In 2025, search engines are no longer reading your site the way they used to. They’re not scanning for keywords. They’re looking for signals of structure - elements they can parse, trust and reuse.
That’s why brands still chasing 'keyword density' are falling off the map.
Generative engines like Google AI, ChatGPT and Perplexity now prioritise citable content - neatly structured, highly relevant and technically accessible. If your content doesn’t meet that bar, it’s likely being skipped entirely in favour of Reddit, Wikipedia or third-party snippets that do.
Unlike traditional crawlers, LLMs consume your content in chunks, not pages. They prioritise:
Structured data (Schema.org markup)
Clean HTML hierarchies (especially Q&A, lists, and tables)
Accurate Knowledge Graph entries
Explicit access signals like llms.txt
Think of it this way: if you don’t serve your content in an AI-friendly format, someone else’s content will be served instead.
Add structured data to high-priority pages:
Use FAQ
, HowTo
, Product
, Organization
and Article
schema
Ensure accuracy and test via Google’s Rich Results Test
Map schema to content types across your funnel
This file tells LLMs what content they’re allowed to ingest and cite.
Include URLs to public datasets, explainer pages and APIs
Publish it at the root domain (e.g., example.com/llms.txt
)
Update it as you release new assets
AI tools lean heavily on known, verified entities.
Check your brand presence in Google Knowledge Panel, Wikidata and Wikipedia
Update any missing or outdated information
Add structured “about” content to reinforce entity clarity
Here's what you should be focussed on this quarter:
llms.txt
— and align it with your content strategyThis is less about rewriting your content - and more about making it readable to machines.
A UK-based travel brand noticed a 36% drop in organic traffic after AI Overviews rolled out earlier this year.
Instead of rewriting blog content, they:
Deployed structured FAQ
and Destination
schema across top pages
Added llms.txt
with links to their API-based trip planner
Updated their Wikidata and Wikipedia entries
Results:
+47% increase in AI visibility share within 6 weeks
Restored 3 lost top-of-funnel queries in Google AI
Increased citations in Perplexity for destination-specific queries
This wasn’t a content rewrite — it was a visibility realignment.
If your brand is serious about being the answer, not just a result, then structure is non-negotiable.
Most marketers aren’t behind on content - they’re behind on technical clarity.
Make it easier for machines to reuse your content and they will.
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