Here's something that should get your attention: Google Gemini has access to the entire Google Search index. The same index that powers the search engine 8.5 billion queries per day run through.
That's a massive advantage over other LLMs. And it means that getting recommended by Gemini has a lot of overlap with the SEO work you're probably already doing. But "overlap" doesn't mean "identical." There are important differences.
If you've been investing in Google SEO, you have a head start. If you haven't, Gemini gives you one more reason to start.
How Gemini decides who to recommend
Gemini sits inside Google's ecosystem, and that shapes everything about how it works.
It draws from Google's search index. When Gemini responds to a query, it can pull from the same web content Google Search knows about. This means your Google indexing, rankings, and authority directly influence whether Gemini sees you.
It has access to Google's Knowledge Graph. Google has spent years building structured data about entities, brands, and relationships. If your brand has a strong presence in Google's knowledge systems (think: Google Business Profile, consistent NAP data, Wikipedia presence), Gemini understands who you are.
Google's own properties may get priority. This isn't confirmed, but it's worth noting: content on YouTube, Google Shopping, Google Reviews, and other Google-owned platforms may carry extra weight in Gemini's responses. It makes sense. Google trusts its own data.
Recency and freshness matter. Gemini can access current web information, so outdated content is a disadvantage just like it is in regular Google Search.
1. Start with a Gemini visibility check
Open Gemini and test your relevant queries:
- "What's the best [your category] for [audience]?"
- "Recommend a [product type] for [use case]"
- "Top [category] options for [specific need]"
Write down whether Gemini mentions you, where you appear in the response, and who it mentions instead. Test at least 10-15 queries that represent how real customers would ask about your category.
This gives you a starting point. For ongoing tracking, Mentionable monitors Gemini alongside other LLMs automatically, so you catch changes as they happen.
2. Strengthen your Google SEO foundation
Since Gemini pulls from Google's index, your SEO fundamentals have a direct impact.
Make sure you're indexed and ranking. If Google doesn't know your key pages exist, Gemini won't either. Check Google Search Console for indexing issues. Fix crawl errors. Submit sitemaps.
Target the right queries. Focus on the relevant queries your customers actually use. "Best [tool] for [audience]" pages, comparison content, and use-case guides are exactly what Gemini draws from when someone asks for recommendations.
Build strong topical authority. Cover your niche comprehensively. Google (and by extension Gemini) trusts sites that demonstrate deep expertise on a topic, not just one or two surface-level posts.
Earn quality backlinks. Links from authoritative sites in your industry remain one of the strongest trust signals in Google's ecosystem. Gemini benefits from the same trust graph.
3. Leverage Google's own platforms
This is where Gemini optimization diverges from generic LLM optimization.
YouTube is underrated. Gemini can reference YouTube content. If you create helpful videos about your niche, especially tutorials, comparisons, and reviews, those become potential sources for Gemini responses. A well-optimized YouTube video with a clear title and description can earn you a Gemini mention that text content alone might not.
Google Business Profile matters for local. If you have any local component to your business, an optimized Google Business Profile feeds directly into Google's knowledge systems.
Google Reviews build trust. Customer reviews on Google add to your brand's credibility signal within Google's ecosystem.
Google Merchant Center for products. If you sell physical products, having them in Google Shopping gives Gemini structured product data to work with.
4. Create content Gemini can use
The content principles for Gemini share common ground with other LLMs, but the Google context adds nuance.
Use structured data markup. Schema.org markup helps Google (and Gemini) understand what your content is about. Product schema, FAQ schema, Review schema, and Organization schema all help Gemini categorize and trust your content.
Write clear, direct answers. When someone asks Gemini for a recommendation, it needs to extract a clear answer from your content. Don't bury recommendations in walls of context. Lead with the useful part.
Build comparison and "best of" content. These pages map directly to the relevant queries people ask Gemini. "Best email marketing tools for small businesses" with an honest, detailed comparison is exactly what Gemini needs to source recommendations from.
Keep content current. Update publish dates. Refresh statistics and pricing. Remove outdated information. Gemini, like Google Search, uses freshness as a quality signal.
5. Build entity recognition
Gemini is better at understanding brands as entities than most LLMs, thanks to Google's Knowledge Graph.
Be consistent across the web. Your brand name, description, and category should be identical everywhere: your site, social profiles, business directories, review platforms. Consistency helps Google build a clear entity profile for your brand.
Get a Wikipedia page (if eligible). Wikipedia is one of the primary sources for Google's Knowledge Graph. If your brand is notable enough, a Wikipedia article significantly boosts entity recognition.
Maintain a strong social presence. Google indexes social profiles and uses them to understand brand identity. LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and especially YouTube profiles should be complete and consistent with your positioning.
Claim your knowledge panel. If Google shows a Knowledge Panel for your brand, claim and verify it. This tells Google you're actively managing your brand identity.
Common mistakes with Gemini optimization
Treating it exactly like Google SEO. There's overlap, but Gemini generates responses. It doesn't show a list of ten blue links. You need content that's synthesis-friendly, not just rank-worthy.
Ignoring Google's platforms. If you're only optimizing your website and ignoring YouTube, Google Reviews, and Google Business Profile, you're missing channels that Gemini specifically has strong access to.
Neglecting structured data. Schema markup is more important for Gemini than for most other LLMs because Gemini inherits Google's structured data understanding.
Focusing only on informational content. Gemini handles relevant queries well. Make sure you have content that addresses buying decisions, not just educational topics.
Inconsistent brand signals. If Google can't clearly identify what your brand is and does, Gemini won't confidently recommend you. Mixed messaging across platforms is the fastest way to stay invisible.
How Gemini compares to other LLMs
| Factor | Gemini | ChatGPT | Perplexity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Web access | Google's full index | Bing/browsing | Live web search |
| Training data influence | High + live | High | Lower (live-first) |
| Google SEO overlap | Very high | Moderate | Moderate |
| Structured data use | Strong | Moderate | Moderate |
| Google platform advantage | Yes | No | No |
The main takeaway: if you're already doing Google SEO well, Gemini is the LLM where you'll likely see the fastest results. If you're not, getting your Google fundamentals right is the single most impactful thing you can do.
Realistic timeline
Week 1-2: Audit your Gemini visibility. Check Google Search Console for indexing issues. Fix any technical problems.
Month 1: Optimize or create content for your top relevant queries. Add structured data markup to key pages.
Month 2-3: Build out Google platform presence (YouTube, Reviews, Business Profile). Strengthen backlink profile.
Month 3+: Monitor changes and iterate. Gemini visibility often correlates with Google Search improvements, so track both.
What to do next
Check how Gemini currently responds to your most important relevant queries. Compare that to your Google Search rankings for the same topics. The gap between the two tells you where to focus.
If you're already ranking well on Google but Gemini isn't mentioning you, the issue is likely content format. Make sure your content is easy to synthesize into a recommendation, not just informative.
Mentionable tracks your Gemini visibility alongside ChatGPT, Perplexity, Grok, and Claude, giving you a clear picture of where you stand across all the AI platforms your customers are using.
