Make sure it's based on something you wrote — not something it pieced together from scattered mentions.
$149 · Published and indexed the same weekWhen a new tool launches, Google starts building a definition immediately.
It pulls from whatever it can find — directory listings, third-party mentions, comparison articles, social profiles. If that information is thin or written in marketing language, Google fills the gaps itself.
Getting that first definition wrong is easy. Correcting it later can take months of work and thousands in agency fees.
Read the live articles we published for aeogeoai.net — then search for us in Google and see what comes up.
Then try this in Google:
Google AI Overview for aeogeoai.net — generated from a structured brand profile published on Our Code World.
Google AI Mode — same query, same source. The structured profile carries through into the conversational result.
The structured profile pulls through in full detail — features, terminology, and category context all extracted correctly.
Google AI Mode extending the answer — AEO and GEO definitions drawn directly from the published profile.
We create and publish a structured brand profile written in the factual language AI systems extract from — not founder language, not marketing copy.
Published on an established indexed tech publication. Permanent URL. Indexed the same week.
| Do Nothing | AI Brand Profile |
|---|---|
| Google builds its own definition | You provide one |
| Based on scattered mentions | Based on a structured profile |
| Difficult to correct later | Clear source from day one |
| No control over narrative | Clear explanation of what you do |
We don't choose publications based on brand recognition alone. We choose them based on three factors that matter when the goal is helping Google understand a business:
Google crawls these sites frequently. New articles are typically indexed within days, not weeks.
These are established technology publications with strong backlink profiles and regular search visibility. Content published on them is treated as a credible source by Google's systems.
A structured profile about a software tool published on a technology publication carries more contextual relevance than the same profile on a generic content site.
Wait. Let Google piece together its own version from whatever it finds. Hope it gets it right. Spend months correcting it if it doesn't.
All tiers include the same structured brand profile format — written in factual language AI systems extract from, published on indexed tech publications, permanent URL, indexed the same week. The only difference is how many sources AI finds when it looks for evidence about your brand.
Not sure which tier? Start with AI Founder. If AI still isn't recommending your brand after 4 weeks, the additional placements in Master or Godfather are the next step. Most new brands see results from Founder. Competitive categories benefit from Master or Godfather.