FAQ
Questions teams ask before they run a SEO + GEO audit.
This page answers the practical questions buyers, consultants, and operators usually ask first:
what gets inspected, what stays private, how SEO differs from GEO, and when the workspace should
move from Free into execution plans.
What does the first audit inspect?
The first audit focuses on the public marketing surface. It reviews the pages and files that search engines
and answer engines can actually reach: titles, meta descriptions, canonicals, headings, schema, crawl files,
redirects, performance clues, content depth, internal links, and obvious trust or authority gaps.
Is the workspace public?
No. The marketing pages on this site are indexable because they explain the product and methodology. Domain-specific
workspaces live under /workspace/*, and those routes are intentionally blocked from indexation with both
robots.txt rules and a noindex response header.
What is the difference between SEO and GEO?
SEO is about being discoverable and competitive in traditional search results. GEO is about being easy for answer
engines to trust, extract, and cite when they synthesize a response. In practice, teams need both: a clean crawl
layer and content that can stand alone as an answer.
What changes after the first audit?
The first audit establishes the baseline. After that, the workspace becomes a prioritization tool. Pro and Max plans
unlock exports, competitor context, AI/GEO research packs, and implementation-oriented workflows so the findings can
become shipped work instead of a static report.
When should a team upgrade from Free to Pro or Max?
Stay on Free if the open question is purely diagnostic. Upgrade when the team already knows the opportunity is real
and needs the execution tools. Pro is usually the right next step for operators. Max fits teams that want AI-assisted
drafting, rewriting, and daily workspace support.