monthly to maintain freshness and relevance.
Optimization for Google AI Overviews and AI Mode
Structure your web pages with semantic HTML and schema.org markup (FAQPage, HowTo, Article), ensuring you include rich snippet elements.
Optimize freshness through a quarterly update schedule and add mini conversational guides to address AI Mode’s multi-turn queries.
Deploy A/B tests to compare the impact of different content structures (long-form vs. FAQ) on your placement in AI panels, and continuously adjust based on measured performance.
Establish Governance and a Continuous Improvement Cycle
GEO is not a one-off project but an ongoing process requiring cross-functional governance and feedback loops. Only a multidisciplinary team can effectively drive this cycle.
Steering Committee and Cross-Functional Governance
Form a committee of IT Directors, digital marketing, content managers, web developers, and UX/UI designers responsible for AI governance.
Monthly or quarterly meetings ensure a shared view of key indicators, leveraging business intelligence tools: share of model, AI click-through rates, leads generated.
This collaborative model breaks down silos and ensures that every technical or editorial optimization fits into your overall roadmap.
Workflows and CMS Integration
Integrate GEO processes directly into your CMS and marketing automation tools. Automate page tagging, update deployments, and A/B test tracking.
A clear workflow enables teams to launch content refresh campaigns, test new schema tags, and trigger alerts if performance drops.
This technical integration reduces implementation time and improves traceability of GEO actions.
Measurement and Continuous Adjustments
Plan quarterly workshops to analyze data, recalibrate your action plan, and redistribute resources based on insights gathered.
Document every experiment in a shared knowledge base (Wiki, Notion), capturing best practices and results achieved.
This agile cycle ensures your GEO strategy evolves in step with AI innovations and Swiss market dynamics.
Master Your AI Visibility with Agile GEO Governance
Mapping optimization criteria, auditing your “share of model,” deploying a channel-by-channel content plan, and establishing cross-functional governance form the four pillars of a high-performance GEO strategy. Each step feeds into the next in a continuous improvement cycle, ensuring agility and responsiveness to rapid AI developments.
Our experts—from strategy, development, and UX—support you in building and managing your end-to-end GEO journey, harmonizing open source, modularity, and business performance.

















