Let’s make marketing feel less robotic and more real.
Find resources that bring your message—and your business—to life.
By Vicky Sidler | Published 28 August 2025 at 12:00 GMT+2
Once upon a time, people typed “best bed sheets” into Google, clicked a few links, and maybe got distracted by a YouTube video of someone folding a fitted sheet perfectly.
Now? They ask ChatGPT, “I sleep hot, have eczema, and hate scratchy fabric. What’s a soft, breathable sheet that won’t irritate my skin?”
Same goal. Very different search rules.
According to Leigh McKenzie’s recent guide for ecommerce sellers, AI search is turning traditional SEO into a multi-layered, multi-platform game. If you want your products to be part of the answer when customers ask the internet what to buy, you need more than keywords.
You need what she calls relevance engineering.
Let’s break that down—plain English, practical steps, no fluff.
AI search tools now recommend products based on prompts, not just keywords
Your product pages need to be crawlable (not blocked) and readable (even without JavaScript)
Structured schema markup helps AI understand what you sell
Product feeds are now fuel for ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google Gemini
AI bots are crawling your site—you should track them
Optimizing for personas and prompts matters more than old-school keyword lists
Your brand must show up across the web—not just your site
Visibility is now probabilistic—your results vary based on how people ask
Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
AI Search Optimization for Ecommerce: 7 Steps to Show Up
Why AI Search Is Changing the Rules:
Step 1—Make Sure Bots Can See Your Products:
Step 2—Add Structured Schema Markup:
Step 3—Build a High-Quality Product Feed:
Step 5—Think in Prompts and Personas:
Step 6—Show Up Everywhere (Not Just Your Site):
Step 7—Track Your AI Visibility:
The End Goal—Be the Answer, Not Just the Option:
New Research Reveals How ChatGPT, Google AI, and Perplexity Source Info
AI Tools May Mention Your Brand Without Sending Clicks
Some Shared ChatGPT Conversations Have Been Indexed by Google
Gen Z Social Search Shift: How Brands Must Adapt
What is AI search optimization?
Why does AI search matter for ecommerce?
How do I know if AI bots are crawling my site?
Do I need to update my product pages?
What is schema markup and why is it important?
Should I submit product feeds to AI platforms?
How is prompt-based search different from keyword search?
What’s the best way to track AI visibility?
AI tools don’t “search” like we do. They interpret. When someone types a long, specific question, these bots scan their training data, recent web content, and product feeds—and then make a recommendation.
So if your product info isn’t showing up in the right places (or isn’t understandable to an AI), you won’t make the cut.
That’s where AI search optimization comes in.
First things first—your product detail pages (PDPs) need to be:
Crawlable (bots can access them)
Renderable (bots can read the content in plain HTML)
If you’re blocking GPTBot or PerplexityBot in your robots.txt file, they won’t crawl your site. That means your products won’t show up in AI answers. Double-check your settings.
Also, if your key info (like descriptions or pricing) loads via JavaScript, tools like ChatGPT and Perplexity may not see it. They can’t parse JavaScript—they read raw HTML. To test this, disable JavaScript in your browser and reload the page. If your product disappears, so will your visibility in AI.
Quick fix: Talk to your dev team about server-side rendering or prerendering important content.
Think of schema markup as a cheat sheet for AI. It tells bots what’s on your page in a format they understand instantly.
Use Schema.org’s “Product” type to describe:
Product name
Description
Brand
SKU or GTIN
Price and availability
Reviews and ratings
Stick to JSON-LD format, embed it in the raw HTML, and make sure it reflects what’s actually on the page.
Bonus: Add FAQ and HowTo markup if it makes sense. The more context you provide, the more likely AI tools are to feature your products in responses.
Think of your feed as the shopping list AI bots use to answer questions. The basics include:
Title
Description
Price
Product URL
Availability
GTIN, MPN, Brand
Image URL
Layer in extras like:
Product categories
Variants (colour, size)
Shipping details
Review count and star rating
And write in plain English. Not “moisture-wicking upper”—say “keeps your feet dry.” Use the words your customers use in reviews and support tickets.
Then submit your feed to platforms like:
Perplexity’s Merchant Program
Google Merchant Center
OpenAI (pilot program)
This makes it easier for AI tools to feature your products directly in answers—including product carousels and conversational recommendations.
Just because you opened the door doesn’t mean anyone’s visiting.
Set up server log tracking or use your CDN to monitor traffic from:
GPTBot (ChatGPT)
OAI-SearchBot (OpenAI search)
PerplexityBot (Perplexity AI)
Googlebot (various flavours)
Track:
Which pages they visit
How often they come back
Whether they crawl your product feed
This helps you see what bots are actually indexing—and where you might be falling short.
Old SEO: Keywords like “best running shoes”
New SEO: Prompts like “I’m training for a marathon in rainy weather. What’s a lightweight shoe with good grip?”
See the difference?
Your content, feeds, and page copy need to reflect how real people talk—and shop—in natural language.
Build prompt-based content around:
Personas (e.g. hot sleepers, allergy sufferers)
Use cases (e.g. travel, gifts, everyday basics)
Problems (e.g. sheets that bunch up, shoes that rub)
If you’ve ever built a StoryBrand BrandScript or Duct Tape customer persona, you already know how to do this. This is just applying it to your product descriptions and AI-facing content.
LLMs learn from the whole internet. That means your brand mentions on Reddit, Quora, Trustpilot, YouTube, and third-party blogs all shape how AI sees you.
So even if your product pages are perfect, if no one’s talking about your brand out there—AI won’t either.
Where to get mentioned:
Review platforms (Google, Amazon, Trustpilot)
Forums (Reddit, Quora)
YouTube videos (yours or creators’)
Affiliate blogs and product roundups
Get your product into these spaces. And make sure the language used aligns with what your ideal customers would say in an AI prompt.
Here’s the weird part. You might show up in one AI response and vanish from the next—even if the prompts are similar.
Why? Because AI results aren’t static. They’re generated on the fly based on your visibility, trust signals, and how the prompt is worded.
So stop tracking fixed keyword rankings. Start tracking prompt coverage instead.
How to do it:
Build a list of likely prompts
Use tools like Semrush AI Toolkit or Peec.AI to check if you show up
Note where your brand is cited, and what tone the AI uses
Compare yourself to competitors over time
Think of it like listening for echoes. If your brand keeps showing up in the answers, you’re doing it right.
This isn’t just about “optimising for AI.” It’s about making sure your products—and your message—show up wherever people are looking.
Your brand should feel like the natural answer when someone types in a long, confused, very human prompt like:
“I’ve just moved into a tiny apartment, I’m allergic to dust, and I hate ironing. What’s the best low-maintenance bedding set under $100?”
If your store doesn’t have a product page that matches that energy, someone else’s will.
Want to be that answer?
Start by getting your messaging right. The 5-Minute Marketing Fix will help you craft one sharp, clear line that cuts through the AI noise and grabs attention across every platform—bot or human.
If you're optimising for AI search, you need to know where these tools pull their data from. This breakdown shows how different AIs favour different platforms—and what that means for your ecommerce strategy.
If you're following the 7 steps to show up in AI results, this post explains why tracking AI mentions matters—even when they don't lead to clicks. A must-read for measuring AI visibility impact.
Your product might show up in an AI-generated answer — and then get indexed by Google. This article dives into what that means for brand control and public perception.
If younger customers are searching on TikTok and Instagram instead of Google, your AI strategy needs to stretch beyond product feeds and schema. This article shows how to keep up.
AI search optimization is the process of making sure your products and brand show up in answers from AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google Gemini. It involves things like schema markup, product feeds, natural-language content, and third-party mentions — not just old-school SEO.
Because more shoppers are using AI to research before they buy. If your products don’t show up in those conversations, you lose visibility — even if your website is technically sound. AI tools recommend based on prompts, context, and brand relevance, not just keywords.
You can check your server logs or use your CDN (like Cloudflare) to track requests from bots like GPTBot, PerplexityBot, and Googlebot. This tells you which pages are being indexed — and whether your product pages are being seen.
Yes, especially if they rely on JavaScript to load key content like prices, descriptions, or images. AI tools can’t read content that’s not in the raw HTML. Make sure your product detail pages are readable even with JavaScript turned off.
Schema markup is structured data that helps AI and search engines understand your product content. It improves visibility in AI-generated answers by clearly explaining what your product is, how much it costs, whether it’s in stock, and more.
Absolutely. Submitting your feed to platforms like Google Merchant Center, Perplexity, and (soon) OpenAI helps ensure your products are eligible to show up in AI shopping results. Feeds act as the “source of truth” for product info across many platforms.
Prompt-based search reflects how people naturally ask questions, like “What’s a good gift for someone who hates clutter?” rather than “minimalist gift ideas.” AI tools look for content that answers full prompts — so your product descriptions and site copy should mirror that language.
Build a library of real prompts your customers might use, and then test whether your brand shows up using tools like Semrush’s AI SEO Toolkit or Peec.AI. Traditional rankings matter less — what matters now is whether you're part of the answer.
Encourage reviews on places like Trustpilot, Amazon, and Google. Participate in forums like Reddit and Quora (without being spammy), collaborate with YouTubers or bloggers, and look for opportunities to be included in listicles and product roundups.
Start with your messaging. If your product descriptions and feeds don’t clearly reflect what real customers are looking for, even the best schema won’t help.Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix to craft a one-liner that works across websites, ads, and AI tools alike.
Created with clarity (and coffee)