In generative search, visibility is ultimately URL-driven. While domains and brands give a high-level signal, LLMs surface specific pages as links. Some URLs become recurring entry points; others appear only on a narrow set of queries. The Ranked URLs view focuses on URLs shown as links in LLM answers — not internal sources used by the model. It helps you:Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.shareofmodel.ai/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
- identify which pages carry the most visibility across prompts and engines,
- understand how visibility is distributed across a site,
- compare individual URLs against competing pages.
What this view helps you analyse
The view tells you which of your pages are visible in generative answers, how consistently they appear, and how they perform relative to competitors.Main table: your URLs at a glance

- Total prompts — how many prompts the URL appears on
- Highest rank — best position reached across all prompts and engines
- Presence Rate — how consistently the URL appears across results
- Top competitors — URLs that most frequently compete on the same prompts
- URLs that appear often vs. occasionally
- URLs that rank highly vs. those that appear lower
- URLs that face consistent competition vs. fragmented competition
Results details: linking URLs, prompts and engines

- the prompts on which the URL appears,
- the engines where it is visible,
- the ranks per prompt and engine,
- the top 3 competitor URLs in this scope.
Competitive context: URL-level competition

- see all competing pages,
- compare average ranking across prompts,
- identify pages that repeatedly challenge your visibility,
- open competitor pages to inspect their content.
Reading cues
These are signals to read, not rules.
- A single URL concentrates most of the visibility — the model consistently selects one page as the most relevant representation of the topic.
- Multiple URLs appear on a small number of prompts — fragmented visibility, no single page dominates.
- The same competitors appear repeatedly — stable competitive sets at URL level, rather than broad domain competition.
- Strong ranking but low presence rate — high performance when the URL appears, limited coverage across prompts.
- High presence rate but lower ranking — broad visibility with less prominent positioning.
How to use this view effectively
What’s next
Presence Rate
Understand the consistency signal underneath this view.
Sources & Links
Compare URLs as sources vs. visible links.