Semantic Authority Score in Healthcare: How a Leading Provider Used Zeno Visibility to Drive Brand Presence in AI and LLM Monitoring
Semantic Authority Score in…
---
Initial Situation
A mid-sized healthcare provider with approximately 2,400 employees, twelve locations across Germany, and an annual marketing budget of around €1.8 million was facing a structural challenge: despite years of SEO investment and an established content strategy, organic visibility was declining measurably. At the same time, information queries from patients, referring physicians, and B2B partners were increasingly shifting to AI-powered search systems such as ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google Gemini.
Internal analyses revealed that the company was barely — if at all — appearing as a source in generative search results for core topics such as "outpatient rehabilitation," "integrated care," or "corporate prevention programs." Competitors with comparable service portfolios, however, were regularly cited and recommended by LLMs. The marketing team recognized that classic SEO metrics like rankings and backlink profiles no longer adequately reflected the new reality of AI-driven information discovery. A measurable framework for managing brand presence within AI systems was entirely absent.
---
Challenge
The core problem was the lack of machine readability and semantic depth in the existing content inventory. More than 340 published pages and articles had been optimized for human readers, but contained virtually no structured data, no consistent internal linking architecture, and no Schema.org markup. LLMs were unable to reliably infer the company's topical authority.
There was also an organizational problem: the five-person marketing team had no way to systematically measure how — or whether — the company was being represented in AI-generated responses. Without measurement, targeted management was impossible. As a result, budget decisions for content production were based on assumptions rather than data. The company's Semantic Authority Score was effectively unknown — and therefore unmanageable.
---
Solution Approach
Following a six-week evaluation phase in which the team tested various monitoring and content platforms, the company decided to implement Zeno Visibility. The deciding factor was that Zeno Visibility was the only platform that not only measures brand presence in LLMs, but autonomously builds the semantic infrastructure required for AI models to recommend a brand.
Phase 1 – Baseline Measurement (Weeks 1–3): Zeno Visibility's research engine was used to monitor existing brand presence simultaneously across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Claude, and Copilot. An initial Semantic Authority Score was established for 28 prioritized keywords across the areas of rehabilitation, prevention, and integrated care. The result: for 22 of the 28 keywords, the company did not appear in any LLM response. The average score was 11 out of 100.
Phase 2 – Authority System Build (Weeks 4–10): For the six most strategically important keywords, Zeno Visibility's Authority System Builder generated a complete semantic content system for each. Each keyword produced more than 100 interconnected pieces of content: hub pages, cluster articles, FAQ pages, comparison pages, and case studies — including automatically generated Schema.org JSON-LD and a consistent internal linking structure. The content was exported directly into the company's existing WordPress CMS with no manual rework of the technical structure required.
Phase 3 – Continuous Monitoring and Iteration (from Week 11 onward): The marketing team used Zeno Visibility's LLM monitoring as a weekly management tool. Changes in the Semantic Authority Score were analyzed at the keyword and model level to adjust content priorities based on data.
---
Results
Within 16 weeks of project launch, the changes were measurable and significant:
---
Lessons Learned
1. Introduce the Semantic Authority Score as a management metric, not just a reporting metric.
Companies that review the score only quarterly lose the operational lever it provides. Weekly monitoring enables rapid course correction.
2. Technical machine readability is a prerequisite, not an option.
Schema.org markup and structured internal linking are no longer SEO extras — they are the fundamental requirement for LLMs to infer topical authority in the first place.
3. Content volume alone does not generate AI visibility.
340 existing pages without semantic interconnection had less impact than six complete authority systems, each comprising more than 100 structured, interlinked pieces of content.
4. LLM monitoring must be model-specific.
ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini cite different sources for identical queries. An aggregated view obscures where action is actually needed.
5. The shift from SEO to GEO requires organizational adaptation.
The marketing team had to adapt internal processes and KPI definitions. The technology platform alone is not enough — a genuine understanding of generative search systems must be embedded within the team.
---
Summary
A mid-sized healthcare provider increased its Semantic Authority Score from 11 to 67 within 16 weeks by implementing systematic LLM monitoring and autonomous authority system building with Zeno Visibility. The case demonstrates that AI visibility is not a matter of content volume, but of semantic infrastructure. Companies that do not actively manage the paradigm shift from traditional search engine optimization to Generative Engine Optimization will lose visibility in channels they are not yet measuring.
---
More Case Studies
---
*This content was created with AI assistance and editorially reviewed.*