The Building Blocks of AEO: How Structured Data Shapes AI-Generated Answers

Jessica Abbadia
Jessica Abbadia 01 November 2025
The Building Blocks of AEO: How Structured Data Shapes AI-Generated Answers

In the evolving world of digital discovery, something big is changing. Traditional search, where keywords are typed into a search engine and pages are clicked through, is still a valid approach. But a new form of optimization is taking centre stage: Answer Engine Optimization (AEO). In this post, we’ll unpack how structured data underpins AEO, why it matters, and how you can build a foundation that gives your brand visibility in AI-driven answers.

Why AEO is becoming essential

The way people find information is shifting fast. Users expect instant, clear answers. AI-powered systems like chatbots, voice assistants, and search platforms increasingly deliver responses directly, rather than simply sending users to a list of links. Zero-click searches are a phenomenon internet analysts have noted, in which more than half of all Google searches result in no click because users are getting information from AI snippets. 

That means for brands and apps, simply being high in search engine rankings may not be enough. Instead, you need to be part of the response that the user sees or hears. This is where AEO comes in.

What is structured data in this context?

Structured data means using a standardized, machine-readable format (such as Schema.org markup in JSON-LD) to describe content, entities, relationships, and attributes on your pages. It helps AI systems understand not just the words on the page but what they represent. 

In AEO, structured data plays a special role:

  • It defines who or what an entity is (brand, person, product).
  • It defines what type of content a page is (FAQ, HowTo, Article).
  • It defines how things relate (this product is by this brand, this person authored this article).

Think of structured data as the language that lets AI systems interpret your digital content correctly so it can confidently cite or use your content inside an AI-generated answer.

Three layers of structured data for AEO success

To make structured data work well in an AEO strategy, you can think of three interlocking layers:

1. Entity-level schema (Who & What)
Define the core entities: your brand, people, products, services, etc. Example: marking up your brand with @type: Organization, your founder with @type: Person. This tells the AI system: “this is this entity”.

2. Content-level schema (How & Why)
Describe the type of content on the page: Article, HowTo, FAQPage, Review. This signals to AI: “this page does this job”. Using the FAQPage schema around questions and answers is particularly helpful for direct-answer optimization.

3. Relationship schema (Connections & Context)
Define how entities and content relate: sameAs, about, isPartOf, mainEntityOfPage. This builds a semantic web of meaning. Linking your brand to external profiles, your author to their credentials, your product to your brand, and so on, helps the AI system situate your entity within a broader graph of knowledge.

When you combine these three layers you build the “semantic foundation” that makes your content answer-worthy in an AI-first discovery environment.

Why structured data matters more now than ever

Here are some of the direct benefits for brands and apps:

  • Increased chances of being included in an AI‐generated answer: AI systems look for content they can trust and understand. Structured data helps your content qualify.
  • Better voice & conversational search performance: Many voice queries are long-form, question style. Structured data (particularly FAQ/HowTo) helps you format content to match that. 
  • Higher brand visibility even with zero-click outcomes: In an environment where users may not click through, being cited is still beneficial in terms of brand awareness, trust and downstream conversions.
  • Stronger signals of authority/trust (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthyness, or E-E-A-T) for AI systems: Marking up content and entities helps reinforce who you are, your expertise, affiliation and helps the AI assess credibility.

Practical steps: How to implement structured data for AEO

Here’s a practical checklist your ASO/CRO team at Moburst can use to apply structured data in an AEO-aware content strategy:

  1. Audit key content pages
    Identify pages most likely to serve direct questions or answers. Examples include FAQ pages, how-to guides, product comparisons, micro‐content around user queries.
  2. Select the right schema types
    Choose schema types that fit: FAQPage, HowTo, Product, Review, Organization, Person, etc. Use schema.org vocabulary.
  3. Mark up entities and relationships
    • Add Organization schema for the brand.
    • Use Person schema for authors.
    • Connect with sameAs links to official social profiles or Wikipedia to strengthen entity identity.
    • Use about, mainEntityOfPage, etc to link content and entities logically.
  4. Write answer-friendly content structure
    • Frame content around user intent: questions, problems, concise answers.
    • Include a short summary or “TL;DR” at the top, followed by deeper detail.
    • Use headings (H2/H3) phrased as questions when appropriate.
    • Use bullet lists, tables, pros/cons – formats that AI finds easy to extract.
  5. Ensure technical accessibility
    • Make sure pages are crawlable by bots (avoid blocking key content).
    • Ensure structured data is properly implemented (e.g., JSON-LD format) and validated using Google’s Rich Results Test or Schema Markup Validator.
  6. Monitor and iterate
    • Track where your brand/content is cited in AI answers or featured snippets. Some tools now offer AI visibility metrics.
    • Update schema and content as needed, because AI-driven surfaces evolve fast.

AEO vs. traditional SEO: How structured data differentiates them

It’s important to emphasise that AEO does not replace your foundational SEO work. Instead it extends and adapts it for the AI era. Here’s how structured data plays a different role:

  • Traditional SEO focuses on keywords, links, ranking positions, click-through to your site.
  • AEO emphasises being the answer, not just ranking. It uses structured data so AI systems can understand, trust, and cite your content.

In essence: with SEO you optimize for a click; with AEO you optimize for a citation or inclusion. Structured data is the enabler of that. Let machines map meaning, not just keywords.

At Moburst, we help brands navigate the shift from search to answers with full AEO strategies, from structured data implementation to AI-ready content optimization. If you want your brand to show up in AI-generated responses, not just search results, our team can help you build the foundation to get there. Check out our AEO service to learn more.

FAQ: Structured Data & AEO

What is AEO?

AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) helps your content appear in AI-generated answers instead of just search results.

Why does structured data matter for AEO?

It lets AI systems understand your content, including who it’s about, what it covers, and how it relates to other entities. This increases your chance of being cited in AI answers.

What types of schema help most?

FAQPage, HowTo, Article, Organization, Person, Product, and Review are key types for AEO success.

Can structured data boost visibility without clicks?

FAQPage, HowTo, Article, Organization, Person, Product, and Review are key types for AEO success.

Does AEO replace SEO?

No, AEO complements SEO. You still optimize for ranking, but you also optimize to be the answer.


Jessica Abbadia
Jessica Abbadia
Jessica is Moburst's ASO & CRO Specialist. She specializes in enhancing organic performance for apps and games all over the world, while actively developing innovative methods for increasing app visibility and conversion, as well as offering her vast knowledge for the benefit of the mobile community. She graduated from law school and now serves as an animal rights activist who also loves reading books while sipping a strong coffee and holding one - or more - of her three cats.
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