AEO vs. SEO in 2025: What Local Businesses Must Do Now
If you run a local business, you’ve probably noticed search results getting… different. Instead of 10 blue links, you’re seeing instant answers at the top from AI systems like Google AI Overviews, Bing Copilot Search, and Perplexity. That shift is real, and it’s changing how people discover you.
So what exactly changed, and what should you do in the next 30 days to retrofit your site for AEO (AI Engine Optimization) without blowing your budget? Let’s break it down in plain English.
AEO vs. SEO (and why both matter)
SEO helps your pages rank in traditional search results. AEO helps your content get selected, summarized, and cited by AI answer engines. The big difference? AI engines try to give a direct answer first, and only then show links—so they pick sources that are clear, trustworthy, and easy to quote.
- Google says AI features (like AI Overviews and AI Mode) surface helpful responses with links to the web, and they emphasize the same fundamentals that have always mattered: high-quality content and technical clarity. Structured data helps Google understand your pages. Google for Developers+2blog.google+2
- Microsoft’s Copilot Search in Bing provides summarized answers with cited sources, so users can verify or click through. Clear, well-structured pages are more likely to be cited. Bing Blogs+2Microsoft+2
- Perplexity positions itself as an “answer engine,” and each answer typically includes numbered citations linking to the sources it used. If your page directly answers the question in plain language, you’re more likely to be included. Perplexity AI+1
Why does this matter? Because zero-click answers can reduce traffic to generic pages. But if your content is the source an AI cites - especially for local, service, and “who/where/how much” questions - you still win the click and the customer.
(Yes, there are ongoing legal debates about how content is used in AI summaries. The landscape is evolving fast, but for small businesses, the best play right now is to make your site the clearest, most citable source in your niche.) Reuters+1
How discovery is changing for local businesses
Ask yourself:
- When someone searches “best emergency plumber near me,” will an AI show your name, phone number, and pricing?
- If a customer asks “Which dentist in [your city] does same-day crowns and how much?” will your page provide a direct, quotable answer with up-front price ranges and availability?
- Does your site make it obvious who you serve, what you do, what it costs, and when you’re open—in short sentences an AI can lift?
Here’s what the new engines tend to reward:
- Answer-first content. Start pages with a short, direct answer (1–3 sentences). Then give details.
- Structured, scannable sections. Headings, bullets, tables, and FAQs.
- Trust signals. Real business details (address, hours), staff bios, nearby landmarks, recent reviews, and “last updated” dates.
- Structured data (schema). LocalBusiness, Service, FAQPage, Product/Offer, and Review markup make your content easier for machines to understand. Google for Developers
- Local specificity. Neighborhood names, service areas, driving times, and “good for” use cases (e.g., “after-hours AC repair in South End, same-day service”).
The 30-Day AEO Retrofit Sprint (simple, affordable, and local-first)
You don’t need a full rebuild. Follow this four-week plan to retrofit what you already have. It’s designed for owners or small teams and balances Action × Frequency, the AXF way.
Week 1: Baseline, clarity, and trust
Day 1–2: Measure & map.
- List your top 10 pages by traffic and revenue.
- For each, write the #1 question the page should answer (e.g., “How much does ductless AC installation cost in Newark?”).
- Quick audit: Is the answer at the top of the page in 1–3 sentences?
Day 3: Create a Local “Answer Hub.”
- Add a single /answers page that links to your top questions with short, direct answers and a “learn more” link to the full page.
- Include city/area cues: “serving [Neighborhoods], [City], [County].”
Day 4–5: Strengthen trust.
- Refresh your About page with owner name, licenses, years in business, and neighborhoods served.
- Add staff bios with headshots and credentials.
- Place NAP (Name, Address, Phone) in the footer site-wide.
- Add “Last updated” dates on key pages.
Day 6–7: Google Business Profile (GBP) tune-up.
- Ensure categories, hours (holiday hours!), services, and service area are current.
- Add 10 new photos, 3 fresh posts, and answer 5 customer Q&As.
- Link GBP to your /answers page or key service pages.
Quick question: If a new customer lands on your homepage, can they find your phone number and service area in under 5 seconds?
Week 2: Answer-first rewrites (fast wins on existing pages)
Days 8–12: Rewrite 5 top pages using “answer-first.”
For each page:
- Add a 2-sentence summary answering the primary question at the top.
- Add a Price & Time box (range + typical turnaround or appointment windows).
- Add a Local Proof box (neighborhoods served, review snippet, or case study).
- Insert a 3–5 question FAQ (short, direct answers).
- End with a clear CTA: “Call now,” “Get a 2-hour estimate,” etc.
Days 13–14: Build one location or service-area page.
- Use plain language: landmarks, parking notes, areas reached in under 30 minutes.
- Include a small comparison table (e.g., Basic vs. Premium service, typical price ranges).
Ask yourself: Would an AI engine be able to quote your price range, hours, and neighborhoods without guessing?
Week 3: Schema, speed, and consistency
Days 15–17: Add structured data (JSON-LD).
Prioritize:
-
LocalBusiness
(or subtype likePlumber
,Dentist
, etc.) -
Service
(describe your services with typical price range) -
FAQPage
(for your FAQs) -
Product
/Offer
if you sell fixed-price items
Why schema? It helps machines understand your info—which, in turn, supports inclusion in AI summaries and rich results. Google for Developers
Days 18–19: Speed & tech basics.
- Compress images, lazy-load below-the-fold, and aim for <2.5s LCP.
- Check robots.txt, XML sitemap, canonical tags.
- Fix broken links and thin pages.
Days 20–21: Consistency check.
- Make sure your NAP is identical across your site, GBP, and top directories.
- Add “last updated” to your top 10 pages.
Week 4: Evidence, repetition, and AI testing
Days 22–24: Add fresh social proof.
- Publish 2 micro-case studies (150–200 words each) with photos.
- Add 3 review snippets (with permission), including location cues: “Installed a 3-ton unit in Maple Heights—same day.”
Days 25–26: Create 10 short Q&A posts.
- One question per post, answer in 80–120 words.
- Examples: “Do you offer emergency service on Sundays in [Neighborhood]?”, “What’s the typical cost to replace a garbage disposal in [City]?”
- Link each post to a related service page and your /answers hub.
Day 27: Internal links & anchor text.
- From blog posts, FAQs, and service pages, link with natural, descriptive anchors (e.g., “same-day AC repair in Shaker Heights”).
Day 28: Test in AI engines.
- Ask your top 10 questions in Google, Bing Copilot, and Perplexity.
- Are you cited? If not, improve your answer-first intro and FAQs, tighten phrasing, and add a price/time box.
Day 29: Fill gaps.
- If engines surface competitors for a service/city combo you want, create a focused Q&A post or location section targeting that query.
Day 30: Document the playbook.
- Keep a simple checklist:
- Answer-first intro ✔
- Price & Time box ✔
- Local Proof box ✔
- 3–5 FAQs ✔
- Schema ✔
- Last updated date ✔
- Internal links ✔
What will you do every month to keep answers fresh? Small, frequent updates compound.
Writing style that AIs love (and humans do too)
- Lead with the answer. “Yes, we do same-day crown repairs in Somerville. Most visits take 90 minutes and cost $350–$900.”
- Use short sentences and headings. Avoid walls of text.
- Show your work. Include steps, parts, timelines, and disclaimers (“pricing varies with…”) so engines can quote specifics without confusion.
- Be explicit about location. Mention service areas, landmarks, and travel times.
- Keep sources clean. If you cite stats or standards, link to reputable sources (city permitting office, manufacturer specs, etc.). Bing Copilot and Perplexity favor verifiable sources. Microsoft Support+1
Common questions to sprinkle through your pages
- “Do you serve [Neighborhood] and what’s the earliest appointment this week?”
- “What’s the typical price range for [Service] in [City]?”
- “Can you do same-day or after-hours service?”
- “What brands or materials do you use?”
- “How long does it usually take?”
- “Is there a warranty?”
- “Who will I be working with?” (Add tech/clinician bios.)
These are the exact patterns people type, or speak, into AI engines. The simpler your answers, the better your odds of being quoted.
Quick reality check (and why now)
Google, Microsoft, and Perplexity all say their AI features aim to give helpful responses with links. If your content is clear, structured, local, and trustworthy, you increase your chances of being that linked source. Perplexity AI+3Google for Developers+3blog.google+3
At the same time, the rules are shifting. Publishers are actively challenging how AI uses content, and features evolve quickly.
That’s exactly why a 30-day, repeatable plan is your best defense: ship small improvements every week, measure, and iterate. Reuters
Bottom line: AEO isn’t a replacement for SEO—it’s an upgrade in how you present answers. Keep it simple: answer first, prove it locally, mark it up with schema, and repeat. Do that for 30 days and you’ll be positioned to show up in both traditional results and AI answers—right where your customers are looking today.
Do I need a separate “AEO strategy,” or is good SEO enough?
Great SEO gets you 80% of the way there. AEO adds answer-first writing, clean schema, and local specifics so AI engines can quote you confidently. Google emphasizes quality and clarity; structured data helps with understanding.
Will AI Overviews kill my website traffic?
It depends. Generic, thin pages may see fewer clicks. But clear, citable pages that answer local questions can gain visibility through citations and inclusion in summaries—especially for service and “who/where/how much” queries.
What schema types should a local service business prioritize?
Start with LocalBusiness (or a subtype like Dentist, Plumber), Service, and FAQPage. Add Product/Offer if you have fixed-price items and Review where appropriate.
How does Bing Copilot choose sources?
Bing Copilot shows summarized answers with citations so people can verify the info. Clean, authoritative pages are more likely to be referenced.
Does Perplexity actually include links to my site?
Yes, Perplexity’s answers typically include numbered source links. Write concise, answer-first content to increase your chances of being cited.
We’re budget-constrained. What are the cheapest AEO wins?
Rewrite your top 5 pages with answer-first intros, add 3–5 FAQs each, implement basic LocalBusiness + FAQPage schema, refresh GBP, and add “last updated” dates. Most of this is owner-doable in a month.
How often should we update?
Monthly is a good rhythm: add one new Q&A post per service area, refresh photos, and update prices/hours seasonally. Small, frequent updates help both SEO and AEO.
How do I know if it’s working?
Track:
- Citations/mentions of your brand in AI answers (manual spot checks weekly).
- GBP actions (calls, directions).
- Organic leads from location and service pages.
- Ranking/visibility for “service + city” terms.
FAQ