Passage retrieval is the reason AEO pages need strong sections. An answer engine may retrieve one chunk of a page as candidate evidence, not the full article.
Short answer
Write each important section so it can stand alone: clear heading, direct first sentence, named entity, local context, and evidence near the claim.
Strong section pattern
| Element | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Specific heading | Matches a real prompt. |
| Direct answer | Gives retrieval systems a clean passage. |
| Evidence nearby | Supports the claim without requiring the full page. |
| Internal link | Connects the passage to the source cluster. |
Where it matters most
Use passage-ready writing on comparison pages, glossary definitions, local category pages, tool pages, research pages, and any guide meant to become a cited source.
How to use this page
Use this page as the operating reference for the topic, then follow the related tools and guides for implementation. The goal is to move from a vague AEO concept to a concrete publishing action: what to check, what to change, and what to measure after the change.
Implementation checklist
- Confirm the target page is crawlable and canonical.
- Write a direct answer near the top of the page.
- Use headings that map to real prompts.
- Add examples, tables, or checklists where the reader needs a decision.
- Link to glossary definitions and deeper guides.
- Track whether answer engines mention the brand, cite the exact URL, or cite a competitor.
Measurement plan
Run a small prompt panel before and after major changes. Record the engine, prompt, cited URL, citation surface, result type, and notes. A page that moves from no mention to domain mention is progress, but the stronger goal is exact URL citation for the claim the page actually supports.
Common misconceptions
AEO is not a single tag, file, or plugin. It is the combination of access, source clarity, structured writing, evidence, internal links, and measurement. A page can have schema and still be ignored if it does not answer a prompt clearly. A page can rank and still fail to be cited if the relevant passage is vague or unsupported.