How can AI find my WEBSITE?

Carlos Polanco
2 min readFeb 20, 2025

--

Have you noticed that we’re browsing the traditional web less and less? Instead of opening your browser and typing in Google, you simply ask your AI assistant: “What is SEO and how can it help my website?

In seconds, you receive a clear and concise answer without having to scroll through multiple pages.

That’s when my concern began. As a developer, I’ve always relied on traditional SEO strategies to increase my site’s visibility. But with the rise of AI that can search and understand content in a semantic way, I started to wonder:

How do AIs search the web, and how can I make sure my site is optimized for them?

The Dual Training Challenge

At first, I thought that improving my traditional SEO would be enough. I optimized keywords, improved loading speed, and ensured a clean link structure.

A small step forward, but soon I realized it wasn’t enough. AIs don’t just look for keywords; they look for context, relevance, and depth. It wasn’t just about “speaking Google’s language,” but rather about speaking AI’s language. This meant creating richer content, implementing structured data, and ensuring that each page provided real and relevant value.

The Revelation: A New Strategy Needed

Consulting with different AI models revealed a fundamental truth:

1. Quality and Relevant Content

Make sure your content answers users’ questions. Think about how people phrase their questions and use natural language that reflects that.

Example: Instead of just writing about “SEO,” create a complete guide that answers specific questions like “How does SEO work in 2025?”

2. Structured Data

Implement schema markup using JSON-LD to help AIs understand the context of your content. This improves eligibility for rich snippets and voice search results.

3. Freshness and Authority of Content

Regularly update your content and build backlinks from reputable sites to signal trust and authority to AIs.

4. User Engagement

Encourage user interaction. Metrics like dwell time and bounce rate tell AIs that your content is valuable.

A Practical Example

Let’s say you have a site about solar energy:

  • Bad: A homepage with “Solar Energy!” and a generic photo.
  • Good: A page titled “How Solar Panels Work in 2025,” with a detailed explanation, a diagram (alt text: “Energy flow in a solar panel”), a FAQs section, and a link to a recent discussion on X about solar innovations.

To Sum Up

This shift means that simply following old SEO methods — like stuffing keywords or speeding up page loads — is no longer enough. Today’s AIs seek context, depth, and clear value.

Stay curious and keep experimenting! For more resources, check out:

**[Guides](https://www.the-aideveloper.com/guides)**

- **[Projects](https://www.the-aideveloper.com/projects)**

- **YouTube**: [The AI Developer](https://www.youtube.com/@theaideveloper)

- **LinkedIn**: [The AI Developer](https://www.linkedin.com/company/theaidevelopercp/)

- **GitHub**: [The AI Developer](https://github.com/cpTheAideveloper)

--

--

No responses yet