What buyers ask
Find the questions repeated during research, comparison, and purchase.
GEO service
The problem is usually not a lack of content. Product details, use cases, and proof are scattered across the site. The first job is to turn them into pages buyers can understand and search engines can find.
GEO is a strong fit when you already have product material and expertise, but the site still fails to explain product differences and sales keeps answering the same questions.
A good fit
What changes
The business and its buyers determine the page count, not a content package.
Find the questions repeated during research, comparison, and purchase.
Explain products, services, use cases, and fit.
Put specifications, cases, certifications, and data in the right place.
Rework service, product, case, FAQ, and guide pages.
Connect related content with useful navigation and internal links.
Assign owners for languages and important product information.
Delivery steps
Every step produces a page or document the team can review.
Understand the business, search performance, and available material.
Collect questions from sales, product, and technical teams.
Confirm specifications, cases, data, and product limits.
Rewrite content and fix links, schema, and technical issues.
Track indexing, AI mentions, visits, and enquiries after release.
After launch
A few screenshots from AI tools are not enough. Website changes, visits, and enquiries need to be read together.
Scope, timing, and pricing
Timing varies with page count, languages, source material, and review speed.
The initial review uses the public site and business problem to decide whether content, technology, or a rebuild comes first. Initial discussion is free.
One offer, product group, or market moves through questions, evidence, content, implementation, and retesting under a fixed scope.
Each phase lists pages, review, technology, and measurement.
The written quote defines pages, languages, revision rounds, technical work, and acceptance. It is not priced around ranking guarantees or vague article quotas.
Related questions
No. The work answers real buyer questions, explains the company and its products clearly, supports important claims with sources, and keeps the pages easy to access.
No. Publishing frequency should follow buyer needs, business changes, and factual freshness. A smaller set of reliable pages is often more useful.
AI can support research, structure, and drafting, but company facts, data, cases, and limitations require traceable sources and accountable review.
No. A provider can improve access, clarity, and supporting sources, but cannot control how an external model answers or cites.
Share the site, target market, and common buyer questions, or read the GEO provider selection guide.