Back to overview

Grounding Pages for Greater Visibility in AI Search

Who benefits from this and how can it be successfully implemented?

There are companies that have been producing high-quality content for years and achieving solid search engine rankings as a result. And yet, they simply don’t appear in the responses from ChatGPT, Perplexity, and other LLMs. Not because their content is poor, but because AI systems simply can’t make sense of it. Today, anyone who writes for humans must also ensure that machines understand who or what is behind that content. This is exactly where grounding pages come in.
Image

Written by
Published on
Last modified on

Katrin Kratz
May 19, 2026
May 19, 2026

Image

What is a grounding page?

A grounding page is a webpage that describes a single entity—such as a company, a person, a product, or a clearly defined topic—in a factual, unambiguous, and machine-readable manner. Its primary purpose is not to persuade or sell, but to serve as a stable reference base for AI systems and to help them contextualize information.

Large Language Models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT or Perplexity generate responses by drawing on multiple sources simultaneously. This can lead to inaccuracies if information about a company is scattered, contradictory, or difficult to contextualize. A grounding page consolidates key facts in one place, reduces ambiguity, and makes it easier for AI systems to interpret the information correctly.

What is the difference between a grounding page and a landing page?

A landing page is designed to drive conversions: its goal is to encourage users to get in touch, make a purchase, or sign up.

A landing page serves a different purpose. Here, the focus is on clarity and ease of reference, not on prompting action.

This difference has practical implications for design: Landing pages use emotional appeals, a sense of urgency, and calls to action to convince visitors of the value of a product or service. Grounding pages, on the other hand, are written in a factual, concise style that leaves no room for interpretation. It is precisely this simplicity that makes grounding pages particularly useful for AI systems.

What elements does a grounding page include?

A grounding page provides direct and comprehensive answers to key questions about the entity described. Typical components include:

  • Clear identification of the entity
  • A brief, factual description containing key information
  • Delimitation: What the entity is not or does not do
  • Structured sections with unique HTML IDs for machine-readable mapping
  • Verified timestamps that confirm the information is up to date
  • Technical features such as Schema.org markup for improved readability

Each of these components serves a specific purpose: it reduces the likelihood that an AI system will draw incorrect conclusions or confuse one entity with another. The quality of a grounding page, therefore, is not determined by the length of the text, but by its clarity.

Why are grounding pages actively used by AI systems?

Well-structured grounding pages are not only crawled and cached; they are actively queried when a response is generated. This is a fundamental difference from traditional crawling.

In traditional crawling, a bot visits a page, indexes it, and stores the content for later retrieval. With grounding pages, we observe that AI crawlers, such as the OpenAI bot, specifically and repeatedly access these pages immediately when users ask relevant questions. The page is integrated into the ongoing process of generating a response, not just stored in advance. This means that content on a well-structured grounding page can directly influence the answer someone receives at that very moment.

What is the difference between Grounding and traditional search engine optimization?

Grounding and SEO pursue related but distinct goals: 

  • SEO optimizes content for search engine rankings and click-through rates. 
  • Grounding optimizes content so that it is correctly recognized, classified, and cited by AI systems.

In practice, the two approaches complement each other. Grounding pages benefit from a robust technical infrastructure, a clear page structure, and subject-matter authority—factors that also play a role in SEO. The key difference lies in the priorities: Grounding pages are optimized primarily for machine readability and factual accuracy, not for click-through potential.

Practical observation also shows that concise, clearly structured pages rank well even for traditional search queries because they align particularly well with search intent. Focusing on clarity therefore pays off for both channels.

Who can particularly benefit from grounding pages?

Companies benefit from grounding pages to the extent that their target audiences use AI-powered information sources to prepare for purchasing decisions or compare products and services. This applies to nearly all industries today, but certain sectors are particularly affected.

Companies with a complex range of services

Businesses that offer many similar or related services run the risk of being misclassified by AI systems or confused with competitors. A grounding page establishes clear boundaries between entities and reduces this risk of confusion. Rather than describing individual services in isolation, it presents the company as a cohesive unit with a defined scope of services.

Companies facing intense competition in the digital space

In saturated markets, the quality of information determines which company emerges as the benchmark. Those who provide a structured, machine-readable database of facts have a systematic advantage over competitors whose information is scattered or contradictory.

Companies building their digital presence

For newer companies without a long history of indexing, the problem is different: there is simply a lack of data points that AI systems can draw upon. Grounding pages offer an efficient way to be recognized as a reliable source early on and thus appear in the responses of large language models (LLMs).

Companies and individuals that could be confused with one another

If a company name, brand, or person is already in use in another context, this creates a classification problem for AI systems. Two different companies with the same name may be confused with one another by LLMs and misclassified. The same applies to people. Grounding pages solve this problem through unambiguity. They clearly define who or what is being referred to, distinguish the entity from entities with the same or similar names, and provide context that rules out confusion. 

How can a landing page be integrated into an existing website?

A grounding page does not require a separate domain or a complete website relaunch. Existing company websites can add individual pages and design them to serve as grounding pages. Three factors are key here.

1. Unambiguity

The page describes exactly one entity, without any thematic expansion or promotional content.

2. Stability

URLs, structure, and content remain consistent over long periods of time because AI systems prefer stable references.

3. Machine readability

Structured markup, clean HTML hierarchies, and verifiable information make it easier for AI crawlers to automatically analyze the content.

Do you have any questions?

Grounding Pages are a key component that determines whether AI systems correctly categorize, cite, and recommend your company as a reliable source. We help you present the right information in a structured, machine-readable format, minimize the risk of confusion and misclassification by AI, and enhance your existing website with this new dimension. Let’s discuss together how your company can remain visible in AI-powered information environments.

Get advice now

Frequently Asked Questions About Grounding Pages

We look forward to your inquiry

Book a free initial consultation with Max-Raphael Feibel now, or contact us by email, phone, or LinkedIn.

hello@partnerundsoehne.de
+49 621 533 999 82
Networking on LinkedIn
Image