Google's AI Search Guide Turns GEO Into a Source-Quality Discipline
Google's guidance makes one thing clear: AI visibility starts with useful, crawlable, source-backed pages, not shortcut files or artificial mentions.
Follow what the Geolity team is publishing, reading, and discussing across GEO, AI search visibility, product updates, and market signals.

What is worth opening this week?
Geolity posts
Guides, product notes, and research summaries.
Outside reads
Useful AI-search stories from the wider market.
X signals
Short conversations worth saving for the team.
A quick entry point for the latest Geolity article, product note, external read, or X discussion we want the team to notice.
Google's guidance makes one thing clear: AI visibility starts with useful, crawlable, source-backed pages, not shortcut files or artificial mentions.
Google's guidance makes one thing clear: AI visibility starts with useful, crawlable, source-backed pages, not shortcut files or artificial mentions.
Google's dedicated generative AI performance view gives teams a first-party visibility signal that becomes stronger when paired with prompt and citation evidence.
Bing's AI Performance update gives publishers a clearer view of intents, topics, citation share, and comparison patterns across AI-generated answers.
Ahrefs found that most llms.txt files in its dataset received no traffic, reinforcing the value of crawlable, source-backed pages.
Google's Search agents point toward a future where buyers do not only ask once. They delegate ongoing discovery, comparison, and update tracking.
A practical publishing model for turning AI-search news into a canonical blog article, an X post, and a product backlog item without duplicating work.