By June 2025, 34% of US adults said they had used ChatGPT, and among adults under 30 the figure rose to 58%, according to Pew Research Centre. That statistic reveals that many people are not discovering products or getting information through lists of links.
For smaller dev tools brands, that opens a useful door. When developers get interested and ask what is AEO, they see direct, reliable answers carrying more weight than publishing volume or brand size. If more product research begins with direct answers, then the clearest explanation, the sharpest documentation, and the most dependable help page have a better shot at being noticed.
There is a grounded case for that view. Pew gives us the use trend, Google Search Central explains what good discoverable content looks like, Postman shows how central documentation has become in the API world, and Reuters has tracked how seriously search platforms now treat AI-generated answers and summaries.
Small brand with a big answer
One reason this feels promising is that answer-led discovery tends to reward precision. Google Search Essentials says content should be helpful, reliable and people-first; it also recommends using the words people search for in prominent places like titles and headings, and making links crawlable so more pages can be found.
That plays to a smaller company’s strengths more often than people assume. If you’ve ever landed on a product page that talks around the problem instead of solving it, you already know how quickly trust slips away. A focused dev tools brand can often explain one job, one workflow, or one integration with much more care than a large company spreading its message in dozens of audiences.
The audience trend supports that optimism. Pew reported in December 2025 that 64% of US teens had used AI chatbots, and 28% said they used them every day. Those teens are tomorrow’s junior developers, product researchers and technical buyers, so the habit of asking for an answer before opening ten tabs is unlikely to fade.
There is a nice side effect here. Smaller brands are often forced to be clearer because they can’t rely on recognition to carry weak copy.
Docs that pull their weight
This is where documentation stops being a background asset and starts doing real commercial work. Postman’s 2025 State of the API Report is based on a survey of more than 5,700 developers, and it highlights two points that are relevant here: APIs are powering agents as well as applications, and integrated documentation helps keep docs current and in sync.
That is a strong clue for smaller dev tools brands. If agents and answer-driven tools are part of how people find and evaluate software, then your docs are not sitting behind the sale; they are helping shape whether the sale begins at all.
In practical terms, the pages most likely to help are often the least glamorous:
- A setup guide that answers the first technical question in plain language, with terms the reader would naturally search for,
- Error and troubleshooting pages that explain what happened, why it happened, and what to try next, using consistent headings and crawlable links,
- Integration, reference and support pages that stay updated, because Postman’s 2025 report points to the value of documentation that remains current and synced.
There is also a useful correction to make. Google’s documentation says structured data helps Google understand page content, but Google’s FAQ page guidance says FAQ rich results are limited to well-known, authoritative government and health sites. So this is not a story about sprinkling markup on a thin page and hoping for magic. It is a story about writing pages that are genuinely easier for both people and systems to understand.
And, honestly, that is good news. It gives smaller teams permission to spend less time chasing clever tricks and more time tightening the pages users were going to need anyway.
The trust gap is the opportunity
The wider search environment makes this even more interesting. Reuters reported on January 28, 2026 that the UK was pressing Google to let websites opt out of content use in AI summaries and independent AI model training, and on March 18, 2026 it reported Google was developing options to allow AI opt-out in search as part of those competition discussions.
Those reports show that answer systems are not a side note. They now sit close enough to the centre of online discovery that publishers, regulators and platforms are arguing over control, access and visibility.
Reuters also reported in December 2025 that Google’s AI Overviews were available in more than 100 countries. For a smaller dev tools brand, the takeaway is straightforward: if answer-led discovery is spreading while the rules are still being refined, your safest long-term asset is content you fully control and regularly improve.
That brings us back to trust. A large brand may have more pages, more backlinks and a bigger team, but a smaller company can still win the moment a buyer asks a narrow question and your page gives the clearest, most dependable response. Google’s guidance keeps pointing in that direction through helpful content, precise wording, and understandable structure.
If answer interfaces are still being worked out in public, who has the cleaner opening than a focused dev tools brand that can keep every page accurate, useful and current?
When clear beats loud
AEO looks encouraging for smaller dev tools brands for one reason above all: It increases the value of being understandable. Pew’s data shows that AI chatbot use is already common in adults and especially strong among younger users, while Google’s guidance continues to favour reliable, people-first content that is easy to interpret.
That does not promise instant visibility, and it should not be sold that way. What it does offer is a more believable path to being discovered, one built on well-kept docs, precise product pages and support content that respects the reader’s time.
For smaller brands, that is a welcome kind of pressure. It rewards the companies that explain themselves well.



