Monitoring Engine Playbooks The Gemini Playbook
Engine playbook · 4 of 8

The Gemini Playbook

Gemini is the easiest engine to work for B2C brands and the hardest one to game with content alone. It pulls heavily from Google's broader ecosystem — Business Profile, YouTube, Knowledge Graph — and respects the same E-E-A-T signals Google search has rewarded for years.

9 min read · Updated June 2026 · Note: Gemini ≠ Google AI Overviews — see the AI Overviews playbook for the SERP-feature variant.
What's in this guide
  1. How Gemini differs from Google AI Overviews
  2. Pattern 1 — Own your Knowledge Graph entry
  3. Pattern 2 — Google Business Profile + YouTube
  4. Pattern 3 — Author-bylined, E-E-A-T-rich pages
  5. What doesn't work
  6. The 45-day checklist

How Gemini differs from Google AI Overviews

It's easy to conflate these. They're both Google products. They both surface AI answers. They're trained on overlapping data. But they're solving different problems.

Google AI Overviews is the answer box at the top of a Google search results page. It's optimized for short, factual, immediately verifiable answers and leans heavily on featured-snippet patterns, structured data, and the SERP-ranking model. See the AI Overviews playbook for that side.

Gemini is the chatbot — a conversational interface that pulls from Google's broader ecosystem, including products that don't show up in regular search: Google Business Profile, YouTube transcripts, the Knowledge Graph entity database, and Google's structured-data index. Gemini also leans on live retrieval through Google-Extended.

The practical implication: winning Gemini means winning the Google ecosystem, not just the search results page.

Pattern 1 — Own your Knowledge Graph entry

Google's Knowledge Graph is the entity database that powers the right-side "knowledge panel" in search results. When Gemini answers a question about your brand, it pulls structured facts from this database — founding date, executives, headquarters, parent company, products. If you don't have a Knowledge Graph entry, Gemini defaults to vague descriptions or skips you entirely.

How to earn a Knowledge Graph entry

You don't apply for one. Google constructs it from signals — structured data on your site, Wikipedia presence, Wikidata entries, and consistent NAP (Name / Address / Phone) data across the web. The recipe:

  1. Add Organization JSON-LD to your homepage with as many properties as possible: name, alternateName, url, logo, sameAs (linking to all your social + review profiles), foundingDate, founders, address, contactPoint, areaServed.
  2. Claim your Wikidata entry. Search wikidata.org for your brand. If there's an entry, claim it and enrich it. If there isn't, create one (Wikidata's notability threshold is lower than Wikipedia's).
  3. Ensure NAP consistency. Your business name, address, and phone must match exactly across Google Business Profile, your website, your social profiles, Crunchbase, LinkedIn, and any review sites. Even small inconsistencies (St. vs Street, or different phone formats) prevent entity consolidation.
  4. Build sameAs links. Every social/review profile you own should link back to your homepage, and your homepage's Organization schema should link out to all of them via the sameAs property.

Within 60-90 days of clean implementation, Google typically begins building a Knowledge Graph entry for any brand with meaningful web presence. Once the entry exists, Gemini's answers about you become dramatically more factual.

Pattern 2 — Google Business Profile + YouTube

Gemini has access to two Google-owned data sources that no other engine touches at the same depth: Google Business Profile (formerly Google My Business) and YouTube. Both are massive AEO levers that most B2B brands neglect.

Google Business Profile

Even if you're pure SaaS with no physical office, claim a Business Profile. Set the address to your headquarters (or your registered business address). Fill in: business description, hours, founding date, services/products, photos of your team and office, founder/CEO name. Post weekly updates (Google calls them "Posts") — product launches, customer stories, press placements.

For B2B SaaS, the under-used field is "Services" — list each of your product features as a service. These become extractable facts Gemini can cite.

YouTube

Gemini pulls from YouTube video transcripts. Three plays:

One YouTube video per month, captioned properly, is enough to meaningfully expand the surface area Gemini can pull from.

Pattern 3 — Author-bylined, E-E-A-T-rich pages

Google's E-E-A-T framework (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) is the lens Gemini uses to weight content. The single highest-leverage move is making sure every substantive page on your site has a clear, credentialed author.

The pattern

This is the same playbook that wins Google search rankings. Gemini reuses the signal.

What doesn't work

The 45-day checklist

  1. Day 1: Open robots.txt to Google-Extended (Gemini's crawler — distinct from Googlebot).
  2. Day 1-3: Add comprehensive Organization JSON-LD to homepage. Validate at validator.schema.org.
  3. Day 3-5: Claim and complete Google Business Profile. Add description, hours, services, photos.
  4. Day 5-7: Audit NAP consistency across all profiles. Fix any mismatches.
  5. Day 7-14: Create or enrich Wikidata entry.
  6. Day 14-30: Upload first product demo video to YouTube with full captions. Publish 1 explainer video on a category question.
  7. Day 30-45: Add author bylines + author pages with Person schema to top 5 content pages.
  8. Day 45: Re-run the audit. Gemini citation rate should begin moving as Knowledge Graph processes the new signals.
Back to Engine Performance · All Engine Playbooks