Write content optimized for AI search engines using the 12 Principles of AI-Friendly Writing. Use when creating articles, documentation, or marketing content that needs to be easily understood and cited by LLMs like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini.
Create content that is easily understood, extracted, and cited by AI search engines while remaining engaging for human readers.
AI-friendly content means writing so clearly that both humans and machines can follow your thinking. Apply these principles to every piece of content.
Start with the main takeaway, then explain it. When you open a section, give the answer in the first one or two sentences, then add context and proof.
Bad:
"In today's fast-paced digital landscape, businesses are constantly looking for ways to improve visibility and stay competitive. One of the most effective ways to do that is through optimizing content for AI-driven search engines."
Good:
"To rank in AI Search, start your article with the answer, not the setup. AI engines (and readers) both reward clarity over buildup."
If your heading is a question, the first sentence under it should contain a direct answer in plain language.
Bad:
What is AI-friendly writing? Before we define it, let's talk about how writing itself has evolved with the rise of large language models...
Good:
What is AI-friendly writing? AI-friendly writing is writing that's easy for both humans and machines to interpret—clear, structured, and impossible to misquote.
Use short sentences with a clear subject and verb. Avoid long chains of clauses that delay the main point.
Bad:
"By implementing these strategies, you can boost engagement across your content."
Good:
"Use these strategies to boost engagement."
State the point literally first. You can add personality, metaphors, or jokes after the core idea is clear.
Bad:
"When it comes to AI Search, most brands are still flying blind."
Good:
"A lot of brands don't yet understand how AI Search discovers and cites their content."
Every "it", "this", or "that" should have an obvious referent in the same sentence or the one before it.
Bad:
"This is why it's important to simplify your structure."
Good:
"Clear antecedents make your writing easier for both readers and AI to follow; that's why simplifying your structure matters."
Each paragraph should support one main idea. If you introduce a new claim, start a new paragraph. This makes it easier for models to assign a single topic to that block of text.
Bad:
"AI-friendly writing requires clear structure. It also changes how we think about storytelling and creativity. Some writers worry this means the death of nuance, but that's not necessarily true if you understand how LLMs process language."
Good:
"AI-friendly writing requires clear structure. Use short sentences, explicit antecedents, and one idea per paragraph. These patterns help both humans and machines follow your argument without getting lost."
Treat headings as a map of your reasoning. Use H2 for core sections, H3 for subpoints, and keep the order logical: claim, explanation, proof.
Structure Example:
## Main Topic (H2)
Introductory statement about the topic.
### Subtopic A (H3)
Details about subtopic A.
### Subtopic B (H3)
Details about subtopic B.
Pick one term for each important concept and use it throughout. If you want to be known for "Generative Engine Optimization (GEO)", avoid switching between GEO, AI SEO, and "AI content tuning" in the same article.
Bad:
"Superlines helps marketers create better content for search. SL also supports AI visibility tracking. Our platform offers several AI-powered tools."
Good:
"Superlines helps brands track, optimize, and grow their visibility in AI Search—from monitoring AI visibility to identifying citation opportunities."
When you know something, say it directly and support it. Avoid constant hedging like "it seems" or "it might" unless you genuinely don't know.
Bad:
"It seems like AI Search might change how brands approach SEO."
Good:
"AI Search is rewriting how brands approach SEO."
Don't only use your main keyword. Surround it with the natural vocabulary of the topic: related tools, concepts, metrics, and use cases.
Bad:
"AI Search is changing how people find information online."
Good:
"AI Search, through features like Google's AI Overviews and the broader GEO layer, is changing how people discover and trust information online."
Spell out any acronym the first time you use it.
Bad:
"GEO is changing how brands approach search visibility."
Good:
"Generative Engine Optimization (GEO)—the practice of optimizing content for AI-powered search engines—is changing how brands approach visibility."
Write each paragraph so it can stand alone as a small answer. One clear idea, stated directly, with enough context that it still makes sense if an AI lifts only those two or three sentences.
Bad:
"AI-friendly writing requires structure, clarity, and empathy. You need to think about formatting, semantics, and tone, because LLMs read differently than people do, and readers still want personality."
Good:
"AI-friendly writing starts with structure. One idea per paragraph makes your content easier to parse—for humans and for machines."
When creating new content, use this structure:
# [Clear, Question-Based Title]
> **TL;DR:** [2-3 sentence summary with the main takeaway]
## [Question-Based H2]
[Direct answer in first 1-2 sentences]
[Supporting details, evidence, examples]
### [Subtopic H3]
[Focused explanation of one aspect]
## Key Takeaways
- [Takeaway 1 - quotable standalone statement]
- [Takeaway 2 - quotable standalone statement]
- [Takeaway 3 - quotable standalone statement]
## FAQ
### [Common question 1]
[Direct answer]
### [Common question 2]
[Direct answer]
Use these elements to make content easy for AI to extract:
| Element | Use For |
|---|---|
| Tables | Comparisons, features, specifications |
| Bullet lists | Steps, features, benefits |
| Numbered lists | Sequences, rankings, processes |
| Blockquotes | Key definitions, important callouts |
| Code blocks | Examples, templates, configurations |