Your Step-by-Step AIO Starter Plan
Think of this as your “do this first before going crazy with 20 blogs” checklist.
Step 1: List 10 “money” questions
Identify ten “money” queries—the ones a qualified buyer actually uses. For each, record whether an AI Overview, featured snippet, or People Also Ask appears, and which domains get cited or featured. Choose one priority page (usually your #1 service or offer).
Ask: What are the real questions buyers ask before they work with you?
Examples:
- “How does your AI consulting work?”
- “What kind of results can we expect?”
- “Do you work with B2B SaaS?”
Write them down.
Step 2: Turn them into an Answer Bank (FAQs)
Write at least 20 buyer-grade Q&As (40–60 words each) in real language.
For each question, write a 40–60 word answer that’s:
- clear
- specific
- no fluff
Place each answer where it naturally belongs. Put service questions on service pages; product questions on product pages; keep general questions on an FAQ hub if needed. Tighten your entity web: About ↔ Services ↔ People ↔ Industries. Add sameAs links to author bios.
- Service questions → service pages
- “About working with you” questions → About / Process page
- General questions → FAQ / resources
Step 3: Implement schema and add a short video
On your top pages:
- Wrap FAQs in FAQ schema. Add
FAQPageto the priority page with the first 5–7 Q&As. - Mark up pages as Article/Service. Add
Article(for this guide or your blog post) andService(for services). - If you have videos, use VideoObject schema. Record one 60–120-second explainer video, publish the transcript, and mark it up with
VideoObject.
You’re not trying to “trick” AI. You’re labeling your content so it can read it correctly.
Step 4: Fix your core signals
- Make your home + key services painfully clear.
- Add at least one case study (even a mini one).
- Make sure your brand name, description, and offers are consistent across your site and profiles (Google Business Profile)
Step 5: Publish, then measure (monthly) and improve.
Go live and document your baseline. Re-check your ten queries. Did an answer feature appear? If yes, which domains are cited now? If no, what do those cited domains show that you don’t (definitions, references, examples, or proof)? Make one improvement per weekly cycle.
Once a month:
- Run a few of your “money questions” in:
- Google (check AI Overview)
- a couple AI tools (ChatGPT, Perplexity)
- Note: Are you mentioned? Are close competitors mentioned? Nobody?
Use that log to decide your next moves.
Key Stats & Takeaways
- In March 2025, SemRush reported 13.14% of queries triggered AI Overviews (vs 6.49% in Jan).
- Organic clicks declined YoY while zero-click rose in 2025 datasets.
- Google’s AI features outlines key considerations (entities, structured data, helpful content).
- The average LLM visitor is worth 4.4x the average traditional organic search visitor. SEMRush
- Total search impressions have increased by over 49%, but click-through rates to websites have fallen by nearly 30% since AI Overviews launched (search is growing, but more queries are being answered directly by Google). BrightEdge
- In May 2025, Nine Peaks reported AI Overviews appearing in ~30% of all queries and in 74% of problem-solving queries, yet 49% of users still click through to websites for deeper information (AI is winning the first interaction, but almost half of users still need in-depth, on-site content).
- Longer, complex queries have grown 49% in AI Overviews, while there’s been a 60% decrease in ranking-style content. BrightEdge
- AI Overviews appear in ~30% of all queries and in 74% of problem-solving queries, yet 49% of users still click through to websites for deeper information (AI is winning the first interaction, but almost half of users still need in-depth, on-site content). Nine Peaks
- Being cited in AI Overviews doesn’t fix the CTR collapse, but it clearly softens the blow. Seer Interactive
- AI Overview slots behave more like position 6 than a true “#1.” Search Engine Land
