Your website's on Google.
Now get it into AI too.
People are asking ChatGPT and Perplexity instead of searching Google. A free llms.txt file tells 23 AI systems who your business is, and that you want to be found. Takes 60 seconds.
Generate your llms.txt
Everything runs in your browser. No data leaves your device until you choose to submit your email.
Tell us about your business
Used only to personalise your file. Nothing is stored until you enter your email.
You've cracked Google.
AI is the next bit.
These days, AI assistants (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Google's AI Overviews) don't just point people to websites. They answer the question themselves. No list of links, no clicking through, just an answer.
If your business isn't in that answer, you've lost a potential customer who never even knew they were looking. GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation) is how you fix that. Research from Princeton and Georgia Tech found businesses using the right GEO strategies got cited up to 40% more in AI-generated responses.
For UK businesses, there's another layer: your content is protected under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. An llms.txt file is your way of telling AI companies what they're allowed to do with your stuff, with a timestamp to show when you did it.
From the blog
All posts →The study that proved you can get found by AI, not just Google
Researchers ran a proper experiment to see if you could deliberately show up more in AI answers. You can, by up to 40%. Here's what they did.
What is llms.txt? (And why your website probably needs one)
It's like robots.txt, but for AI. One small file at your domain root tells ChatGPT, Claude, and 21 others who you are and what they're allowed to do.
How UK businesses are losing customers to AI search, and what to do
Over a quarter of UK adults now use AI assistants for information queries. Here's what the data shows and what UK copyright law means for your content.