You rank on page one, your backlinks are solid, and your keywords are clean. Then you ask ChatGPT a question in your niche and it cites a competitor instead of you. The gap is usually not authority. It is extractability: whether an AI can actually read a claim from your page, understand it, and lift it into an answer.
Content Extraction Rate (CER) is a practical way to think about that. It is the share of your content that an AI model can successfully parse and reuse. A long, story-heavy article where the one useful fact is buried in paragraph nine has a low CER, even if a human would enjoy reading it. A page that leads with a clear answer, breaks claims into self-contained sections, and states facts plainly has a high CER. This guide shows you how to raise it.
Key takeaways
- CER is the proportion of your content an AI can read, understand, and quote. It is a working concept for structuring pages, not a standardized third-party score. - AI answer engines retrieve content in chunks. Facts that sit alone in a clearly labeled section get pulled; facts buried in narrative get skipped. - Answer-first writing wins: open every section with a direct one- or two-sentence answer before the context and detail. - Structure beats prose for extraction. Definition lines, short lists, concrete numbers, and step sequences are easier to lift than long paragraphs. - Verify the effect by checking whether AI engines start quoting the exact lines you rewrote, and by watching citation rate move over time.
Step 1: Lead with the answer (inverted pyramid)
Journalists put the most important information first. AI retrieval rewards the same habit. When a model assembles an answer, it favors passages that resolve the question immediately, because those are the safest to quote out of context.
For every section, put the payoff in the first sentence, then add why it matters, then supply examples or data. If a section header asks a question, the first line should answer it.
A low-CER opener reads like this: "There are many factors to consider when evaluating this metric, and in this section we will walk through the background before arriving at a working definition." Nothing there can be quoted.
A high-CER opener reads like this: "AIGVR is a 0–100 score for AI visibility, weighting answer position at 40%, mention frequency at 25%, and citations at 25%. It matters because it tells you whether AI engines actually surface your brand." The first sentence is a complete, liftable fact.
Step 2: Make every section a self-contained chunk
Retrieval-augmented generation does not read your page top to bottom. It splits pages into chunks and pulls the ones that match the query. If a section only makes sense after reading the three sections above it, it will not survive being pulled out on its own.
Write each section so it stands alone. Repeat the subject rather than leaning on "it" or "this." Give every H2 and H3 a descriptive, literal heading that names the topic, so the label alone signals what the chunk contains. "How to verify your CER" travels better than "Checking your work."



