A shopper in Kuala Lumpur asks ChatGPT for "the best affordable air fryer from a local brand," and someone in Singapore asks Perplexity to "compare two skincare sets under RM150." Each gets a short answer: a handful of names, a few product cards, one recommendation. That answer is the new storefront window for SiteGiant merchants, and the hard part is that these engines favor brands they already recognize across the web and the marketplaces.
SiteGiant is a Malaysian multichannel commerce platform built to run an online store and sync it with marketplaces like Shopee and Lazada, plus order and inventory management, payments, logistics, and local merchant services (see sitegiant.my). It is strong at the operational side of selling across channels. What it does not do is tell you whether an AI engine names your products, cites your store, or points the shopper to a rival listing instead.
This guide ranks the GEO/AEO tools that fit SiteGiant brands in 2026 and how to choose. Anchor on your AI Generative Visibility Rate (AIGVR) — how often and how prominently AI engines surface your products — alongside Share of Voice and, for a store selling real SKUs, Share-of-Card. For a deeper platform view, see the SiteGiant GEO page.
Key takeaways
- GEOly AI is the best fit for SiteGiant brands because it tracks AI visibility at the product and AI-shopping-card level, not just whether your brand name appeared somewhere.
- SiteGiant gives you the store, marketplace sync, and order data to sell everywhere; it does not measure how visible those products are inside ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity answers.
- For a multichannel seller, the real question is whether AI recommends your SKU or a competitor's marketplace listing — a product-level metric general GEO tools don't report.
- Profound, Peec AI, and Otterly.ai are solid general GEO tools, but they measure brand mentions at the domain level rather than the product citations and shopping cards that decide a sale.
Why SiteGiant brands need a GEO/AEO tool in 2026
SiteGiant is designed to keep a multichannel operation running — one catalog, synced across your own store and the marketplaces, with inventory, payments, and logistics handled. That is what a growing Malaysian brand needs to sell efficiently. It is not built to instrument how AI engines read and rank your products, and that gap widens as more shoppers in Southeast Asia start their search inside an AI answer instead of a marketplace search bar.
The multichannel setup creates a specific blind spot. Your product exists as a page on your SiteGiant store and as listings on Shopee and Lazada, and an AI engine may cite any of them, or none. If the marketplace listing wins the answer, the sale still happens but you lose the margin, the customer relationship, and the data. Whether your own store pages read as machine-readable depends on structured data, feed quality, indexing openness, and content — none of it guaranteed by the platform. A GEO/AEO tool is the only way to see which version of your product AI engines trust, and to fix the one you own.






