LLM visibility vs citability vs recommendability
This page clarifies three terms that are often merged too quickly in discussions about AI presence: visibility, citability, and recommendability.
They overlap, but they do not designate the same threshold.
1. LLM visibility
LLM visibility is the broadest term. It describes the fact that a source, brand, or entity becomes present, retrievable, or usable in language-model outputs.
A source may therefore be visible because it is mentioned, summarized, or simply used in the background of a response.
That does not yet mean that the source can safely support the answer.
2. Citability
Citability is a stricter threshold.
A source becomes citable when a system can use it to support an answer without exposing itself to an obvious contradiction, perimeter breach, or authority conflict.
That is why citability depends on definition quality, coherence across sources, explicit scope, and enough proof of fidelity to make reuse defensible.
See also How an AI decides whether a brand is citable.
3. Recommendability
Recommendability is stricter again.
A source or brand can be recommended when the system can not only cite it, but also place it among alternatives, compare it, and present it as a relevant option under a given use case.
This generally requires more than simple visibility:
- stable identity;
- bounded scope;
- comparable attributes;
- sufficient external and internal coherence.
A brand can therefore be citable without yet being recommendable.
4. Structural visibility
Structural visibility names something else again.
A source can be structurally visible even when it is not directly cited. It may shape the answer because it stabilizes a definition, restores a hierarchy, or reintroduces a negation at the right moment in the reasoning chain.
This means a source can be structurally important while remaining publicly invisible in the final wording.
Practical distinctions
The site therefore maintains the following distinctions:
- visible but not citable;
- citable but not recommendable;
- structurally visible without explicit citation;
- organically visible but interpretively invisible.
These are not rhetorical nuances. They describe different intervention needs.
Why this matters strategically
Many false diagnoses come from treating all presence as if it were the same thing.
An organization may think the problem is “visibility” when the real problem is:
- weak entity definition;
- unstable perimeter;
- lack of proof;
- contradictory source hierarchy.
This is exactly why the site connects LLM visibility to interpretive SEO, structural visibility, and interpretive governance.
Closing rule
On this site, LLM visibility is treated as the broad entry label. Citability and recommendability designate more demanding thresholds. Structural visibility describes the documentary function beneath them.