We're entering a new era of search where AI Overviews, AI-generated summary answers at the very top of search engine results, can make or break your visibility. In plain terms, AI Overviews are short, machine-written snapshots that synthesise information from multiple sources and cite them. They sit above traditional results and let buyers get to a trustworthy answer faster.
For a busy B2B tech buyer, an AI Overview is an executive summary of their question, no need to click through dozens of links.
Why does this matter for B2B tech companies? Because those cited answers at the top of the page are fast becoming prime real estate for capturing your audience's attention. If your content is the one chosen and cited by AI, you instantly gain authority and exposure with potential customers at the very moment they're seeking information. Early research backs this up: 72% of B2B buyers in a recent study by TrustRadius said they encounter Google's AI Overview snapshots during their research, and 90% of them click through to at least one of the cited sources for fact-checking.
In other words, the brand that answers a prospect's question better, faster, and more honestly than anyone else wins the coveted citation and with it, a shot at the trust and leads that come from being viewed as the source of truth.
What are B2B Tech AI Overviews?

What is an AI Overview?
AI Overviews are AI-generated summaries for search queries that appear above traditional results, pulling information from multiple sources (blogs, knowledge bases, forums, etc.) that include links for further reading. Think of them as "position zero" answers authored by AI, not by a single website. In Google, this feature comes from its Search Generative Experience Google has published official guidance on AI features in Search, confirming thatfoundational SEO best practices you use for Google Search overall, including E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness), helpful content creation, and structured data are required for AI Overviews.
When do AI overviews appear?
AI Overviews most often trigger on informational queries (usually questions starting with "what," "why," or "how") and complex questions where synthesis helps the user move faster. Industry tracking shows rising presence for B2B technology queries, with Google citing more expert sources and authoritative content than earlier roll-outs. For example, a search for "benefits of cloud computing for businesses" might display an AI Overview bulleting the key benefits (Cost Savings, Scalability, Collaboration, etc.), each point drawn from a different authoritative source. Unlike a traditional featured snippet which quotes one webpage.
Where will I find AI overviews?
Answer-style results are now the norm across experiences (Bing Copilot, Perplexity, ChatGPT with browsing). This is why AEO and GEO now sit alongside SEO in any modern search strategy. Meanwhile, analysts predict traditional search volumes will decline by ~25% by 2026 as more queries move to AI-driven tools, so being chosen as a cited source is becoming as vital as classic ranking. In fact, featured snippets and AI Overview results now appear in nearly half of all Google searches.
Why AI Overviews matter for B2B tech companies

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Prime visibility: AI Overviews sit above all the organic results and even ads, often consuming nearly half of a user's screen. On a mobile phone, the AI answer might fill the entire screen, pushing everything else down. If your content isn't part of that overview, it's effectively invisible to a large chunk of searchers who don't scroll. (Today, as much as 58% of Google searches result in no traditional clicks: people get their answer and stop. You want your brand to be in that answer.)
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Authority at the moment of truth: Being cited in an AI Overview is like a third-party endorsement of your content's credibility. AI has essentially tagged your page as one of the most trustworthy sources on that question. Buyers who see your name linked at the top of the AI summary immediately associate you with expertise. Notably, many B2B searchers don't fully trust an unverified AI blurb, they use the citations to fact-check. When they click your link for confirmation, you've won a chance to impress a highly engaged prospect. (And because the overview highlights exactly what they were curious about, you already know what information they're looking for when they arrive on your site.)
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Higher-Intent Traffic and Leads: The users coming from AI Overview citations are not casual browsers, they're actively researching and verifying information. Jam 7's own experience (and outside research) shows these visitors tend to be further along in their decision process, which means they're more likely to convert. Industry data supports this: users clicking through AI summaries are often seeking detailed information and are more qualified leads than your average organic visitor. By appearing in AI Overviews, you attract prospects who have a specific question or pain point and are serious enough to dig into the answer.
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Future-proofing: Gartner predicts that by 2026, traditional search engine usage will drop 25% as more queries shift to AI-driven platforms. Already, Microsoft's integration of ChatGPT into Bing and the popularity of ChatGPT/Perplexity for research signal that AI-assisted search is here to stay. B2B tech is often on the cutting edge of such trends; your target buyers are likely early adopters of these AI tools. Adapting your SEO strategy to include Answer Engine visibility now is going to put you a year or two ahead of those who wait. On the flip side, ignoring it could mean a slow erosion of your organic leads as competitors start capturing those AI citations.
xEO: Our new search stack
At Jam 7, we think in terms of xEO: one unified approach that serves search engines, LLMs and humans.
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SEO ranks your pages in organic results.
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AEO (Answer Engine Optimisation) wins modern answer formats such as AI Overviews, featured snippets, People Also Ask, voice assistants, direct answers instead of a list of links.
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GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation) is "SEO for AI agents" making sure the AI picks and quotes you when it writes the answer.
xEO is one plan built around real personas, their pains/gains/jobs-to-be-done, and the questions they actually ask. It turns zero-click and AI-generated experiences into demand capture. Winning search by answering better, faster and more honestly.
The xEO playbook: how to win AI Overview citations

Our core principle: answer better, faster, more honestly.
Answer better
Make sections extractable
Structure content so subsections can stand alone as a high-quality "chunk": use question-based H2/H3s with short answer paragraphs directly under headings, and bullets for steps/criteria. This increases "copy-ability" into AI Overviews.
Cover intent completely
Define the concept, explain the "why", show "how", prove it, and link to next steps. AI is increasingly citing authoritative, advanced sources, depth matters.
Keep it current & correct
Refresh quarterly (or faster in fast-moving niches). Link to primary sources. If the space is volatile (e.g., AI risks/hallucinations), acknowledge uncertainty and cite policy updates Google has adjusted AI Overview scope after reliability issues, so accuracy and transparency are trust signals.
Prove real-world experience
Content that demonstrates strong Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness and Trustworthiness (E-E-A-T) is more likely to be cited by Google's AI when generating AI Overviews.
Use named expert authors, first-hand lessons, process screenshots, decision criteria, and customer-approved examples. These are the signals Google and third-party studies associate with citations.
Answer faster
Trend sensing + rapid content
Monitor new questions (release notes, policy changes, vendor updates, UK/EU regulation) and publish within hours/days. Google AI has a recency bias. Early high-quality answers often become the default "source of truth" AI Overviews latch onto.
Programme velocity
You won't win one answer, you need topic breadth. Use a human-in-the-loop workflow to create and maintain content at scale while keeping quality and brand voice intact.
Answer more honestly
No fluff, no hype.
Say what's true, what's unknown, and what to do next. If there's a trade-off, state it. This reduces hallucination-risk and increases the chance your passages are quoted verbatim.
Semantic search, entity SEO & knowledge graphs
Search and generative systems map entities (people, products, brands, methods) and their relationships. To become "the" source an AI trusts, you must be legible at the entity level.
Your entity strategy checklist
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Declare your entities clearly (Organisation, Product, Person pages).
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Use schema markup.
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Consistent naming across your site, LinkedIn, GitHub, partner marketplaces.
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Build topic clusters: a pillar page plus interlinked cluster articles that cover sub-topics, use consistent terminology, and answer related questions.
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Cite primary sources and UK-relevant standards/regulations, these create graph edges AIs can follow.
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Reinforce authorship: expert bios with credentials and "what I've done" signals (talks, contributions, patents).
Studies show AI Overviews draw heavily from pages that already demonstrate topical authority; many citations come from top-ranking pages, but not all; a meaningful minority come from outside the top 10. You increase your odds by being both rank-worthy and extractable.
Practical on-page patterns that AIs love

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Lead with the answer (short answer paragraphs) under each question-style H2.
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Decision tables & checklists (criteria columns: use case, risk, cost, time).
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Numbered steps for processes (implementation, evaluation, migration).
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Definition blocks for key terms (bold term, one-sentence definition).
The Role of Trust and Authority in AI Citations (E-E-A-T)
Optimising for AI Overviews isn't just a technical exercise, it's fundamentally about building trust and authority. Google's algorithms (and by extension, its AI) heavily favour content that demonstrates what it calls E-E-A-T: Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. When multiple sources are vying to answer a question, the one that "feels" the most credible will win the citation. So how do you ensure that's you?
First, make sure all your content radiates credibility:
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Experience: Speak from first-hand experience whenever possible. If you're discussing "scaling a SaaS infrastructure," mention that you've done it, and share a lesson learned or a result achieved. Buyers (and Google) love to see evidence that you know what it's really like. This could mean publishing case studies, having your CTO co-author technical articles, or even sharing failures and how you overcame them. Content written from experience stands out: it's more specific, candid, and useful.
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Expertise: Back up your points with knowledge. This includes citing reliable statistics, linking to research or official documentation, and using correct terminology (explained in simple terms). Also, don't be afraid to get granular on your topic: detailed how-to guides or deep-dives signal that you're an expert who isn't just surface-level. On a site level, consider showcasing author bios with credentials (e.g. "Jane Doe, 10+ years in cybersecurity"). These signals help both users and AI understand the expertise behind the content.
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Authoritativeness: This is about your brand's reputation in the industry. Part of it you build through content (e.g. consistently blogging insightful things about your niche), but part comes externally (e.g. others referencing your work, speaking at conferences, winning awards). One practical tip: ensure your brand and key figures are visible and consistent across the web. If your CEO writes a piece on LinkedIn about the same topics you cover on your blog, that's great, it reinforces your authority on those topics. If you've been featured in press or have partnerships (like being a Microsoft or AWS partner), mention it. These trust signals might seem "PR-ish," but they contribute to how algorithms assess your site. Google's own analysis shows it's getting better at identifying niche expertsand authoritative content, and citing them more often in AI results. In short, become known for your specialty.
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Trustworthiness: This underpins all the above. Be accurate (we said it before: double-check facts), be transparent (use disclaimers or clarify when something is your opinion vs. proven fact), and ensure your site looks legitimate. Basic things matter here: a secure HTTPS site, clear contact information, a privacy policy, and a professional design all contribute to trust. Also, consistency is key, if your messaging and quality are consistent across every channel (website, social media, emails, even sales decks), it creates a reinforcing loop of trust. When content is scattered or contradictory, it's a red flag.
The "One Voice" strategy
Now, a special note on consistent voice and messaging: We call this the "One Voice" strategy. AI models (and human readers, frankly) are piecing together your trustworthiness from all the content associated with your brand. If your blog is helpful but your product pages are full of buzzwords, or your social media posts are off-tone, it creates dissonance. Strive to have a unified, helpful voice across all content. This doesn't mean every piece is identical, but they should feel like they're coming from the same knowledgeable, honest source. Over time, this consistency paints a clear picture to Google (and to customers) that "this company knows its stuff and can be trusted."
Finally, create content that educates, not advertises. This is perhaps the golden rule of building authority. If your AI Overview strategy is simply to get your product name mentioned in the answer, you're doing it wrong. The AI isn't going to cite a sales pitch, it will cite a genuinely helpful explanation. So approach every piece with a value-first mindset: How can we answer the question in a way that genuinely helps the reader? The irony is, by doing that, you actually earn the right to talk about your solutions in context. Trust is the precursor to any conversion. So focus on being the teacher, the guide, the thought leader, and the leads will follow.
Technical foundations that support citation-worthiness
While content quality drives AI citations, technical SEO provides the foundation that makes your pages discoverable and usable in the first place. Google's algorithms consider site performance and structure as trust signals, and pages that deliver a poor user experience are less likely to be cited regardless of content quality.
- Core Web Vitals. Google measures three key user experience metrics: Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) measures loading performance (aim for under 2.5 seconds), Interaction to Next Paint (INP) measures responsiveness to user interactions (aim for under 200 milliseconds), and Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) measures visual stability (aim for under 0.1). Pages that fail these thresholds signal poor user experience and may be deprioritised for citations.
- Page speed. Fast-loading pages correlate with higher rankings and citation rates. Use server-side caching, compress images, minimise JavaScript, and leverage a content delivery network to keep load times under three seconds. Speed matters for both human visitors and the crawlers that feed AI systems.
- Internal linking. A clear internal linking structure helps search engines understand your site's topical authority and the relationships between your content pieces. Link related articles within your topic clusters, use descriptive anchor text, and ensure your most authoritative pages on a topic receive internal links from related content. This reinforces your entity graph and makes it easier for AI systems to identify you as a comprehensive source on specific topics.
- Mobile optimisation and HTTPS. With mobile-first indexing, your mobile experience is your primary experience in Google's eyes. Ensure responsive design, readable fonts, and touch-friendly navigation. HTTPS is table stakes for security and trust signals.
Technical SEO won't win citations on its own, but technical issues will absolutely cost you them. Treat these foundations as prerequisites, then focus your energy on the content and authority signals that actually earn the citation.
Content Strategy for AI Overview Success
A successful AI Overview strategy isn't just about one-off tweaks, it requires a holistic content plan. Here are some strategic considerations to execute on the guidance we've covered:
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Start with deep discovery: Effective content stems from truly understanding your business and your audience. Before you create a single piece, invest time in what we call deep discovery. This means getting crystal clear on your brand's unique value propositions, your product/service details, and the real pain points and questions your ideal customers have. The takeaway for you: don't skip the homework. Talk to your sales and support teams to find out what prospects keep asking. Research forums, LinkedIn groups, and use tools like AnswerThePublic to see actual questions people type. Build your content strategy on this foundation of real questions and authentic brand perspective. This ensures everything you create is on-target and genuinely useful.
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Map content to the buyer journey: B2B tech buyers move through stages, from awareness (identifying a problem or opportunity) to consideration (comparing solutions) to decision (evaluating specific vendors). AI Overviews are mostly impacting those early and mid stages right now (since they trigger on informational queries), but don't neglect later-stage content. In fact, one industry report noted that vendors should provide detailed, later-stage info (like specific use cases or transparent pricing) so that AI tools have quality material to pull in those areas. Ensure your content strategy covers the full funnel: how-to guides, best practice articles, checklists, and thought leadership for top-of-funnel; comparison guides, case studies, and FAQs for mid-funnel; and in-depth product information, pricing explainers, and implementation guides for bottom-funnel. By doing this, you not only cater to AI Overviews (which might grab, say, a snippet from a use case in your case study), but you also create a cohesive journey for the human reader who clicks through.
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Organise around topics and entities: Shift from a pure keyword mindset to a topic + entity mindset. Generative AI understands context, not just keywords. Plan your content in thematic clusters. For example, if you're a cybersecurity firm, you might have a cluster around "cloud security for fintech", including articles on regulations, common threats, solutions, case studies, etc. Interlink these pieces and use consistent terminology. Over time, you're effectively creating an "entity" in Google's knowledge graph that associates your brand with that topic area. This boosts your chances of being seen as the go-to authority that the AI Overview will quote. It's no coincidence that brands with strong topical authority (well-structured clusters of content on their site and across the web) are seeing more citations.
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Maintain a content update routine: An AI content strategy isn't set-and-forget. Regularly audit and refresh your articles to improve your standings in AI overview rankings. Add new developments (did Google release a new algorithm? Did a law change? Add it to your relevant post). Update the year in titles when appropriate (e.g. "Best X Practices in 202X"). Not only does fresh content rank better, but as noted, fresher info is more attractive to AI summarisers. Set a cadence, for example quarterly reviews of key pages, to keep things current.
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Monitor and adapt: Use tools like Google Search Console and analytics to see which queries are bringing people to your site and where you might be getting mentioned in AI Overviews (some SEO platforms are starting to track "AI citations" as a metric). If you notice certain keywords consistently trigger an AI Overview where you're not cited, that's a gap to fill. Create content for it or improve your existing content. Also pay attention to engagement: if people coming from an AI summary spend 2 minutes on your page and then contact sales, that's a big win. Double down on that topic and find related questions to answer. Conversely, if a page is getting traffic but not engaging visitors, it might need a tweak (maybe the content isn't as helpful as the AI thought it was).
In essence, approach your content strategy as an ongoing cycle: discover → plan → create → measure → refine. When you ground that cycle in real customer questions and commit to continual improvement, you'll steadily build an engine that captures AI Overview spots and the trust of your market.
Applying these principles
Optimising for AI Overviews is both an art and science. While the patterns we've outlined are proven to work in many cases, they won't improve every piece of content. In fact, these elements can actually hinder performance in certain contexts. We've seen cases where adding a table reduced a page's xEO score, or where rigid Q&A formatting made content less engaging for human readers. The role of artificial intelligence in analysing these patterns is becoming increasingly significant.
The truth is, trying to include everything all the time rarely works. Context matters. Your topic, audience, existing page structure, and brand voice all play a role in determining what will genuinely help versus what might hinder. Some content naturally suits a Q&A format; other pieces flow better as narrative explanations. Some pages benefit from tables and checklists; others are more compelling without them.
Use your skill and judgment. Test, measure, and refine. The goal isn't to follow a formula rigidly, it's to create genuinely useful content that both humans and AI can extract value from. When in doubt, prioritise the reader's experience and the authenticity of your answer over any prescribed pattern.
Conclusion & Next Steps
The rise of AI Overviews in search is a massive opportunity in the making. B2B tech companies that recognise this shift early and adapt their digital marketing content strategy accordingly stand to gain a competitive edge in visibility and trust. It boils down to a simple truth: better answers win. If you can consistently provide genuinely useful, trustworthy insights, and do it faster than others, you will earn your place in that AI-generated spotlight. We've seen it happen, and it's levelling the playing field in exciting ways.
FAQs
What is an AI Overview?
An AI Overview is a machine-written summary that appears above traditional results, synthesising multiple sources and citing them to provide users with the most relevant information. It helps buyers get a trustworthy answer quickly while linking to referenced pages for verification.
Do AI Overviews replace SEO?
No. Treat them as part of an integrated xEO approach: classic SEO for rankings, AEO to win answer formats, and GEO so AI agents cite you.
How do we earn citations in AI Overviews?
Answer better, faster, and more honestly than competitors. Use question-led headings, a 2–3 sentence direct answer under each, bullets/steps, fresh facts, and visible E-E-A-T signals (named authors, first-hand experience, references).
How should we structure content for extractability?
Make every section standalone: question H2/H3 → 2–3-sentence answer → bullets, steps, or a decision table, plus a brief "why it matters." Add internal links and relevant schema (FAQPage/HowTo/Article).
How frequently should we update content?
Review key pages quarterly (faster in fast-moving niches). Refresh stats/examples, call out uncertainties, and add new standards/regulations to keep signals fresh.
How is AI changing B2B lead generation?
AI is revolutionising B2B lead generation through enhanced targeting and personalisation. Advanced algorithms analyse vast data sets to identify high-quality leads, streamline outreach processes, and improve conversion rates, ultimately transforming how businesses find and engage prospects. This enables businesses to foster better relationships and drive more efficient sales strategies.