As members of in-house web development teams and employees of third-party service providers, web developers have long been the silent architects of the digital universe. They have not only built websites and web-based apps, but they have also supported digital marketing through technical SEO. But there is a new game in town. It’s called Generative Engine Optimization (GEO). It is not a substitute for SEO; it is a compliment to it.
Things like URL structures, XML sitemaps, and Core Web Vitals are the tools web developers have consistently utilized to support the marketing team. But as we move through 2026, developers must modify what they do to account for both SEO and GEO simultaneously.
The Shift From SEO to GEO
GEO is suddenly in the spotlight thanks to AI-driven search. But Pixsan based in San Diego, says service providers should not assume that the two disciplines are mutually exclusive. It is not an either-or proposition. Instead, SEO and GEO work together to give search engine users what they want.
- SEO – SEO is about discovery. Think of it as a digital librarian for the internet. You provide the input (keywords) so that the search engine can index your website and put it alongside similar sites when users go looking for information.
- GEO – GEO is about research. Instead of being the librarian, it is the research section of the library. You provide structure and authoritative data, while the search engine consumes that data and summarizes it for the user.
Regenerative AI has made it possible for consumers to use search engines in very different ways. As a result, the shift from SEO to GEO affects both users and web developers.
The Goals Are Slightly Different
Pixsan Solutions goes on to explain that the transition means slightly different goals for web development teams. For example, SEO’s primary goal is to increase organic traffic. GEO’s primary goal is to get mentions and citations in AI summaries.
Because SEO is about discovery, web development teams are tasked with making sites as visible as possible. Consumers cannot click links and visit sites if the sites cannot be found. On the other hand, the nature of GEO says to web developers that they need citations and mentions. Without them, there is little to no chance that consumers will ever visit a website.
GEO Is Not a Replacement
It is imperative to understand that GEO is not a replacement for SEO. Consider GEO more of an evolutionary step in the way people search for information online. SEO still matters because it remains the foundation on which GEO rests.
For the web development team, this understanding paves the way for one of the most critical things they can do to leverage GEO: reduce, and eventually eliminate, SEO’s technical debt. Here is why:
- Friction – AI-powered web crawlers are more sensitive to friction than their legacy counterparts. A site with crawl errors, for example, is likely to be perceived as less reliable.
- Schema – Schema bridges the gap between technical SEO and GEO. AI-powered crawler bots rely extensively on it to figure out topical relevance, brand authority, etc.
- Mobile-First – Mobile and voice-enabled devices are the primary drivers behind generative AI searches. So sites have to be mobile-friendly.
There is certainly a lot more to say about the transition from SEO to GEO. For now, it is enough to know that web development teams can’t continue relying on an SEO-only approach. They must now adapt their technical SEO to both support and encourage better GEO performance.



