Much of the GEO discussion centers on how AI systems locate, extract, cite, and recommend content. That work is important. But visibility also depends on what the content actually delivers once it’s discovered. Next-question intent is a way to evaluate whether a page offers enough depth to support the user’s next decision, not just their initial query. The first search is usually only a starting point. Real decisions emerge in the follow-up questions, tradeoffs, constraints, and objections that follow. Content that anticipates and answers those next questions gives AI systems richer material to summarize, compare, cite, and recommend.
From results to narratives: Traditional search vs. AI search
Traditional search was designed around a results page: a ranked list of links users could scan, compare, and interpret on their own. AI search is increasingly organized around a synthesized response built from multiple sources. That shift changes what content needs to accomplish. A page can rank, be indexed, and look technically optimized, yet still fail to provide the depth required to power an AI-generated answer. That’s where next-question intent becomes critical.
Search intent asks, “What is this user trying to do?” Next-question intent asks, “What will the user need to understand next before they can trust, compare, decide, buy, book, or move forward?” This is becoming more important because AI systems don’t just match queries to pages. They construct answers, comparisons, caveats, and recommendations. In that context, content must support the entire decision journey, not only the first query.
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