GEO (generative engine optimization) is the practice of shaping your business information so that AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity name your company when someone asks for a deck or patio builder. SEO (search engine optimization) is the older practice of ranking your website in traditional Google search results. Neither one replaces the other; a deck and patio builder who wants steady lead flow now needs both working at the same time.
What each approach optimizes toward
SEO optimizes for placement on a search results page, competing for clicks through keywords, backlinks, and page structure that Google's crawlers can rank. GEO optimizes for something different: being the answer an AI engine gives directly to the person asking, often with no click and no ranked list involved at all. A deck builder ranked #3 on Google can still be invisible in an AI answer, and a builder mentioned by name in a ChatGPT response might never appear in a Google search at all. These are two separate races, and winning one does not guarantee winning the other.
Traditional SEO cares about things like page titles, meta descriptions, site speed, and the number of other websites linking to yours. Google's algorithm reads those signals and decides where your business site lands among competitors for a search like "deck builder near me." GEO cares about something closer to reputation and clarity: does your business have consistent, well-structured information across the web that an AI model can pull from confidently when generating a direct answer? That includes your service descriptions, reviews, location details, and how other trusted sites describe your work. If an AI engine can't find clear, matching information about what you do and where you do it, it will simply recommend someone else it trusts more.
Why deck buyers increasingly start in generative tools
Homeowners planning a deck or patio project are shifting how they begin that research, asking AI assistants open-ended questions like "who builds composite decks in my area" or "what should I budget for a paver patio" instead of typing a keyword into a search bar. These generative tools give a conversational answer that often names two or three local businesses by name, and the homeowner may act on that shortlist without ever visiting a search engine or comparing a page of links. For a deck and patio builder, this means the first impression can now happen entirely inside an AI conversation, with no website visit involved at all.
This matters because the homeowner researching a new patio is usually early in the buying process, comparing materials, styles, and rough costs before they are ready to call anyone. If an AI tool answers those early questions by naming three competitors and not your business, you have lost a chance to be considered before the homeowner even reaches the stage of browsing websites. The businesses that show up in these generative answers tend to be the ones with clear, consistent information about their services and service area published in places the AI model already trusts.
Where the two overlap for a contractor
GEO and SEO are not competing strategies for a deck and patio builder; they draw from much of the same underlying material. Both depend on your business having accurate, detailed descriptions of your services, your service area, and your completed work, published consistently across your website, directory listings, and review platforms. A contractor who has already invested in solid SEO fundamentals is not starting from zero when it comes to generative visibility.
The overlap shows up clearly in a few specific areas. Your Google Business Profile, which supports local SEO rankings, is also a primary source AI tools reference when answering local queries. Your customer reviews, which influence SEO trust signals, are also read and summarized by generative engines when they describe your reputation. Your service pages, if they clearly explain what you build, what materials you use, and where you operate, feed both a Google crawler and an AI model's understanding of your business. Neither SEO nor GEO rewards vague, generic copy that could describe any contractor in any city; both reward specificity about what you actually do.
What to keep from your existing SEO work
Nothing about GEO requires a deck and patio builder to throw out existing SEO work. The foundational pieces, a complete and accurate Google Business Profile, a website with real photos of finished decks and patios, consistent business name and address information across listings, and a steady stream of customer reviews, all remain valuable. These elements were built to help search engines trust your business, and that same trust signal is exactly what generative engines look for when deciding which contractor to recommend.
What should stay untouched includes your backlink profile, your local citations across home-improvement directories, and any location-specific landing pages you have built for the different towns or neighborhoods you serve. These assets took time to build and continue to support your presence in traditional search results, which still matters since not every homeowner starts their research in an AI tool. Keeping this foundation solid means you are not choosing between SEO and GEO; you are extending what already works into a new channel of visibility.
How to add GEO without starting over
Adding GEO to an existing SEO strategy for a deck and patio builder starts with reviewing the same information for clarity rather than replacing it. Service descriptions should spell out specifics: the materials you install, the styles you specialize in, the towns or counties you serve, and any details that distinguish your work from a generic contractor listing. AI tools tend to favor businesses whose information is specific and easy to summarize over businesses whose website copy is vague or overly promotional.
Consistency across platforms matters more for GEO than it did for SEO alone. If your business name, phone number, or service area differs between your website, your Google Business Profile, and a directory listing, an AI model may hesitate to recommend your business confidently or may pull outdated details. Auditing these listings for consistency is a practical first step that does not require rebuilding a website.
Encouraging detailed reviews also supports GEO directly. A review that mentions a specific project type, like a composite deck build or a paver patio installation, gives an AI model concrete language to draw from when summarizing your reputation to a homeowner asking a related question. Generic five-star ratings without detail are less useful to a generative engine than reviews describing the actual work performed.
Finally, structured information about your business, including service lists, service areas, and clear project categories on your website, gives both search engines and AI models a reliable source to reference. This does not mean discarding SEO content; it means tightening it so it reads clearly to a machine trying to summarize your business in a conversational answer, not just to a person scanning a search results page.
While one deck and patio builder treats this as a minor update, a competitor down the road is already being named in AI answers to homeowners' first research questions, collecting the early-stage attention before a single estimate is requested. Every month spent invisible in generative search is a month those early conversations go to someone else, and by the time a homeowner is ready to call, the shortlist may already be set without your business on it.