
Key takeaways
- SEO gets you ranked in Google. AEO gets you cited in AI-generated answers. GEO shapes how AI describes your brand in generated content. They’re related - but they reward different things and require different work.
- For most B2B SaaS marketing teams in 2026, AEO is the highest-leverage investment right now. Competition is lower, the structural changes are manageable, and Webflow makes them easier to implement than any other platform.
- Optimizing for AEO doesn’t hurt your SEO. The same practices that make content citeable by AI - clear structure, direct answers, real expertise - also improve Google rankings. They’re the same foundation.
- Most B2B SaaS sites are already doing basic SEO. Almost none have structured their content for AEO. That gap is the opportunity, and it’s still wide open.
SEO, AEO, and GEO are three distinct optimization strategies - and in 2026, knowing which one to prioritize can save a B2B marketing team months of wasted effort. SEO gets you ranked in Google’s blue links. AEO gets you cited in AI-generated answers (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews). GEO shapes how AI engines describe your brand and category when generating content.
They overlap, but they’re not the same game. For most B2B teams running a Webflow site, AEO is where the opportunity is right now - because the competition is still thin, the structural changes required are small, and the results compound faster than most teams expect.
What are SEO, AEO, and GEO?
The clearest way to see the difference is to look at what each one actually optimizes for.
SEO (Search Engine Optimization) is the practice of improving your site’s visibility in Google’s ranked search results. More clicks from the blue links.
AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) is the practice of structuring your content so that AI systems - ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews - extract and cite it when someone asks a question your content answers. More citations from AI answers. Read more in our full guide to Webflow AEO.
GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) is the practice of shaping how AI engines describe your brand or category in generated content - not just being cited, but being accurately represented in how AI talks about your space.
They’re related. But they reward different things, they’re measured differently, and they require different work.
How are SEO, AEO, and GEO different from each other?
The clearest way to see the difference is to look at what each one actually optimizes for.
The part that trips people up is that AEO and GEO are often used interchangeably. They’re similiar, but not exactly the same. AEO is about getting cited when a user asks a specific question. GEO is about the broader, ambient understanding AI engines have of who you are - the context that shapes every answer they give about your category.
A practical example: if a CMO asks ChatGPT “what’s a good Webflow agency for B2B SaaS,” AEO is what gets you cited as a source. GEO is what shapes whether ChatGPT’s description of that category even includes the attributes relevant to your work. Both matter. For most teams right now, AEO is the faster win. GEO follows naturally as you build authority. If you want to understand how Webnomads approaches both in practice, the AEO System covers exactly that.
Which one should a B2B SaaS marketing team focus on first?
Quick answer: AEO if you’re behind on website structure. SEO if you’re behind on content volume. GEO only once both are in place.
Here’s the logic. Most B2B SaaS marketing teams in 2026 are running sites built for Google’s blue links - keyword-targeted pages, service descriptions, blog posts that bury the answer three paragraphs in. That’s table stakes, and it’s where most competitors already sit. The marginal return from more traditional SEO is lower than it was two years ago, especially for smaller domains competing against DA 70+ generalist sites on head terms.
AEO is different. The structural requirements are achievable without a large content investment. Direct opening answers, question-format headings, FAQ sections, specific numbers from real experience. Most B2B content still doesn’t do this
GEO is a longer game. It requires brand mentions in third-party sources: industry publications, comparison sites, review platforms, podcast appearances. It builds the presence in the sources AI engines draw from. Worth doing, but not the first move when content structure is still weak.
The practical order for a B2B SaaS team on Webflow in 2026:
- Get the technical foundation right. Schema markup, crawlability, internal linking architecture. This is where the Webnomads AEO System starts - because strong content on a poorly structured site still struggles to surface.
- Fix your content structure for AEO. Direct answers at the top of every post, question-format H2s, FAQ sections. The lowest-effort, highest-return step - one day of work per post. Our guide to structuring Webflow content for AI citation walks through how we set this up.
- Keep publishing SEO-targeted content. Volume still matters for topical authority. One well-structured post per week compounds faster than it looks, especially once the AEO foundation is in place.
- Build GEO signals over 6-12 months. Guest posts on industry sites, G2/Capterra reviews, partner directories.. These build the ambient brand presence and authority tor AEO and AI engines to draw on. Start this in parallel once the content and technical work is underway.
Does optimizing for one hurt the others?
No. The same fundamentals drive all three.
Clear structure, direct answers, real expertise, and fresh content improve Google rankings, increase AI citation rates, and contribute to accurate brand representation in generated content. There’s no tradeoff between them. The practices are the same. The emphasis shifts slightly depending on which channel you’re measuring, but the underlying work is identical.
The one exception worth noting: pure GEO and AEO authority tactics - building brand presence on third-party review sites, ensuring your LinkedIn company description uses accurate category language - don’t directly affect your SEO rankings. They operate in a different channel. They don’t hurt SEO either. They’re additive. If you want a framework for tracking all three together, our post on measuring Webflow AEO performance covers how to set up monitoring across search, AI citations, and brand mentions.
What does hurt all three: content that buries the answer, vague claims without specifics, and posts written to hit a keyword rather than answer a real question. That pattern is still widespread on B2B marketing sites. Fixing it is the single biggest lever most teams have.
What does this mean practically for a Webflow site?
Webflow is well-suited for all three strategies - but most sites use a fraction of that capability. Here’s what the full picture looks like.
Webflow for SEO
Webflow’s clean HTML output, automatic sitemap generation, and fast rendering - particularly on Webflow Enterprise with edge hosting - give you a technical foundation most WordPress or Squarespace sites have to work harder to match. You’re not fighting a platform that adds bloat. The structural advantages are real, and they compound as your content volume grows.
Webflow for AEO
Webflow’s CMS makes it practical to build structured content at scale. FAQ sections as repeatable CMS components, key takeaway fields, question-format headings as standard templates. Once the content model is in place, every future post inherits the structure automatically. We’ve set this up for B2B clients and it meaningfully cuts per-post production time - because the structure is baked in rather than retrofitted each time. See how we approach this in detail in our Webflow technical AEO guide.
In April 2026, Webflow launched native AEO tooling in Enterprise beta - structured content schemas, AI-optimized metadata fields, and FAQ components built directly into the CMS. It removes most of the custom code requirement for AEO implementation. If you’re on Webflow Enterprise and haven’t looked at this yet, our breakdown of Webflow’s new AEO tool covers what it actually does versus what the marketing says.
Webflow for GEO
Webflow’s schema markup support lets you add structured data that tells AI engines exactly what your organization is, what it does, and what category it belongs to. Organization schema, FAQ schema, HowTo schema - all of these feed the entity understanding GEO relies on. Most Webflow agencies don’t set this up as standard. It takes a few hours on initial build and has lasting impact. Our post on building AEO authority in Webflow covers how we approach this for B2B clients.
Final thoughts
If your Webflow site is built but your content still reads like a brochure, no amount of schema markup will fix that. Structure comes first. Everything else follows. If you want an honest assessment of where your site sits right now, the Webnomads AEO System starts with exactly that.






