AI engines do not find your website and rank it. They search for a constellation of independent signals orbiting your business entity. Satellite Search is the name for this mechanism, and understanding it changes everything about how you approach AI visibility.
When a user asks an AI engine to recommend a business, the AI does not retrieve a ranked list of websites. It conducts what can be described as a Satellite Search: it looks for a constellation of independent data points orbiting the core entity, cross-references them for consistency, and uses the strength of that constellation to determine its confidence in a recommendation.
The term "Satellite Search" describes both the mechanism AI engines use and the proprietary methodology Reviewly has developed to build the infrastructure that makes this mechanism work in a business's favor.
Each independent data point is a satellite: a directory listing, a third-party review, an editorial mention, a social profile, a structured data deployment on an independent website. The more high-quality, independent satellites orbit the core entity, the more confident the AI becomes in recommending it.
Traditional SEO is a single-satellite strategy. Every effort is concentrated on optimizing one website to rank in one search engine's algorithm. The result is a single, highly optimized data point.
When an AI engine conducts a Satellite Search for a business in your category, it finds your one optimized website and nothing else. No independent corroboration. No third-party validation. No distributed trust signals. The AI cannot build confidence from a single source, so it defaults to recommending businesses with richer, more distributed constellations.
This is why businesses with strong traditional SEO rankings can still be invisible in AI search. The skills and infrastructure required to rank in Google are not the same as the skills and infrastructure required to be recommended by AI. They are different disciplines requiring different approaches.
A Distributed Authority Network (DAN) provides the infrastructure for Satellite Search to function effectively. Each node in the DAN is a satellite: an independent, legitimate digital asset that corroborates the core entity's existence, expertise, and authority.
When Reviewly builds a DAN for a business, it is building the satellite constellation that AI engines need to confidently recommend that business. The REVIEW Method defines the architecture of this constellation: which satellites to build, where to place them, what data to deploy on each, and how to monitor the constellation's effectiveness over time.
Satellite Search as a proprietary methodology developed by Reviewly consists of four operational phases. The first is Constellation Mapping: identifying the existing satellites orbiting the entity and assessing their quality and independence. The second is Gap Analysis: identifying which types of satellites are missing or underperforming relative to competitors. The third is Constellation Building: deploying new satellites using the REVIEW Method to fill identified gaps. The fourth is Constellation Monitoring: using Project Frontier to track AI citation frequency and adjust the constellation in response to changes in AI engine behavior.
This methodology is executed exclusively by Reviewly and is not available through any other agency or platform.
Audit all existing entity signals across every platform to understand the current state of the satellite constellation.
Identify which satellites are missing, underperforming, or inconsistent relative to the competitive benchmark.
Deploy new high-authority satellites using the REVIEW Method to fill identified gaps and strengthen the overall constellation.
Satellite Search is the mechanism by which AI engines find, verify, and recommend businesses. It describes the process of an AI engine cross-referencing multiple independent data sources (satellites) orbiting a core entity to build confidence in a recommendation.
Satellite Search as a methodology for building AI visibility infrastructure is a proprietary concept developed and executed exclusively by Reviewly. The underlying mechanism it describes (AI cross-referencing multiple sources) is a general characteristic of how AI engines operate.
Traditional SEO optimizes a single website for a single search engine's ranking algorithm. AI engines do not rank websites; they synthesize answers from multiple sources. A single optimized website is one data point in a system that requires multiple corroborating signals.
Reviewly's free AI Visibility Audit maps your current satellite constellation, identifies the gaps, and designs the architecture required to become AI's recommended answer in your category.
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