by Denise Wauters
For a long time, SEO meant writing for search engines. Keywords, backlinks, headings — and just enough polish to keep Google happy.
That approach still exists, but it’s no longer the whole story.
We’re now moving into something different: GEO — Generative Engine Optimization. Content isn’t just ranked anymore. It’s evaluated, summarized, and sometimes filtered out entirely by AI before a reader ever sees it.
And here’s the part people don’t always realize:
AI is actively removing low-quality content — what many now call slop.
SEO Isn’t Gone — It’s Just Not Enough
Traditional SEO has always focused on things like:
- Keywords and keyword placement
- Backlinks and authority
- Page structure and metadata
- Technical performance
Search engines still use these signals. But they’re no longer the final decision-maker.
AI systems now sit between your content and the reader, deciding what’s even worth showing.
What GEO Really Means
GEO is about writing content that holds up when AI systems generate answers — not just when a page is indexed.
These systems don’t ask, “Does this page rank?”
They ask, “Is this actually useful?”
AI looks at whether content is clear, trustworthy, original, and worth including at all. If it isn’t, it’s simply considered Slop and left out — quietly and completely.
How AI Spots “Slop”
AI is very good at recognizing patterns, especially low-effort ones.
Some common red flags include:
- Rewritten or recycled content with nothing new to say
- Over-optimized keyword stuffing
- Vague paragraphs that don’t add value
- Clickbait headlines with thin substance
- Content created to rank instead of help
When AI sees this, it doesn’t penalize it.
It ignores it.
No citation.
No summary.
No visibility.
The Real Shift Most People Miss
This is where GEO and SEO truly diverge.
With SEO, low-quality content might still show up — just not very well.
With GEO, low-quality content often never appears at all.
If AI wouldn’t confidently quote your content, summarize it, or recommend it, it’s effectively invisible.
What Holds Up Now
Content that performs well in this environment tends to:
- Be written for people, not systems
- Reflect real experience or local knowledge
- Say something clear and specific
- Avoid filler and repetition
- Sound natural and human
In simple terms:
If it feels manufactured, AI tends to move on.
Why This Matters Locally
For Everglades City and the surrounding Ten Thousand Islands communities, this matters more than ever.
AI doesn’t just scan information — it decides which voices represent a place.
Clear, authentic local content is far more likely to be referenced, summarized, and trusted. Rushed or generic content fades into the background.
The Bottom Line
SEO helps content get indexed.
GEO determines whether it gets included.
And in today’s search environment, slop doesn’t linger.
It disappears.
If your content wouldn’t be trusted as an answer, AI won’t use it — and that’s the new reality of search.
How This Article Measures Up
Before publishing, we took a step back and looked at this article the same way AI systems now do. Is it clear? Does it say something real? Is it written for people, not algorithms? Articles that answer yes to those questions are far more likely to be kept, referenced, and trusted — while vague, recycled content is often filtered out before it ever shows up. I think we nailed it.
Curious whether your content is being surfaced or skipped? We’re happy to help you take a closer look.

