The Difference Between SEO, AIO, and GEO for Interior Designers

Three acronyms, one goal: being found by the right clients. Here is what SEO, AIO, and GEO actually mean for a design studio, without the jargon.

Abstract editorial graphic of three columns representing SEO, AIO, and GEO

For years, "being found online" meant one thing: SEO. Show up on Google, and you were visible. That world has quietly split in three. Today, discovery happens across search engines, AI assistants, and AI-generated answers, and each has its own rules.

The good news is that they rest on the same foundation. You do not need three separate strategies so much as one clear structure read three ways. Here is what SEO, AIO, and GEO for interior designers actually mean, and how they fit together.

SEO: being found on search engines

Search engine optimization is the original layer, and still essential. It is the practice of structuring your site and signals so Google and other engines rank you for what clients search: services, locations, project types. Ranking for the searches that matter comes from clear pages, real relevance, internal linking, and trust.

SEO has not gone away. It has become the base the other two layers build on. A studio that is illegible to Google is usually illegible to AI as well.

AIO: being understood by AI assistants

AI optimization is about being understood by assistants like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot, not just ranked by an engine. Where SEO asks "can Google match this page to a query?", AIO asks "can an AI model comprehend this studio well enough to describe it?"

That comprehension comes from entity clarity, defined services, consistent details, and readable structure. It is closely tied to what AI tools need to know before they will recommend you.

GEO: being surfaced inside AI answers

Generative engine optimization is the newest layer: earning a place inside the answers AI actually generates, the studios named in an AI Overview or a Perplexity response, with a reason attached. This is where AI Overviews and assistant recommendations live.

GEO depends on the previous two. If SEO makes you rankable and AIO makes you understandable, GEO is what makes you quotable, content clear and trustworthy enough that a model is comfortable repeating it to a client.

How the three fit together

Picture them as layers rather than rivals.

  • SEO gets you found on search engines.
  • AIO gets you understood by AI assistants.
  • GEO gets you surfaced inside AI-generated answers.

All three draw on one foundation: clear structure, defined services, real location relevance, and verifiable trust. Build that well and you are not optimizing three times, you are optimizing once and being read three ways. That is the logic behind our SEO, AIO, and GEO work.

What this means for your studio

You do not need to master three disciplines. You need a foundation legible enough to serve all three audiences, the search engine, the assistant, and the generated answer. Practically, that means the same priorities you would pursue anyway: real service pages, location relevance, connected authority, and content that answers real questions.

One clear structure, read three ways. That is the whole strategy.

If you want to know which of the three layers your studio is strongest and weakest on today, a visibility review will map it out.

Start with a Google + AI visibility audit

Before changing anything, it helps to see clearly. A visibility audit shows exactly where your studio is easy, or hard, to understand.

Start with a Google + AI visibility audit
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Questions, answered

SEO, AIO, GEO: quick answers

What is the difference between SEO, AIO, and GEO?
SEO is search engine optimization, being found on Google and other engines. AIO is AI optimization, being understood by AI assistants. GEO is generative engine optimization, being surfaced inside AI-generated answers like AI Overviews and Perplexity responses. All three rest on the same clear structure.
Do interior designers need all three now?
Increasingly, yes, because clients now discover studios across all three layers. The encouraging part is that one well-built foundation, clear services, location relevance, and verifiable trust, serves all three at once rather than requiring three separate strategies.
Where should a studio start?
With the foundation that serves every layer: clear service pages, real location signals, connected authority, and readable structure. A visibility review shows which layer you are strongest and weakest on so you can prioritize.