Detailed Report:

GEO Assessment — executive-air.com/

(Score: 58%) — 01/27/26


Overview:

On 01/27/26 executive-air.com/ scored 58% — **Fair** – Overall, the site has a solid base for AI visibility, but a few gaps around clarity, identity, and content depth are holding it back.

Website Screenshot

Executive summary

Most of the issues showed up around business identity signals, content structure and authorship cues, and a couple of visibility basics that help platforms understand and present the site. The gaps are spread across multiple areas (discoverability, structured data, reputation, performance, and LLM-ready content), so the overall picture is mixed rather than concentrated in one spot.

Score Breakdown (High Level)

  • Discoverability: 100% - The site has a solid technical foundation for indexing, though it is currently missing a meta description and specialized media sitemaps.
  • Structured Data: 33% - The site’s schema implementation is technically sound and error-free, but it lacks the organization-level and author-specific details that help generative engines verify business identity and expertise.
  • AI Readiness: 67% - The site is in good technical shape for AI crawlers, though missing a Wikidata entry is the one notable gap in its foundational readiness.
  • Performance: 33% - Mobile performance is a bit of a mixed bag; the site reacts quickly to user input, but it takes a long time to visually stabilize and fully load the main content.
  • Reputation: 81% - The brand has strong recognition and social signals, but the lack of a Wikidata entry and inconsistent location data across sources are the main gaps.
  • LLM-Ready Content: 36% - The site is well-maintained with recent updates and outbound links, but the content is too fragmented and lacks the descriptive structure and authorship needed for high AI visibility.

What stands out most overall

The big picture is that your visibility foundation is there, but a few core clarity signals are coming through as incomplete or inconsistent. Most of the gaps aren’t “wrong” so much as they leave AI systems with less certainty about who you are, where you’re based, and how to pull clean answers from your content. Below, we’ll walk through the specific areas where those issues showed up, section by section. None of this is unusual—these are common growing pains for otherwise solid sites.

Detailed Report

Discoverability

❌ Core metadata missing on the homepage

What we saw

The homepage is missing a standard meta description, so there isn’t a clear, publisher-controlled summary available in the page’s metadata.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When generative systems and search surfaces summarize your brand, missing core context can lead to weaker or less consistent descriptions of what you do.

Next step

Write and add a clear, plain-English homepage description that summarizes what the business is and who it’s for.

❌ No image or video sitemap found

What we saw

We didn’t find any specialized sitemaps for images or videos in the data reviewed.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Rich media is often reused in AI-generated answers and previews, and unclear media discovery can limit how reliably those assets are understood and referenced.

Next step

Publish dedicated discovery files for image and video assets so crawlers can more easily find and interpret them.

Structured Data

❌ Missing organization or local business details on the homepage

What we saw

We didn’t see organization-related structured data types on the homepage (only general site/page types were detected).

Why this matters for AI SEO

Without strong business identity details, AI systems may have a harder time confidently connecting the site to the right brand entity and business attributes.

Next step

Add structured data that clearly describes the organization behind the site using the appropriate organization-type details.

❌ Resource/blog structured data couldn’t be evaluated

What we saw

A resource/blog page file wasn’t provided for this portion of the review, so we couldn’t confirm whether article-specific markup is present.

Why this matters for AI SEO

If content pages don’t clearly communicate what they are (and who created them), AI systems have less to work with when deciding what to cite or summarize.

Next step

Provide a representative resource/blog page for evaluation so article-level structured data can be verified.

❌ Clear, non-generic author signals couldn’t be verified (resource/blog)

What we saw

Because a resource/blog page wasn’t provided, we couldn’t confirm whether the content includes a clear author name.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Author clarity is a common trust cue for AI-driven summarization, especially when content is informational or advisory.

Next step

Share a sample article/resource page so we can confirm author attribution is present and unambiguous.

❌ Author identity links couldn’t be verified (resource/blog)

What we saw

A resource/blog page wasn’t provided, so we couldn’t check whether author identity links are included.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Consistent identity references help AI systems connect authors and brands across the wider web, which can improve confidence in attribution.

Next step

Provide a resource/blog page example so the author identity references can be reviewed.

AI Readiness

❌ No Wikidata entity found for the brand

What we saw

We couldn’t find an associated Wikidata entity for the brand in the provided data.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When a brand isn’t linked to a well-known public entity record, AI systems can be less confident about “who’s who,” especially when names or locations overlap.

Next step

Create or confirm an official Wikidata entry for the brand so it can be consistently referenced as a known entity.

Performance

❌ Main content takes too long to appear

What we saw

The page’s primary content took a long time to fully load on the homepage, which creates a noticeably slow “first impression.”

Why this matters for AI SEO

Slow loading can reduce how reliably systems and users access the content, which can limit crawling, summarization quality, and overall visibility across AI-driven surfaces.

Next step

Reduce the load time of the homepage’s main visible content so it becomes usable faster.

❌ Layout shifts during load

What we saw

The homepage content visibly shifts around as it loads, which can make the page feel unstable.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Unstable layouts make it harder for systems (and people) to consistently interpret what’s most important on the page, which can weaken how content is understood and reused.

Next step

Stabilize the homepage layout during loading so key content stays in place.

Reputation

❌ Brand identity is inconsistent across sources

What we saw

The business address information appears inconsistent across different sources, with multiple locations referenced.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When identity details conflict, AI systems may hesitate or “blend” information, which can lead to confusing summaries about where the business is based.

Next step

Standardize the brand’s primary location details so they match consistently wherever the business is listed.

❌ No Wikidata entity exists for the brand

What we saw

No matching Wikidata entity was found for the brand.

Why this matters for AI SEO

A missing entity record can make it harder for generative systems to confidently connect your site, your brand name, and third-party references.

Next step

Establish an official Wikidata entity for the brand to serve as a consistent identity reference.

❌ Wikidata identity anchors can’t be verified

What we saw

Because no Wikidata entity exists, we couldn’t verify official identity anchors (like the canonical website and identifiers) through that source.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Without verified anchors, AI systems have fewer “authoritative tie points” to confirm that offsite mentions and profiles refer to the same exact brand.

Next step

Once a Wikidata entity exists, ensure it includes the official website and key identifiers to anchor the brand consistently.

LLM-Ready Content (Blog Analysis)

Heads up: this section looks at one article as a snapshot, so it’s a little more interpretive than the rest of the report and may shift slightly from run to run. Have questions? Just shoot us an email at hello@v9digital.com

Persona Targeting: This content appears to be aimed at pilots, aviation professionals, and corporate travelers evaluating FBO services, fuel pricing, and private charter options around Bismarck, ND.

❌ No clear, named author

What we saw

We didn’t see a specific individual credited as the author on the page.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When authorship is unclear, AI systems have fewer trust cues to lean on when deciding whether to reuse, summarize, or cite the content.

Next step

Add a visible author name to the page so it’s clear who is responsible for the information.

❌ Sections are too thin to stand on their own

What we saw

The page is broken into multiple sections, but most are very short and don’t provide enough context as a self-contained unit.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Generative systems tend to work best when each section provides a complete thought, making it easier to extract the right answer without guessing.

Next step

Expand sections so each one provides enough detail to fully explain the topic it introduces.

❌ Key data isn’t presented in an easy-to-extract format

What we saw

Information like fuel prices is presented as standard text rather than in a structured table.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When data isn’t clearly structured, AI systems may misread values or skip them, which can reduce accuracy when the content is summarized.

Next step

Present key numerical details in a simple table so they’re easier to interpret and reuse.

❌ Subheadings are too generic

What we saw

Several subheadings are short labels (for example, “Charters” and “Fuel Prices”) that don’t add much context about what’s inside each section.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Descriptive subheadings help AI categorize content correctly and improve the odds that the right section gets pulled into an answer.

Next step

Rewrite section headings so they more clearly describe the specific question or topic each section addresses.

❌ Sections don’t lead with a clear, explanatory summary

What we saw

Many sections start with very short lines or isolated values instead of a short, explanatory opener.

Why this matters for AI SEO

AI systems prefer content blocks that begin with immediate context, because it reduces ambiguity about what the section is trying to answer.

Next step

Start each section with a brief, plain-language summary sentence that explains the main takeaway.

Does Anything Seem Off?

Thanks for taking our free GEO Grader for a spin. When we started this journey, the tool had a fairly long processing time to check everything we wanted both onsite and offsite, so we made a few adjustments on the backend to speed things up. As a result, there are times when the grader may not get everything 100% right. If something feels off, we recommend running the tool a second time to confirm the results. From there, you’re always welcome to reach out to us to schedule a GEO consultation, or to have your SEO provider validate the findings with a more detailed crawl and manual review.

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