I Asked ChatGPT and Gemini to Audit My Digital Footprint: Here's What They Revealed
Like many marketers entering the AI era, I had a simple question:
How do AI systems actually perceive me?
Not how I perceive myself.
Not how my LinkedIn profile describes me.
Not how my website presents me.
But how major AI systems interpret my publicly available digital footprint.
As AI-powered search platforms continue to influence information discovery, recommendation systems, and authority building, understanding how these systems perceive individuals may become increasingly important.
This curiosity led me to conduct an experiment.
I asked two of the world’s most widely used AI systems:
- ChatGPT
- Gemini
to evaluate my digital footprint, authority signals, GEO positioning, and overall online presence.
Rather than seeking validation, I wanted an honest diagnosis.
My objective was straightforward:
Identify the gaps between how I see my professional journey and how AI systems currently evaluate my authority.
The findings were both encouraging and surprising.
Why This Experiment Matters
Traditionally, personal branding has focused on human perception.
Professionals often ask questions such as:
- What do recruiters think?
- What do clients think?
- What do employers think?
- What do industry peers think?
However, a new layer has emerged.
Today, AI systems increasingly influence:
- Information discovery
- Content recommendations
- Knowledge retrieval
- Professional visibility
- Authority assessment
When someone searches for a topic through AI-powered systems, those systems determine:
- Which information to retrieve
- Which sources to trust
- Which experts to mention
- Which content to recommend
This creates an important question:
What happens when AI becomes one of the primary interpreters of your professional identity?
That question became the foundation of this experiment.
The Questions I Asked
To make the audit meaningful, I asked both AI systems a series of direct questions.
These included:
Authority Questions
- What prevents Soumyaditya Biswas from being considered a leading GEO expert?
- What authority signals are missing from his online presence?
- What would make you more likely to recommend him?
Visibility Questions
- How can Soumyaditya Biswas improve AI visibility authority?
- What is the biggest weakness in his digital footprint?
Competitive Questions
- Compare Soumyaditya Biswas’s authority signals with established GEO experts.
The goal was not to receive compliments.
The goal was to identify weaknesses.
If AI systems increasingly influence discovery and recommendations, understanding those weaknesses may become a valuable exercise for anyone building authority online.
What ChatGPT and Gemini Agreed On
One of the most interesting findings was that both systems reached similar conclusions.
Although the wording differed, the overall diagnosis was remarkably consistent.
Both systems recognized evidence of:
- Learning
- Experimentation
- Publishing
- SEO knowledge
- GEO awareness
- Search Intelligence thinking
However, both systems also identified several authority gaps.
These gaps became recurring themes throughout the audit.
Finding #1: The Difference Between Knowledge and Authority
The most important insight from the experiment was this:
Knowledge and authority are not the same thing.
An individual may possess valuable knowledge.
They may study extensively.
They may build frameworks.
They may conduct experiments.
However, authority requires something additional.
Authority requires visible proof.
Both AI systems repeatedly highlighted missing evidence such as:
- Public case studies
- Industry recognition
- Third-party mentions
- External citations
- Original research
This distinction changed how I viewed authority building.
For years, I believed that learning and publishing naturally led to authority.
The audit suggested something different.
Authority emerges when knowledge becomes visible, measurable, and independently validated.
Finding #2: High Activity, Low External Authority
One phrase stood out more than any other.
ChatGPT described the situation as:
“High activity, low external authority.”
This observation was difficult to ignore.
There is evidence of:
- Content creation
- Framework development
- SEO learning
- AI visibility research
- Search Intelligence exploration
However, there is currently limited evidence of:
- Industry citations
- Conference participation
- Podcast appearances
- Research publications
- Third-party validation
This creates an important gap.
Many people can publish content.
Far fewer can demonstrate that their work is influencing others.
According to both systems, this gap is one of the largest barriers between being perceived as a practitioner and being perceived as an authority.
Finding #3: AI Systems Evaluate the Entire Ecosystem
Another fascinating discovery involved positioning.
Gemini highlighted what it described as a Positioning Gap.
The analysis suggested that my digital footprint contains two distinct categories of content.
Category One
Foundational digital marketing content:
- Basic SEO
- Google Analytics
- WordPress
- Keyword Research
- Marketing tutorials
Category Two
Advanced search content:
- GEO
- AI Visibility
- Search Intelligence
- Entity SEO
- Retrieval Optimization
Because AI systems evaluate the entire ecosystem, they do not always classify me solely as a GEO-focused practitioner.
Instead, they see a broader digital marketing profile.
This insight was extremely valuable because it revealed that authority is not determined only by what you publish.
Authority is also influenced by consistency.
What Authority Signals Were Missing?
After reviewing the responses from both ChatGPT and Gemini, a clear pattern emerged.
Neither system questioned whether I was actively learning, experimenting, or publishing content.
Instead, both focused on something else:
Evidence.
The central theme throughout the audit was that authority is not created by knowledge alone.
Authority is created when knowledge is supported by visible proof.
This distinction became one of the most valuable insights from the entire experiment.
The Missing Authority Signals
Both AI systems identified several authority signals that were either weak or largely absent from my public digital footprint.
These included:
1. Public Case Studies
One of the most common recommendations involved publishing detailed case studies.
Examples include:
- AI Visibility Growth Studies
- GEO Experiments
- Entity Optimization Tests
- Search Intelligence Research Projects
The reasoning was simple.
Case studies transform theory into evidence.
They demonstrate:
- What was tested
- What happened
- What changed
- What was learned
Without case studies, much of the work remains difficult for external systems to evaluate.
2. Original Research
Another recurring recommendation involved publishing original research.
Most content on the internet explains existing concepts.
Far fewer people create new insights.
Examples of original research include:
- AI Retrieval Experiments
- Citation Studies
- AI Visibility Tracking Reports
- Entity Authority Analysis
- Search Behavior Studies
Research creates something unique.
It gives others a reason to reference, discuss, and cite your work.
This is one of the ways authority compounds over time.
3. External Validation
Perhaps the most important missing signal was third-party validation.
AI systems appear to place significant weight on what other people say about you.
Examples include:
- Guest Articles
- Industry Mentions
- Podcast Appearances
- Expert Interviews
- Community Discussions
- Industry Citations
This makes sense.
Authority becomes stronger when multiple independent sources reinforce the same expertise signal.
If all evidence exists within a personal website or LinkedIn profile, AI systems have fewer external references available for verification.
4. Recognized Frameworks
One observation particularly caught my attention.
Both systems suggested that experts often become authorities when they create concepts that others reference.
Examples might include:
- Proprietary Methodologies
- Research Models
- Evaluation Frameworks
- Scoring Systems
This insight immediately resonated with my work around Search Intelligence and framework development.
Creating frameworks is not enough.
The framework must be:
- Clearly documented
- Consistently applied
- Publicly visible
- Referenced over time
Only then does it begin functioning as an authority signal.
Comparing My Position with Established GEO Experts
Another interesting part of the audit involved comparing my authority signals with those of recognized GEO professionals.
The differences were revealing.
The gap was not primarily knowledge.
The gap was visibility and validation.
Established experts often possess:
Strong Research Libraries
They regularly publish:
- Studies
- Reports
- Experiments
- Industry Analysis
Their websites become knowledge hubs.
Industry Recognition
They appear in:
- Podcasts
- Conferences
- Webinars
- Industry Publications
Their expertise is reinforced by external platforms.
Independent Citations
Other professionals reference their work.
Their frameworks appear in discussions.
Their research is linked and discussed.
This creates a powerful authority loop.
The more people reference them, the stronger their perceived expertise becomes.
Consistent Specialization
One important observation was that established experts often maintain a highly focused positioning strategy.
Their content repeatedly reinforces a specific area of expertise.
For example:
- Technical SEO
- GEO
- AI Search
- Entity SEO
- Search Intelligence
The specialization remains clear.
As a result, both humans and AI systems develop stronger associations between the expert and the topic.
The Concept of Entity Authority
One idea became increasingly important as I analyzed the audit results.
That idea is Entity Authority.
Most marketers focus on website authority.
Some focus on domain authority.
Others focus on backlinks.
Entity Authority is different.
Entity Authority focuses on how strongly a person, brand, company, or concept is associated with a specific topic.
For example:
When someone hears:
- Search Quality
many people think of Google.
When someone hears:
- Personal Branding
certain well-known names immediately come to mind.
These associations represent forms of entity authority.
The stronger the association becomes, the easier it is for search systems and AI systems to recognize expertise.
Why Entity Authority Matters in AI Search
AI systems increasingly organize information around entities.
This means they attempt to understand:
- Who someone is
- What they specialize in
- Which topics they are associated with
- How frequently they are referenced
As AI-powered search grows, entity authority may become increasingly important.
Instead of asking:
“Does this website rank?”
AI systems may increasingly ask:
“Who is most strongly associated with this topic?”
This shift changes how authority is built.
What Would Make AI Systems More Likely to Recommend Me?
One of the most interesting parts of the experiment involved asking a simple question:
What would make AI systems more likely to recommend my work?
The answers were surprisingly practical.
Both systems suggested that stronger recommendation signals would emerge from:
Publishing More Evidence
Not opinions.
Not observations.
Evidence.
Examples include:
- Experiments
- Studies
- Framework Testing
- Research Reports
Creating Consistent Topic Associations
Rather than spreading attention across many unrelated topics, stronger specialization creates clearer expertise signals.
Consistency improves recognition.
Recognition improves authority.
Authority improves recommendations.
Building a Research-First Brand
This recommendation appeared repeatedly.
Instead of primarily explaining existing ideas, focus on:
- Testing ideas
- Measuring results
- Publishing findings
Research creates differentiation.
Differentiation creates authority.
Expanding Beyond Owned Platforms
A website and LinkedIn profile are valuable.
However, authority accelerates when expertise appears across multiple ecosystems.
Examples include:
- Guest Publications
- Industry Websites
- Podcasts
- Interviews
- Collaborative Research
External validation strengthens trust signals.
The Most Important Lesson from the Audit
The biggest lesson was not about SEO.
It was not about GEO.
It was not about AI Visibility.
It was about authority.
The experiment revealed that authority is not built by publishing alone.
Authority emerges when expertise becomes:
- Visible
- Verifiable
- Referenced
- Trusted
Knowledge is the foundation.
Evidence is the amplifier.
Recognition is the outcome.
My Action Plan: From Practitioner to Authority
After reviewing the responses from both ChatGPT and Gemini, I realized something important.
The objective is not to convince AI systems that I am an expert.
The objective is to build enough evidence that AI systems naturally arrive at that conclusion on their own.
This distinction fundamentally changed how I think about personal branding, authority building, and AI visibility.
Rather than focusing solely on content production, I began focusing on authority production.
The question shifted from:
“What should I publish?”
to:
“What evidence should I create?”
That shift became the foundation of my next phase of growth.
Building a Search Intelligence Ecosystem
A single article rarely creates authority.
A collection of interconnected assets does.
As a result, I began organizing my work around a broader Search Intelligence ecosystem.
The objective is to create a system that combines:
- SEO
- AEO
- GEO
- Entity SEO
- EEAT
- AI Visibility
- Authority Building
into a single framework.
Rather than creating random content, every piece of content should contribute to a larger authority structure.
This includes:
- Pillar Articles
- Supporting Articles
- Research Studies
- Frameworks
- LinkedIn Content
- Industry Discussions
- AI Visibility Audits
Each asset strengthens the overall ecosystem.
The Search Intelligence Framework
One direct outcome of this experiment was the development of a structured approach to content and authority building.
Instead of beginning with keywords alone, the process starts with understanding the broader search ecosystem.
The framework focuses on:
Business Understanding
Understanding:
- Industry
- Audience
- Products
- Services
- Competitive Landscape
Search Intelligence
Researching:
- Keywords
- Search Intent
- Entities
- Questions
- Retrieval Opportunities
Topic Clustering
Creating:
- Pillar Topics
- Supporting Clusters
- Internal Linking Structures
Content Optimization
Combining:
- SEO
- AEO
- GEO
- EEAT
within every content asset.
AI Visibility Tracking
Monitoring how content performs across:
- ChatGPT
- Gemini
- Perplexity
- Copilot
- Google AI Overviews
This creates a continuous improvement process rather than a one-time publishing process.
How I Plan to Measure Progress
One challenge with authority building is that progress is often difficult to measure.
Rankings can be tracked.
Traffic can be tracked.
Authority is more complex.
To address this, I plan to monitor several indicators.
Indicator 1: AI Mentions
I will periodically ask AI systems:
- Who writes about Search Intelligence?
- What are the leading GEO resources?
- Which experts discuss AI Visibility?
The objective is not ego.
The objective is measurement.
If visibility improves over time, the responses should gradually reflect that.
Indicator 2: Citation Growth
Authority becomes stronger when work is referenced.
I plan to monitor:
- Website Mentions
- Backlinks
- Framework References
- External Citations
These signals often indicate growing recognition.
Indicator 3: Entity Recognition
As AI systems become increasingly entity-driven, I want to understand how consistently my name is associated with specific topics.
Examples include:
- Search Intelligence
- AI Visibility
- GEO
- AEO
- Entity SEO
The stronger these associations become, the stronger the entity authority becomes.
Indicator 4: Research Output
Instead of focusing exclusively on publishing volume, I plan to focus more heavily on:
- Experiments
- Studies
- Audits
- Original Frameworks
Research tends to create stronger authority signals than standard educational content.
Lessons for Marketers and Personal Brands
Although this experiment focused on my own digital footprint, the lessons extend far beyond personal branding.
Many professionals face a similar challenge.
They create content.
They learn continuously.
They share insights.
Yet they struggle to establish authority.
One reason may be that they focus heavily on visibility and insufficiently on evidence.
The modern search ecosystem increasingly rewards:
- Proof
- Originality
- Research
- Expertise
- Consistency
Content remains important.
But content alone is often not enough.
The strongest authority signals frequently come from:
- Case Studies
- Research Reports
- Public Experiments
- Framework Development
- Third-Party Validation
These assets create differentiation.
Differentiation creates recognition.
Recognition creates authority.
The Future of Authority in the AI Era
The rise of AI-powered search introduces a fascinating shift.
Historically, authority was primarily evaluated by humans.
Today, authority is increasingly interpreted by AI systems as well.
This means professionals must consider two audiences:
Human Audience
Clients
Employers
Peers
Industry Communities
AI Audience
ChatGPT
Gemini
Perplexity
Copilot
AI Overviews
Knowledge Systems
Both audiences influence visibility.
Both audiences influence discovery.
Both audiences influence trust.
As a result, authority building is becoming a multidimensional challenge.
Key Takeaways
This experiment produced several important insights.
Insight 1
Knowledge and authority are different.
Authority requires evidence.
Insight 2
Publishing content is valuable.
Publishing proof is more valuable.
Insight 3
AI systems evaluate entire ecosystems rather than isolated articles.
Consistency matters.
Insight 4
Entity authority may become increasingly important in AI-powered search environments.
Insight 5
Research, experiments, and frameworks create stronger authority signals than generic educational content.
Conclusion
When I began this experiment, I expected feedback about SEO, GEO, and AI visibility.
Instead, I received a much deeper lesson about authority.
Both ChatGPT and Gemini delivered a remarkably similar conclusion:
The challenge is not a lack of learning.
The challenge is a lack of visible proof.
That realization changed my perspective.
Rather than asking how to create more content, I now ask how to create more evidence.
Rather than asking how to appear more knowledgeable, I focus on creating assets that demonstrate expertise.
Authority is not something that can be claimed.
Authority is something that must be earned, documented, and recognized.
The journey from learner to practitioner and from practitioner to authority is ultimately built on evidence.
This audit provided a snapshot of where I stand today.
More importantly, it provided a roadmap for where I want to go next.
And in an era increasingly influenced by AI systems, that roadmap may prove just as valuable as the destination itself.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did you conduct this AI visibility audit?
The goal was to understand how major AI systems currently perceive my professional identity and authority signals.
What was the biggest takeaway?
The biggest takeaway was that knowledge alone does not create authority. Authority requires visible proof, validation, and recognition.
What weakness did the audit identify?
The audit consistently highlighted a gap between learning and public proof. There was evidence of activity but limited evidence of external authority signals.
What is entity authority?
Entity authority refers to how strongly a person, company, or brand is associated with specific topics within search and AI ecosystems.
Why does AI visibility matter?
AI visibility influences how often content is retrieved, referenced, recommended, and surfaced within AI-powered search experiences.
What is Search Intelligence?
Search Intelligence is the practice of understanding how information is discovered, interpreted, retrieved, evaluated, and recommended across modern search ecosystems.
How can professionals build authority online?
By combining expertise with public evidence through case studies, research, experiments, frameworks, and third-party validation.
What is the next step after this audit?
The next step is building a stronger research-first content ecosystem focused on Search Intelligence, AI Visibility, GEO, and authority-building experiments.
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