AI visibility is the degree to which a brand, product, or entity appears in answers generated by AI engines such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Copilot, Grok, Google AI Mode, and AI Overviews. It has two dimensions: frequency — how often the AI mentions or cites you across the queries your buyers actually ask — and prominence — whether you lead the answer, sit inside a shortlist, or surface only as a footnote citation. In generative search there is no page two; a brand is either inside the synthesized answer or it does not exist for that user.
Key takeaways
- AI visibility measures how often and how prominently a brand appears in AI-generated answers — a different game from ranking a URL on a results page.
- AI engines typically present a consideration set of three to five options per query. Visibility work is the fight to enter and stay in that set.
- You measure it by running a fixed panel of buyer-relevant prompts across engines and scoring mentions, positions, and citations; the AIGVR score condenses this into a single 0-100 number.
- Absence is not neutral. Users treat AI answers as vetted summaries, so being left out reads as irrelevance — and with zero-click behavior rising, the answer is often the only touchpoint.
- Improving AI visibility comes down to earning third-party mentions and citations, structuring your own content for retrieval, and monitoring continuously — the discipline known as Generative Engine Optimization (GEO).
How AI visibility works
When someone asks ChatGPT for the best carry-on luggage under $300, the engine does not rank pages. It decomposes the question into several grounding queries, retrieves passages from sources it trusts, blends them with what its training data already holds about each brand, and writes a short answer naming a handful of options.
Your brand can surface in that answer in four escalating forms. It can appear as a citation — a source link the engine used but may never name in the text. It can be mentioned inside a list of options. It can be recommended outright ("for frequent flyers, X is the strongest pick"). And in shopping contexts it can render as a product card with image, price, and reviews, which is where agentic commerce begins.
Each form deserves separate tracking because each responds to different levers. Citations follow from crawlable, quotable content; mentions and recommendations follow from your reputation across the wider web; product cards follow from feed and catalog data. and cover the first two in depth.





