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LLM SEO Agency: Get Your Brand Named by AI in 2026

An LLM SEO agency gets your brand named, not just linked, in answers from ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Perplexity. The brands that do get used as sources face a quieter problem: their pages reach the answer the way cargo reaches a harbor under no flag. The goods land, and nobody learns whose they were.

84%

of AI citations come from earned media you did not publish (Muck Rack, May 2026)

What you are actually buying

Named, not just linked

An LLM SEO agency (also called an LLMO agency) gets your brand named, not just linked, in answers from ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Perplexity. The work runs in three layers: crawl access, content built for extraction, and off-site brand signals on domains the models already trust, measured as citation share and mention share.

This page sits inside our LLM SEO and LLMO guide and answers the buyer’s question the roundup lists skip: what does the engagement actually consist of, and when is it worth paying for? Start with the score. Victorious tested 177 brands across 107,011 AI responses in Q1 2026 and found 89.8% of brands had zero AI search mentions on all eight platforms measured. That second problem is the one this category of agency exists to solve. Your content is doing the work. The answer leaves your name out of the credits.

What the 2026 data says

84%

of AI citations come from earned media

Not your own domain. The off-site layer an agency builds. (Muck Rack, May 2026)

62%

of AI citations never name the brand they cite

Almost 62% (61.7%) are ghost citations: linked as a source, brand never named. (Semrush and Kevin Indig, June 2026)

239%

median lift in AI citations from earned-media distribution

What does an LLM SEO agency actually deliver?

Three layers of work, in ascending order of difficulty and value. Use this as the scope checklist when you compare proposals.

The layer that separates an LLM SEO agency from a content agency, and the one that addresses ghost citations directly, is off-site brand signals. 84% of AI citations come from earned media (Muck Rack, May 2026), and the competitive window is narrow: the top 10 domains capture 46% of ChatGPT citations in a topic, the top 30 take 67% (Kevin Indig analysis via Search Engine Land, March 2026).

In practice this means editorial placements, press distribution for real announcements, and contextual coverage that spells out your brand name on sites the models already read. How that multi-source pattern is built and measured is covered on our AI visibility services page. The short version: each independent domain that names you is one more witness the model can’t ignore.

The three layers, scoped

An LLM SEO agency builds work in three layers, in ascending order of difficulty and value. A retainer that consists mainly of the first layer is overpriced by definition.

LAYER 1

Retrieval access

The hygiene layer: robots.txt rules that admit GPTBot, ClaudeBot, and PerplexityBot, an llms.txt file, and server-side rendering so the bots get real HTML. OpenAI’s ChatGPT-User crawler made 3.6x more requests than Googlebot (Alli AI, April 2026), so your site is probably being crawled already. Necessary, cheap, mostly one-time.

LAYER 2

Content built for extraction

Restructuring priority pages so a model can lift the answer cleanly: a 40 to 60 word direct answer at the top, question-style headings, named statistics with sources. Position matters because 44.2% of ChatGPT citations come from the first 30% of page content (Kevin Indig, Growth Memo, February 2026). Necessary, and on its own, never enough.

LAYER 3

Off-site brand signals

The layer that addresses ghost citations directly. A commissioned study by Stacker and Scrunch measured a median 239% lift in AI citations from third-party earned media distribution across 87 stories and 30 brands (March 2026). This is the lever that moves the number.

Why is being cited not the same as being mentioned?

Because AI engines separate the source from the name. In a June 2026 analysis of 3,981 domain appearances across four AI engines, almost 62% (61.7%) of AI citations were ghost citations: the page is linked as a source, but the brand name never appears in the answer (Semrush and Kevin Indig, Growth Memo, June 2026). Only 13.2% of citations both linked the source and named the brand.

The split runs deeper per platform. The same study found Gemini mentions brands in 83.7% of appearances but cites them as sources only 21.4% of the time, while ChatGPT does the reverse: an 87% citation link rate against a 20.7% brand mention rate. Gemini says your name but hides its sources. ChatGPT shows its sources but withholds your name. Neither asks which one you’d prefer.

A ghost citation (linked, never named) is an entity problem: the model retrieves your page but hasn’t learned to associate your brand label with your domain, and the fix lives mostly off your site. An unattributed mention (named, never linked) is a structure problem, fixed on-page. A traditional SEO report shows neither failure. Rankings can be perfect while your brand stays anonymous in every answer that matters.

In the work itself, LLM SEO is barely different from GEO and AEO: practitioners in 2026 treat the labels as near-synonyms. The full breakdown lives in our GEO vs AEO vs LLMO comparison. The one real difference is emphasis: LLM SEO includes the parametric layer, getting your brand into what the model knows from training, not just what it retrieves at query time. An agency selling “LLM SEO” that only does retrieval optimization is selling GEO with a newer label, which is fine, as long as the invoice doesn’t claim otherwise.

Schema markup helps machines parse pages, but as of March 2026 no peer-reviewed study had shown schema alone moving LLM citations. Don’t buy a program built on it.

Which red flags should make you walk away?

Agency practitioners themselves consistently flag the same patterns (Minuttia, 2026). Two are worth naming before you sign anything.

Guaranteed AI placements

Nobody outside the model labs controls model outputs. A guarantee prices confidence, not work. If the agency can’t show citation frequency and brand mention share per platform either, it can’t show progress, so walk away from the guarantee and the missing measurement together.

“Getting you into the training data”

ChatGPT Search and Perplexity answer from live retrieval, and a model’s training snapshot is already closed by the time it ships, so that pitch is selling passage on a ship that sailed months ago. Watch too for AI visibility tied to content alone: earned media drives 84% of citations, and a content-only program ignores the layer that moves the number.

What does it cost, and what is the single biggest tell?

Two more things to weigh before you sign: the price band the market actually charges, and the one omission that should end the conversation.

What it costs in 2026

Doc Digital SEM’s 2026 pricing guide puts retainers at $1,000 to $3,000 per month for small businesses, $3,000 to $8,000 for mid-market, $8,000 to $15,000 for national competition, and $15,000 to $50,000+ for enterprise. Project work runs $5,000 to $30,000 one-time. The spread is wide because the off-site layer drives the cost: real coverage on real publications is earned one article at a time, not generated.

No named client whose AI visibility improved

The single biggest tell. A good engagement works because of platform-specific mention tracking plus off-site deliverables that exist at URLs you can visit, compounding monthly. A bad one repackages an on-page SEO checklist under a new acronym, and the ghost citation rate never moves. Press releases are one corroborating input: they account for roughly 1% of all AI citations (Muck Rack, 2026), so any agency selling them as the whole strategy is misreading the data.

Stop crediting anonymous cargo.

We at The Puffer build the off-site layer through The Chest: sponsored editorial placements on real publications, wire press distribution for genuine announcements, and white-hat contextual backlinks, each one a live article you can read on the publication that ran it. The goal of every placement is the same: your brand named next to your domain on an independent site, so the engines stop crediting anonymous cargo and start recognizing whose flag it sails under.

An unnamed source is a donation. A named one is marketing. Ask us for a baseline of your category: who gets cited, who gets named, and where you sit in both lists.

Ready to Shape How LLMs Talk About Your Brand?

Tell us about your goals and we will build an LLM SEO strategy that puts your brand in AI responses. Send us the questions your buyers ask an AI engine, and we will tell you what an LLM citation campaign looks like for your category.

Part of the LLM SEO and LLMO guide. The mentions will follow. Stay buoyant.

Last updated: June 2026

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