GEO for professional services firms
By Abhijay Tondak, Founder · Updated June 25, 2026 · 6 min read
GEO for professional services firms - law, accounting, consulting, agencies - means getting cited when prospects ask AI engines expertise questions ('how do I structure an S-corp', 'do I need a trademark attorney') that precede a high-trust, high-value hire. The playbook: demonstrate genuine, named expertise the engine can attribute to real practitioners, answer the substantive questions directly instead of gating everything behind a contact form, and build the credibility signals that make an engine comfortable recommending a firm in a stakes-heavy domain.
Key takeaways
- Professional-services buyers research the problem with AI before they ever shortlist a firm.
- Expertise and trust (real authors, credentials, track record) weigh heavily because the stakes are high.
- Answer the substantive 'how do I' and 'do I need' questions - gating everything kills citability.
- Engines hold advice domains (legal, financial, medical) to a higher accuracy bar.
- Localized and specialty pages win the 'best [profession] for [situation]' queries that convert.
Why trust is the whole game here
Hiring a lawyer, accountant, or consultant is a high-trust, high-cost decision, and the research now starts with AI. A prospect asks 'what does a fractional CFO actually do', or 'do I need an employment lawyer for this', long before they look for a firm. The engine's answer shapes whether they even realize they need you - and whether your firm is the one named when they decide to act.
These are exactly the domains where engines apply the most scrutiny. Advice that could cause financial, legal, or medical harm is held to a higher bar, so demonstrable expertise and trustworthiness are not optional polish - they are the price of being cited at all.
Demonstrate expertise the engine can attribute
Anonymous, generic content reads as low-expertise. Make the human expertise behind your firm explicit and verifiable.
- Real, named authors with credentials and bios - so the engine can attribute advice to a qualified person.
- First-hand specifics: how you actually handle a matter, what trade-offs you weigh, what most clients get wrong.
- Track record and proof - representative matters, outcomes, and recognitions, stated accurately.
- Consistent firm and practitioner entity data so the engine knows who is speaking and trusts it.
Answer the question, do not just gate it
Many firms hide every useful answer behind 'contact us', which is the fastest way to be uncitable. An engine cannot cite a contact form. Answer the substantive question directly and well - explain how an S-corp election works, when a trademark search matters, what a diligence process involves - and let the depth of the answer demonstrate that the firm is worth hiring for the parts that genuinely need a professional.
This does not mean giving away the engagement. It means being the source that explains the landscape clearly, so when the prospect needs hands-on help, your firm is the trusted name already in their head and in the engine's answer.
Win the specialty and local queries that convert
Generic 'what is a contract' content rarely converts; '[specialty] attorney for [situation] in [city]' does. Build pages for your real specialties and locations that answer the situation-specific question and make clear who the firm is right for. Then track citations on those situation-and-specialty queries, and on the 'do I need a [professional] for [problem]' questions that turn a researcher into a client, closing the gaps where a competing firm is recommended and you are not.
Frequently asked questions
Will answering questions for free cannibalize billable work?
Rarely. The work that needs a professional is judgment, representation, and accountability - none of which a free explanation replaces. Answering well builds the trust that wins the engagement; gating everything just makes you uncitable.
How do I show AI my firm is credible?
Attribute content to real, credentialed practitioners with bios, state your track record accurately, and keep firm and author entity data consistent. In advice domains, demonstrable expertise is what lets an engine recommend you.
Which pages drive the most qualified citations?
Specialty-and-situation pages ('[specialty] for [situation] in [city]') and 'do I need a [professional] for [problem]' answers - they match how prospects research a real engagement, not abstract definitions.
Put this into practice — free.
Get your free AI-visibility audit and see where engines find you today.
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