How to use an AEO tool for your small business | Tech Radar
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The ultimate guide to getting discovered in AI answers.
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Somewhere right now, a person is asking Chat GPT for the best cafe near them. The AI answers in four seconds and names three cafes. What if one of them isn't yours?
That's the problem I’ll address here. Without any hacks or suggesting a $500-a-month dashboard that you'll open twice. Instead, something that works with a system you can run from a spreadsheet.
Start your free 28-day trial and find out if your brand is the answer AI gives buyers
Hub Spot AEO gives you visibility tracking, competitor analysis, citation analysis, and prioritized recommendations across Chat GPT, Perplexity, and Gemini — all in one place.
It's one of the fastest ways to understand where your brand stands in AI-generated answers and what to do about it.
AEO stands for Answer Engine Optimization. It's the practice of making your business show up when people ask questions to AI tools like Chat GPT, Claude, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google's AI Overviews.
AEO vs SEO: What's the difference & do you need both?
How to track your brand's visibility in AI search results
Is your business not showing up in AI overviews? This could be why
Before AI was a thing, you would simply search for a query on Google and find multiple results, including Ads, Featured Snippet, Blogs, etc.
But, right now, most people ask AI the same question and get an instant answer. Three names, maybe four. A short paragraph and that’s it.
Well, if you and your business is in the above paragraph, you win. If you're not, you don't exist.
And the shift is already here. Google now puts AI-generated answers on top of regular results. Millions of people ask Chat GPT for recommendations the way they used to ask a friend, and your customers are among them.
Business owners hear about AEO and ask the same question:
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Wrong question. That's like asking which weighing scale to buy before you've changed anything about your diet. The scale will just tell you the same bad news with more decimal places.
An AEO tool doesn't get you cited. It shows you where you're invisible. Those are very different jobs.
Here's what any AEO tool, cheap or expensive, does at its core:
Points out what's missing about your business online
That's it. That's the whole product. It's a diagnostic machine. The treatment is the work you do outside the tool, and most of that work is free.
So, before you buy anything, build the system the tool is supposed to sit inside.
Every small business, whether you run a cafe, a mechanic shop, a car wash, or a Saa S product, should think about AI visibility in four layers.
Start with questions that your target audience actually asks. The stuff people type randomly at 9 PM when they need something.
This is where tracking begins, and you don't need software for it yet. Open Chat GPT. Open Perplexity. Ask your 20 questions. Write down what comes back.
Do this weekly. Same prompts, same day, every week. It takes 30 minutes, and it will teach you more about your market than any webinar.
AI doesn't recommend businesses out of thin air. It looks for proof. And proof, for a local business, lives in boring places.
It lives in your Google Business Profile. In your reviews, and not just the count and the score, but what people actually say in them. In your photos, your menu or service pages, and the local directories that list you. It lives in articles and listicles that mention you, your social media presence, and the community discussions happening around your area.
Google itself says local visibility comes down to relevance, distance, and prominence. And prominence is built from links, articles, directories, review count, and review scores. AI systems lean on the same signals.
So when your competitor gets mentioned, and you don't, the reason is rarely mysterious. Your business information is incomplete or inconsistent somewhere. You don't have enough reviews. Your website doesn't answer specific questions, or your photos don't show the experience.
Maybe nobody else on the internet is talking about you yet. Or you're chasing a query that's too broad for where you are right now.
This is where most businesses quit. They track AI mentions, feel excited for two days, screenshot a result, send it to the family group chat, and then do nothing.
Tracking without action is a hobby. A good AEO workflow ends every week with a short action list. Things like:
"Fix the phone number, it's different on two platforms"
Small, boring, and super specific. That's what moves the needle. And yes, I checked, the needle exists. It's your review count.
Quick detour, because this mistake costs people months.
If you run a cafe in Greenwich Village, do not start by targeting "best cafe in New York." That query belongs to famous names with thousands of reviews and a decade of press. You will lose that fight, and you'll lose it slowly.
Narrow queries have less competition and higher intent. The person asking "cafe near Bleecker Street with Wi-Fi" is closer to walking through your door than the person asking "best cafe in New York" for a listicle they're skimming on the subway.
Own the street first. Then the neighborhood. Then, maybe, the city!
Okay. Say you've run the manual system for a couple of months. Your listings are fixed, reviews are climbing, and checking 20 prompts by hand every week is getting old. Now a tool makes sense.
Here are the seven things a small business AEO tool should do. If a tool doesn't do most of these, keep your money.
It should track the questions your customers actually ask. Real buyer prompts like "where can I get car AC repair near me," not vanity prompts like "is my business the best." (The answer to that one is always disappointing anyway.)
It should show which competitors keep appearing. If the same three names show up for every prompt, those three names just became your homework. Study their reviews, their photos, their pages, and their listings.
The tool should show where AI answers pull information from. Review platforms, directories, articles, maps, social profiles. Then your job is simple:
Being simply mentioned is also not enough right now. You should focus on how your brand is perceived online. Here’s what I mean:
A good mention: "A budget-friendly cafe near Bleecker Street known for coffee, snacks, and casual hangouts."
A weak mention: "A cafe located in Greenwich Village."
A bad mention: "Mixed reviews about service and food quality."
Same business. Three very different outcomes for the person reading. The tool should tell you which one you're getting.
It should show what competitors have that you don't. Something like:
That table isn't depressing. It's a to-do list wearing a disguise.
Prompts tracked. Mentions gained or lost. Competitors appearing. Sources cited. Gaps found. Next five actions.
If the report doesn't tell you what to do next, it's really just a screensaver with a subscription fee.
Let me put the whole system in one place. This is what I'd hand any small business owner tomorrow.
Pick your 20 money prompts: The questions customers ask right before they spend money.
Run them weekly: Chat GPT, Perplexity, Google's AI Overviews. Log who gets mentioned, what sources appear, how you're described.
Fix what you own first: Website, business listing, menu, photos, FAQs, hours, address, phone number. Google's guidance for showing up in AI features is almost insultingly basic: crawlable pages, important content in text form, structured data matching what's visible, business info kept current. Basic. And still, most small businesses fail at it.
Build third-party validation: AI trusts repetition across independent sources. Local blogs, directories, review platforms, creator videos, community mentions. For Saa S, that's comparison pages, review sites, customer stories, and integration directories. The more places that say the same thing about you, the easier you are to recommend.
Review progress every 30 days: Mentions up? Descriptions improving? Gaps closing? Adjust and repeat.
Buy a tool only when the manual version hurts: More on that now.
Buy one when the spreadsheet starts groaning. If you're tracking more than 20 or 30 prompts, running multiple locations, or a team needs weekly reports, manual checking stops being cheap. It just becomes slow.
It also makes sense once you want history. Citation trends over time, sentiment shifts, mentions gained and lost month over month. A spreadsheet shows you today. A tool shows you the movie.
And if you're already producing content and collecting reviews every week, a tool helps keep the data pace with the work. At that stage, you're not buying insight. You're buying speed.
Now the other side. Don't buy one if your website is incomplete, your business listing is half-empty, or your review count is embarrassing. The same goes if your photos look like they were taken during an earthquake, or if nobody online is talking about you yet.
And definitely don't buy one hoping it will "get you cited" on its own. It won't. A tool pointed at a business with no proof will produce a beautiful report that says "you're invisible" in fourteen different chart formats. You already knew that. Save the money, do the work, then buy the tool to scale the work.
Small businesses keep asking "which AEO tool should I buy?" when the question that actually matters is this:
What are the 20 questions my customers ask before buying, and does the internet prove I'm a good answer?
Answer that honestly, and everything else falls into place. The listings, the reviews, the pages, the photos, the mentions. AEO isn't a separate marketing channel. It's a visibility audit for the AI era, and the audit is only useful if you act on it.
Remember that person asking Chat GPT for the best cafe near Bleecker Street? They're going to ask again next month. And the month after that.
Whether your name comes up is a decision you make this week. Open a spreadsheet. Write your 20 prompts. Start asking.
How long does it take to show up in AI answers?
Expect 60 to 90 days for narrow, local queries, and longer for competitive ones. AI answers lean on reviews, listings, and third-party mentions, and those take time to build. The businesses that see results fastest are the ones fixing their listings and collecting reviews every single week, not the ones checking prompts every day, hoping something has changed.
They overlap, but they're not the same. SEO gets you ranked in a list of links. AEO gets you named inside an answer. The foundations are shared: good pages, accurate business info, strong reviews. The difference is the finish line. In SEO, position four still gets clicks. In an AI answer, there is no position four.
Start with Chat GPT and Google's AI Overviews, because that's where your customers already are. Add Perplexity to your weekly tracking since it shows its sources openly, which makes it the easiest one to learn from. You don't need to chase every platform. They pull from similar signals, so fixing your proof once improves your odds everywhere.
Can I just ask customers to mention keywords in their reviews?
No, asking people to stuff phrases into reviews reads as fake to platforms and to humans. Ask for honest reviews instead. If your birthday setups are genuinely good, people will mention birthdays on their own. Your job is to make the experience worth describing, then make asking for the review a habit.
AI mentioned my business, but the information was wrong. What do I do?
Fix the sources, not the AI. Wrong hours, old menu, dead phone number in an AI answer almost always trace back to an outdated listing or an old article somewhere. Find the source the answer cites, correct it there, and update your own website and business profile. AI answers refresh from the web, so clean sources eventually mean clean answers.
How much should a small business spend on an AEO tool?
At the start, nothing. The manual spreadsheet system in this article costs 30 minutes a week. When you outgrow it, entry-level tools run roughly the price of a decent phone plan per month, and that's plenty for a single-location business. If a sales page quotes you enterprise pricing for tracking 20 prompts, close the tab.
Pawan Singh is a tech writer at Tech Radar Pro, where he contributes fresh how-to guides, product reviews, and buying guides within the tech industry. Apart from his writing duties, Pawan offers editorial assistance across various projects, ensuring content clarity and impact. Outside the world of tech, he enjoys playing basketball and going on solo trips.
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