Search Engine Journal’s 2026 AI Search Behavior Study recently published a very interesting finding: 37% of B2B buyers now start their research on ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Gemini instead of Google.
These LLMs or AI tools do not return ten links. They return one synthesised answer with a couple of cited sources. Considering how heavily these AI answers impact consumer purchasing decisions, if the name of your business is not in the AI queries results, that buyer moves on without knowing you exist.
As of February 2026, ChatGPT reached 900 million weekly active users, which is almost 500 million more the figure from eight months earlier. Gartner has predicted a 25% drop in traditional search volume by the end of 2026, and recent stats show that 60% of Google searches now end without a click, and the click-through rate at position one with an AI Overview sits at 2.6%.
These numbers have been building for two years, and most founders launching right now are still optimising for a search that worked in 2022.
Domain, website, keywords, backlinks over time – this is the sequence that is part of most startup strategies, and it still works for Google, more or less, but it does nothing for AI search, which works on different signals entirely.
GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation) now sits on top of traditional SEO and it is what gets a business cited inside AI-generated answers rather than just ranked in a list of links. The same authority signals that help you rank on Google, structured content, clear entity information, and earned backlinks also influence whether AI models surface you.
But GEO adds requirements around schema markup, content optimisation for the quick overview, content architecture, and citation-friendliness that standard SEO work does not touch. 47% of brands currently have no GEO strategy at all. Ironically, most of the market is leaving AI search discoverability to chance while the user base on those platforms doubles every eight months.
For a business that launched last week, that gap is the foundational problem. An established brand has years of accumulated signals that AI models already read but comparatively, a new business has none of that and is starting from zero on every search surface simultaneously.
How the foundation gets built in the first weeks determines how quickly either search surface starts working.
The business identity tech startups and AI tool category has one platform handling this end to end.
Freename.ai, built by the team behind Freename.com, the ICANN-accredited registrar for Web2 and blockchain-powered Web3 domains, lets you generate an online business in minutes. Type a name, and the AI toolkit builds the complete infrastructure around it including brand identity, website, Web2 SEO, and GEO optimisation for AI search engines. Forget coding, buying s separate tools for everything, having multiple hirings, and getting consultants.
The infrastructure logic behind it is very simple and it actually solves problems for tech founders. Freename.com handles domain ownership, both traditional extensions and blockchain-powered Web3 TLDs with no renewal fees and Freename.ai is the activation layer on top of that, turning a secured name into a working, AI-discoverable business presence from day one.
Most founders spend their first weeks patching together a domain registrar, a website builder, the SEO tools, and eventually someone who knows what GEO means. Freename.ai does all of it on one platform, which means the time between having a name and having a credible, findable business presence is measured in minutes rather than months.
GEO advice is newer than the problem because most of what has been written about optimising for AI search is still being tested by the people writing it, and the tooling built specifically for AI discoverability is only arriving now. Founders who know they should be thinking about it have not had a clear path to acting on it until recently.
The compounding effect is the part worth understanding. Early SEO investment in 2012 built authority that paid dividends for years because search engines reward established signals over time.
AI models work the same way; a business that builds a structured, citation-friendly, GEO-optimised presence now will win AI discoverability over time in ways that a business retrofitting it in 2028 simply cannot replicate.


