That's the GEO problem — and it's growing faster than most SaaS founders realize.
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of optimizing your content to appear as citations and mentions inside AI-generated answers from platforms like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and Gemini.
Unlike traditional SEO — where you optimize to rank in a list of links — GEO gets you cited when an AI engine synthesizes an answer for your audience. AI-referred sessions jumped 527% year-over-year in the first half of 2025. The window to get in early is still open, but closing fast: 47% of brands still have no GEO strategy.
ChatGPT now has more than 900 million weekly users as of April 2026. When someone in your ICP asks "What's the best tool for [your category]?" — if your brand isn't in that answer, you effectively don't exist to them.
The shift is structural:
And here's what makes this especially relevant for SaaS marketing: 50% of content cited in AI answers is less than 13 weeks old. Recency matters more than domain age. A challenger brand can win the citation battle against a legacy competitor — if it moves now.
This is the part most GEO guides skip.
According to Semrush data from January 2026, Reddit and LinkedIn are the two most cited domains across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Mode.
Not Forbes. Not TechCrunch. Reddit.
Why? Because Reddit contains millions of real, specific, first-person discussions about product decisions, tool comparisons, and industry questions. LLMs are trained on this content — and they keep pulling from it in real-time via web search.
This has a direct implication for SaaS companies: if you have no Reddit presence, you have no GEO presence.
We ran a GEO audit for one of our clients — a B2C SaaS on the job search market. We asked ChatGPT questions their target users would ask about their category.
Out of 10 citations ChatGPT pulled when recommending tools in that space, 7 came from Reddit posts we had published for that client.
Not from their website. Not from their blog. From Reddit.
That's what GEO looks like in practice: a well-placed Reddit thread, written in the voice of a real user, becomes the source an LLM trusts when your category comes up in conversation.
AI systems don't read — they extract. The core principles: answer directly in the first 40–60 words, maintain fact density with statistics every 150–200 words, cite authoritative sources, and implement proper schema markup.
Practically: use H2/H3 subheadings phrased as questions. Write short paragraphs. Use bullet points. Put the answer first, context second.
Reddit is the top community source for LLM training and real-time citation. To grow your Reddit presence, find subreddits where your audience hangs out and share genuinely helpful advice when people ask questions related to your expertise.
The critical rule: don't promote directly. Contribute genuinely. The subreddits where your ICP hangs out (r/SaaS, r/startups, r/Entrepreneur, r/IndieHackers, etc.) are exactly where LLMs look when they need community-sourced answers.
The reason 80%+ of SaaS companies fail at this: they get banned. Reddit's anti-spam systems are aggressive, and a new account pushing links gets flagged fast. The way around it is to build karma through real contributions — or work with an agency that already has established profiles.
FAQ format converts seamlessly into AI responses. Structure frequently asked questions as H2 or H3 headings phrased exactly as users would ask them, followed by concise answers. Implement FAQ schema markup.
Think: "What is the best Reddit marketing tool for SaaS?" → your blog should contain that exact question as a heading, with a direct answer in the first sentence below it.
"Fact density" — the inclusion of authoritative citations, statistics, and quotations — can boost the visibility of lower-ranked websites by up to 40% in AI responses.
Every section of your content should contain a specific, citable fact. Not "Reddit is popular" — but "Reddit has 91 million daily active users, up 51.6% year-over-year." LLMs pull content that gives them something precise to quote.
Unlike SEO rankings that persist for months, GEO citations decay: 50% of content cited in AI answers is less than 13 weeks old. This means a one-time content push won't sustain your GEO presence. You need a consistent publishing cadence — on your blog AND on community platforms like Reddit.
Content with proper schema markup shows 30–40% higher visibility in AI-generated answers. Start with FAQ schema on your highest-traffic pages.
If you want to appear in LLM answers within weeks — not months — Reddit is the fastest path.
That's exactly what we do at MarketOwl. We use our own established Reddit profiles to publish content for SaaS clients — natively, without direct links, in the voice of a real community member. The result: content that Reddit doesn't ban, Google indexes, and LLMs cite.
For one client, that meant 7 out of 10 ChatGPT citations in their category came from our Reddit posts.
The brands that move on GEO now — while 47% of competitors have no strategy — will own the citation layer before anyone else gets there.