Monitoring Engine Playbooks The Grok Playbook
Engine playbook · 6 of 8

The Grok Playbook

Grok is the most opinionated and least filtered of the eight engines. It pulls primarily from real-time X conversations, weights recency over authority, and surfaces brands that have a live presence on the platform. If your brand isn't on X, you're invisible to Grok.

7 min read · Updated June 2026 · Most relevant for B2C, consumer SaaS, and brands with retail audiences
What's in this guide
  1. How Grok pulls from X
  2. Pattern 1 — Founder-led X presence
  3. Pattern 2 — Reply guy, not broadcaster
  4. Pattern 3 — Trend-jacking with substance
  5. What doesn't work
  6. The 30-day checklist

How Grok pulls from X

Grok is built on X (formerly Twitter). It has structured, real-time access to every public post, reply, and trend. When a buyer asks Grok "what's the best X for Y?", the model heavily weights recent X conversations about the category over older blog posts or review sites.

This produces a different bias than the other eight engines. Grok rewards liveness — what's being talked about this week — over authority — what's been the consensus answer for years. A brand with 50 mentions on X in the last 30 days will outrank a brand with 500 G2 reviews but zero recent X presence.

The corollary: Grok is the only engine where activity is more important than authority. For B2C and consumer-facing SaaS, this is good news (X is where consumer conversation happens). For deep-enterprise B2B, it's harder — you have to manufacture conversation that wouldn't naturally exist.

Pattern 1 — Founder-led X presence

The single highest-leverage move for Grok visibility is having a real founder presence on X. Not the brand account — the founder's personal account with their name and a real photo.

What works

What to avoid

Don't post via the brand account only. Brand accounts on X are heavily down-weighted by Grok as promotional. The founder's personal account is what gets cited.

Pattern 2 — Reply guy, not broadcaster

Most brand X accounts are broadcast-only. Grok rewards the inverse. Founders and team members who reply thoughtfully in conversations about the category — even on competitors' posts — get extracted as authorities.

The cadence

The model in one line

Grok cites whoever shows up where the conversation is. Showing up means replies, not broadcasts.

Pattern 3 — Trend-jacking with substance

Grok over-indexes on what's trending. The tactical version of "newsjacking" — finding a moment where your category is being discussed and contributing substantively — works exceptionally well on Grok.

How to operationalize

What doesn't work

The 30-day checklist

  1. Day 1: Founder commits to daily X cadence. Set up posting reminder.
  2. Day 1-3: Build a list of 30-50 category accounts to follow and engage with.
  3. Day 3-7: Begin 2-3 posts/day cadence. Mix product updates, takes, customer stories.
  4. Day 7-14: Begin reply cadence — 5-10 substantive replies per week to category accounts.
  5. Day 14-21: Write first long-form post (4,000+ characters). Topic: "the state of [your category]".
  6. Day 21-30: First trend-jack — find a moment where your category trends and contribute meaningfully.
  7. Day 30: Re-run the audit. Grok citation rate should begin moving as recent X activity accrues. Grok updates near-real-time, so changes can show within 7-14 days of activity.
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