A car buyer doesn't follow a tidy funnel. They search a model at midnight on Google, ask ChatGPT or Claude "which luxury SUV is best for Quebec winters," then type "dealership near me" on the way home from work. Three intents, three moments, three levers.
SEO, being found when people research
Organic search captures broad, lasting intent: model guides, comparisons, financing questions, the local business listing. It's slow to build, but it's an asset you don't rent, it compounds. Done well, it reduces your dependence on paid media month after month and plants the brand both on the map and in the results pages.
GEO, being cited by generative engines
More and more buyers no longer type a query, they ask an AI a question. ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Gemini, Google's AI Overviews: these generative engines summarize and recommend, and their answer is becoming the new first page. GEO, Generative Engine Optimization (also called AEO, Answer Engine Optimization), is the craft of building a body of content that gets cited in those answers, for your brand as for your models. It's no longer optional: if you're not mentioned, you don't exist in the conversation.
- +Factual, structured content that directly answers buyer questions.
- +A consistent presence on the authority sources AIs consult.
- +A tracking of citations: who mentions you, how, and alongside whom.
SEM, accelerating what's already ripe
Paid doesn't invent demand: it gets ahead of it and captures it before the competition. Used alone, it's expensive and stops the moment you cut the tap. Backed by a solid organic foundation and a strong presence in generative engines, it becomes a surgical accelerator rather than a permanent IV.
You don't choose between organic and paid. You choose the right lever for the right moment in the journey.
Method · three stages
The real question isn't "which one?" but "in what order, and to serve which intent?" That articulation, not the sum of the budgets, is what brings the cost of acquisition down.
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