GEO + SEO

Content Analyzer

Check if your content is ready for Google rankings and AI search visibility — in one scan.

Free GEO and SEO Content Analyzer for Freelancers

This free GEO and SEO content analyzer checks your content across 11 weighted dimensions and tells you exactly what to fix — for both Google rankings and AI search visibility. Paste any article, service page, or landing page and get a full content score in seconds.

What Is GEO? And Why Freelancers Can No Longer Ignore It

GEO — Generative Engine Optimization — is the practice of structuring content so that AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews can understand, extract, and cite it in their answers.

Traditional SEO focuses on ranking in Google search results. GEO focuses on being the source that AI-generated answers reference and quote. Both matter — and both require different optimization strategies.

For freelancers, GEO is especially important. Clients in tech, marketing, and business increasingly use AI tools as their first research step when looking for service providers, evaluating pricing, or understanding a topic. If your content is not structured for AI retrieval, you are invisible to a growing share of your potential clients before they ever open Google.

What Is a GEO and SEO Content Analyzer?

A GEO and SEO content analyzer is a tool that evaluates your content against the signals that determine visibility in both traditional search engines and AI-powered search tools. It checks on-page SEO factors like title tags, meta descriptions, heading structure, and keyword placement — and it checks GEO factors like direct-answer formatting, citation-ready paragraph structure, entity coverage, FAQ completeness, and schema markup.

This analyzer returns a score from 0 to 100 across 11 dimensions, weighted by their relative impact on content performance. The highest-weighted signals — GEO readiness and citation readiness — reflect the growing importance of AI search visibility in 2025 and beyond.

What the Analyzer Checks: 11 Content Dimensions

1. GEO Readiness (Highest Weight)

GEO readiness measures how well your content is structured for AI tools to extract and cite. It checks whether your introduction leads with a direct answer, whether your paragraphs are concise and self-contained, whether you use question-driven headings, and whether your content includes the trust signals — examples, data, methodology — that AI systems look for when selecting sources.

2. Citation Readiness

Citation readiness measures how easy it is for AI tools to quote a specific section of your content accurately. Short, precise paragraphs between 30 and 80 words score highest. Long, dense paragraphs that contain multiple ideas score lowest — because AI tools either skip them or summarize them inaccurately.

3. SEO Fundamentals

SEO fundamentals covers the core on-page signals that affect Google rankings: title tag length and keyword inclusion, meta description quality, canonical tag presence, H1 usage, subheading structure, content length, keyword density, readability score, lexical diversity, internal linking, and image alt text.

4. Entity Coverage

Entity coverage measures how comprehensively your content covers the related concepts, terminology, and entities that define your topic. AI tools assess topical completeness through entity recognition. Content that covers the primary topic but misses closely related concepts signals shallow expertise — and gets passed over in favor of more complete sources.

5. FAQ Coverage

FAQ coverage checks whether your content includes explicit question-and-answer sections aligned with what your audience actually searches for. FAQ content is the single most likely element of a page to be cited by AI tools — because generative engines are literally designed to answer questions. Missing FAQ sections are one of the most common and highest-impact gaps in freelancer content.

6. Introduction Quality

Introduction quality evaluates whether your first paragraph leads with a direct answer, mentions the primary topic clearly, and is appropriately concise. A weak introduction — one that starts with context or background before stating the answer — hurts both SEO engagement signals and GEO citation probability.

7. Conclusion Quality

Conclusion quality checks whether your content ends with a clear summary and a practical next step. Strong conclusions reinforce the main topic, use summarizing language, and give the reader something concrete to do. Weak conclusions that trail off or repeat the introduction without adding value reduce the overall content quality signal.

8. Heading Quality

Heading quality evaluates whether your H2 and H3 headings are specific, search-friendly, and appropriately concise. Headings between 4 and 10 words that include the primary keyword or a clear question perform best. Vague headings like "Introduction" or "My Thoughts" score near zero.

9. Paragraph Quality

Paragraph quality checks for weak paragraphs — ones that are too short, too long, duplicate content elsewhere on the page, or rely on vague filler language. Each weak paragraph identified reduces the score proportionally. Pages with no weak paragraphs score 100.

10. Internal Linking Opportunities

Internal linking opportunity analysis identifies entities and related concepts mentioned in your content that are not yet linked to other pages on your site. Internal links distribute page authority, improve crawl efficiency, and help both Google and AI tools understand your site structure. Most freelancer sites are significantly under-linked internally.

11. Schema Markup

Schema markup detection checks whether your page includes structured data — specifically Article, FAQPage, BreadcrumbList, or WebPage schema. Schema communicates content structure directly to search engines and AI systems. FAQPage schema in particular dramatically increases the probability of your FAQ content appearing in Google's featured snippets and AI-generated answers.

How to Use This GEO and SEO Analyzer

To analyze text content: paste your article, service page, or landing page copy into the text field, enter your primary keyword or topic, and click Analyze Content. Results appear in seconds.

To analyze a live URL: switch to the URL tab, enter the full page address including https://, add your primary keyword, and click Analyze URL. The tool fetches and analyzes the live page, which may take 5 to 10 seconds depending on the page size.

After the analysis, review your Overall Score and the Score Breakdown to understand which dimensions are pulling your score down. Focus on High Impact items first — GEO Readiness, Citation Readiness, and SEO Fundamentals have the largest effect on your overall score. Use the Generated Improvements section to copy ready-to-use suggestions for your title, meta description, introduction, FAQ, and article structure.

Who Should Use a Content Analyzer?

This tool is designed for freelancers who publish content — articles, service pages, case studies, blog posts, portfolio descriptions — and want that content to generate inquiries and drive traffic. It is also useful for freelance content writers, SEO consultants, and copywriters who need to audit client content before delivery.

You do not need technical SEO knowledge to use the analyzer. The scores are explained in plain language, the priority actions are specific and actionable, and the generated improvements are ready to copy and use directly.

GEO vs SEO: What Is the Difference?

SEO (Search Engine Optimization) focuses on ranking in traditional search engines like Google. The primary signals are relevance — does the content match the search query — and authority — do other sites link to it. SEO results appear as ranked links that users click to visit the source page.

GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) focuses on getting your content cited in AI-generated answers. The primary signals are clarity — is the answer stated directly and extractably — and completeness — does the content cover the topic comprehensively through entities, related concepts, and FAQ coverage. GEO results appear as inline citations or referenced sources within AI-generated responses.

The two disciplines overlap significantly — high-quality, well-structured content performs better in both — but they also have distinct requirements. Content optimized only for SEO often underperforms in AI search because it prioritizes keyword density over extractability. Content optimized only for GEO may miss Google ranking signals like title tag optimization and internal linking. This analyzer checks both simultaneously.

Why Content Visibility Is Changing for Freelancers

Three trends are reshaping how freelancers get discovered online in 2025. First, AI-assisted search is growing rapidly — a significant and increasing share of professional research now starts with a question to ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity rather than a Google search. Second, Google itself is displaying AI Overviews — synthesized answers generated from multiple sources — above traditional search results for a growing range of queries. Third, zero-click searches — where users get their answer without visiting any website — now account for more than half of all searches.

These trends mean that content which is not optimized for AI extraction is losing visibility on multiple fronts simultaneously. A freelancer whose service page ranks on page two of Google but is never cited in AI answers is invisible to most of their potential audience. Optimizing for both SEO and GEO is no longer a nice-to-have — it is the baseline for content that generates consistent inquiries.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a GEO and SEO content analyzer?

A GEO and SEO content analyzer is a tool that evaluates your content against the signals that determine visibility in both traditional search engines like Google and AI-powered search tools like ChatGPT and Gemini. It checks on-page SEO factors — title tags, headings, keyword placement, internal links — and GEO factors — direct-answer formatting, paragraph structure, entity coverage, FAQ completeness, and schema markup — and returns a combined score with specific improvement recommendations.

Is this GEO and SEO analyzer really free?

Yes. The GEO + SEO Analyzer on FreelanceWithUs is completely free with no account required, no usage limits, and no credit card needed. Paste your content or enter a URL and get a full analysis immediately. The tool is built for freelancers who need professional-level content analysis without the cost of enterprise SEO platforms.

How is GEO different from traditional SEO?

Traditional SEO focuses on ranking in Google search results through relevance signals like keyword placement and authority signals like backlinks. GEO — Generative Engine Optimization — focuses on getting your content cited in AI-generated answers through clarity signals like direct-answer introductions and extractability signals like concise paragraph structure and FAQ coverage. Both require well-written content, but they prioritize different structural elements. This analyzer checks both simultaneously.

What content score should freelancers aim for?

A score of 75 or above is considered strong — content at this level is well-positioned for both Google rankings and AI citation. Scores between 50 and 74 indicate a workable foundation with specific gaps to address. Scores below 50 indicate significant structural or SEO issues that are likely preventing the content from ranking or being cited. Most published freelancer content scores between 30 and 55 on the first analysis.

Can I analyze a URL instead of pasting text?

Yes. Switch to the Analyze URL tab, enter the full page address (including https://), add your primary keyword, and click Analyze URL. The tool fetches the live page and analyzes it — including the HTML structure, meta tags, schema markup, and all on-page content. URL analysis may take 5 to 15 seconds depending on page size and server response time.

What is entity coverage and why does it matter for GEO?

Entity coverage measures how comprehensively your content covers the related concepts and terminology that define your topic. AI language models understand topics through entities — specific concepts, people, places, tools, and ideas — rather than just keywords. Content that covers the primary topic but misses closely related entities signals incomplete topical authority. For example, a freelance writing service page that never mentions editorial calendar, content brief, or SEO writing has low entity coverage for its topic — and AI tools are less likely to cite it as a comprehensive source.

How often should I analyze my content?

Analyze new content before publishing to catch issues before they affect performance. For existing content, audit your top 5 to 10 most important pages every 3 to 6 months. After major Google algorithm updates, re-check pages that show traffic drops. AI search patterns shift faster than Google, so checking high-priority pages for AI citation monthly is worthwhile — especially pages about topics where you want to be seen as an authority.