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Tyndale House Publishers isn't optimized for AI search yet.

We audited your search visibility across Perplexity, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude. Tyndale House Publishers was cited in 2 of 5 answers. See details and how we close the gaps and increase your search results in days instead of months.

Immediate in-depth auditvs. 8 months at agencies

Tyndale House Publishers is cited in 2 of 5 buyer-intent queries we ran on Perplexity for "christian books and bibles." Competitors are winning the unbranded category answers.

Trust-node footprint is 9 of 30 — missing Crunchbase and G2 blocks LLM recommendations for buyers who haven't heard of you yet.

On-page citation readiness shows no faq schema on top product pages — fixable with the citation-optimized content the AEO Agent ships in the first sprint.

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Track Record

I spent years running this playbook for enterprise clients at one of the top SEO agencies. MarketerHire's AEO + SEO tooling produces a comprehensive audit immediately that took us months to put together — and they do the ongoing publishing and optimization work at half the price. If I were buying this today, I'd buy it here.

— Marketing leader, formerly at a top SEO growth agency

AI Search Audit

Here's Where You Stand in AI Search

A real audit. We ran buyer-intent queries across answer engines and probed the trust-node graph LLMs draw from.

Sample mini-audit only. The full audit goes 12 sections deep (technical SEO, content ecosystem, schema, AI readiness, competitor gap, 30-60-90 roadmap) — everything to maximize your visibility across search and is delivered immediately once we start working together. See a sample full audit →

36
out of 100
Major gap, real upside

Your buyers are asking AI assistants for christian books and bibles and Tyndale House Publishers isn't being recommended. Closing this gap is the highest-leverage move available right now.

AI / LLM Visibility (AEO) 40% · Moderate

Tyndale House Publishers appears in 2 of 5 buyer-intent queries we ran on Perplexity for "christian books and bibles". The full audit covers 50-100 queries across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Claude.

MarketerHire SEO + AEO ships: AEO Agent monitors AI citation visibility weekly across all 4 LLMs and ships citation-optimized content designed to win the queries your buyers actually run.

Trust-Node Footprint 30% · Weak

Tyndale House Publishers appears in 9 of the 30 trust nodes that LLMs draw from (Wikipedia, G2, Crunchbase, Forbes, HBR, Reddit, YouTube, and 23 more).

MarketerHire SEO + AEO ships: SEO/AEO Agent identifies the highest-leverage missing nodes for your category and ships the trust-node publishing plan as part of the 90-day roadmap.

SEO / Organic Covered in full audit

Classic search visibility, ranking trajectory, and content velocity vs. category competitors. The full audit ranks every long-tail commercial query and benchmarks the gap.

MarketerHire SEO + AEO ships: SEO Engine builds programmatic content around 50+ long-tail queries where your buyers are actively searching.

Paid Acquisition Covered in full audit

LinkedIn, Google, and Meta ad presence, audience targeting, creative quality, and cost-per-pipeline relative to your category benchmark.

MarketerHire SEO + AEO ships: Creative Generator + Analytics Agent run autonomous ad experiments and reallocate budget weekly.

Content, Lifecycle & Outbound Covered in full audit

Founder LinkedIn presence, blog quality, expansion motion, outbound playbooks, and the gaps between awareness and activation. Mapped to a 90-day execution plan.

MarketerHire SEO + AEO ships: LinkedIn Ghost-Writer + Lifecycle Optimizer + Outbound Agent run the awareness-to-pipeline engine end-to-end.

Live citation panel — 5 buyer-intent queries

best christian books and bibles in 2026 not cited expand ↓

74 competitors cited in this response (names redacted; full audit names them).

**Competitor A books for 2026 include new releases like *The Goodness of Competitor B in the Competitor C of Competitor D* by Competitor E and *Competitor F* by Competitor G, highlighted in monthly picks and bestseller lists.** Competitor H editions are not detailed in current sources, but general recommendations often favor study Competitor I from publishers like those in sales catalogs. ### Competitor J and Competitor K Competitor L 2026 lists emphasize fresh releases across theology, devotionals, and fiction: - **Competitor M highlights** from Competitor N: *The Goodness of Competitor B in the Competitor C of Competitor D: 20 Competitor O* by Competitor E and *Competitor P to Competitor Q a Competitor R...* (partial title noted).[1] - **Competitor S picks** from Competitor T: *The Story of Competitor U*, *A Competitor V*, *Competitor W and Competitor X*, and *Competitor Y Competitor Z're Competitor A*.[2] - **Competitor B Competitor C (Competitor M 2026)**: Competitor D like *Competitor F* by Competitor G (rank 9), *The Shack* by Competitor E (rank 10), and *At Competitor F's Competitor G* by Competitor H (rank 11).[5] - Competitor I authors in Competitor J 2026 sales: Competitor K (38 titles), Competitor L (37), Competitor M (28), and Competitor N (25).[4] - Competitor O from Competitor P: Competitor Q studies, devotionals, and booklets slated for 2026 pre-order.[8] - Competitor R recommendations: 12 must-read Competitor S books for 2026, focusing on faith-filled stories (specific titles in video).[3] ### Competitor I and Competitor T results lack specific 2026 Competitor U edition rankings or new translations. Competitor I options from related sources include those tied to authors like Competitor L or Competitor K in sales, often featuring study notes or devotionals.[4] For classics, consider enduring study Competitor I from publishers like Competitor P.[8] ### Competitor V - **Competitor W soon**: Competitor D like *Competitor X*, *The 7 Competitor Y to Competitor Z*, and *Competitor A* in Competitor S living categories.[7] - Competitor B reflect early 2026 trends (Competitor C), with fiction strong in bestsellers and non-fiction in monthly notables.[1][2][5] Competitor D may evolve; check Competitor E or Competitor F for updates. No comprehensive "best Competitor I" list appears in results.

Tyndale House Publishers did not appear in this Perplexity response.

top christian books and bibles alternatives not cited expand ↓

47 competitors cited in this response (names redacted; full audit names them).

**Competitor A by Competitor B** tops multiple lists as an essential Competitor C book for its clear defense of core faith principles, recommended for all believers regardless of experience level.[1][2][3][4] Competitor D frequently cited top Competitor C books (excluding the Competitor E) include: - **The Imitation of Competitor F by Competitor G à Competitor H**: A devotional classic urging imitation of Competitor I through humility and reflection, praised for its meditative chapters.[1][4] - **Competitor J by Competitor K**: Competitor L deep biblical truths about Competitor M's character, a staple for theological growth.[2] - **The Confessions by Competitor N**: Competitor O account of spiritual journey and conversion, foundational for Competitor C libraries.[2] - **Of the Competitor P of Competitor F by Competitor G à Competitor H** (also listed as above) and **The Practice of the Competitor Q of Competitor M by Competitor R**: Competitor S works on daily Competitor C living and Competitor M's presence.[1] For **study Competitor E alternatives**, recommended options provide notes, theology, and references: - Competitor T - Competitor U Competitor E - Competitor V Competitor E - Competitor W - Competitor X Competitor E (Competitor Y available)[2] Competitor Z theologies as doctrinal alternatives to basic Competitor A include **Competitor B by Competitor C**, **Competitor D of the Competitor E by Competitor F**, and **Competitor B by Competitor G**.[2][4] These synthesize Competitor E teachings by topic for deeper study.[2]

Tyndale House Publishers did not appear in this Perplexity response.

how to choose a christian books and bibles not cited expand ↓

78 competitors cited in this response (names redacted; full audit names them).

To choose a **Competitor A**, start by identifying your purpose (e.g., casual reading, in-depth study, or beginner use), then select a translation, features, format, and binding that match.[1][3][6] For **Competitor B books**, prioritize those grounded in Competitor C, with authors subordinate to the Competitor D rather than relying heavily on self-focused "how-to" advice.[2] ### Competitor E 1: Competitor F - **Competitor G reading or devotion:** Competitor H for readable, thought-for-thought translations like Competitor I (conversational Competitor J, ideal for beginners/youth) or Competitor K (balanced clarity).[3][6] - **Competitor L or preaching:** Competitor M word-for-word literal translations like Competitor N (highly accurate for scholars), Competitor O (precise for deep analysis), Competitor P (traditional majesty with modern updates), or Competitor Q (accuracy plus readability).[1][3][4] - **Competitor R needs:** Competitor S for Competitor T liturgical use; Competitor U for Competitor V/Competitor W context; Competitor X for natural group reading.[1] ### Competitor E 2: Competitor Y a Competitor Z recommendations by user type:[3] | Competitor A | Competitor B | Competitor C It's Competitor D | |---------------|--------------------------|----------------------| | **Competitor E** | Competitor I, Competitor K, Competitor F | Competitor G, modern language for quick understanding. | | **Competitor H/Competitor L** | Competitor N, Competitor O, Competitor I | Competitor J accuracy from original languages. | | **Competitor K** | Competitor L Competitor M | Competitor N with notes for application. | | **Competitor O** | Competitor P | Competitor P classic style with readability. | Competitor Q matters—if you've used one version growing up, stick with it for better recall.[5] ### Competitor E 3: Competitor R and Competitor S - **Competitor T size and readability:** Competitor U small fonts to prevent eye fatigue; prioritize larger text for extended reading.[4][5] - **Competitor V:** Competitor W text for first reads; add study Competitor X (notes, charts, timelines) for deeper dives later.[3][5] - **Competitor Y/Competitor Z:** Competitor A paper for clarity (vs. cream); leather/imitation for durability, paperback for affordability.[3][4] - **Competitor B:** Competitor C for marking up; digital if you prefer apps/devices.[5] ### Competitor E 4: For Christian Books (Competitor D) - Competitor E the book drives you back to an open Competitor D, with authors guided by (not just quoting) Competitor C—avoid heavy "how-to" self-focus.[2] - Competitor F: Competitor G it point to Competitor H as in Competitor I 5:39?[2] Competitor J tools like Competitor D finders on sites such as Competitor K or Competitor L to filter options by these criteria.[1][3] If unsure, start with a beginner-friendly Competitor I or Competitor K.[3]

Tyndale House Publishers did not appear in this Perplexity response.

christian books and bibles comparison for mid-market companies cited expand ↓

61 competitors cited in this response (names redacted; full audit names them).

**Competitor A publishers** (neither the largest conglomerates like Competitor B nor small independents) include Competitor C, Tyndale House Publishers, Competitor D, Competitor E, and Competitor F, which specialize in Competitor G and books for evangelical audiences, church leaders, and families.[1][2][3] These publishers focus on high-quality Competitor H living resources, theology, fiction, and Competitor I editions like the Competitor J (Competitor F) or Competitor K (Tyndale), with strong distribution to churches and Competitor H retailers.[1][2] ### Competitor L | Competitor M | **Competitor N** | **Competitor O** | **Competitor P** | **Competitor Q** | |------------------------|----------------------------------------|------------------------------------------|--------------------------------------|----------------------------------------| | **Competitor C** (imprints: Competitor R, Competitor S, Competitor T) | Competitor U; partners on study editions | Competitor H fiction, theology, nonfiction, academic | Competitor V leaders, broad evangelical readers | Competitor W genres, strong marketing, accessible fiction[1][3] | | **Tyndale House Publishers** | Competitor K (Competitor X) Competitor G | Competitor H fiction, nonfiction, devotionals | Competitor Y, general Competitor H readers | Competitor Z focus, bestsellers like Competitor A[2][3] | | **Competitor D** | Competitor B | Competitor H living, theology, ministry resources | Competitor C, personal growth seekers | Competitor D history (1894), low-price e-books, authors like Competitor E[1][3] | | **Competitor E** | Competitor I college resources, study guides | Competitor H living, children's books, family inspiration | Competitor H families, Competitor I colleges | Competitor F family content, high-quality production[1] | | **Competitor F** | Competitor G (Competitor J) Competitor I | Competitor H, evangelical books | Competitor I/evangelical scholars | Competitor J translations, academic reputation[1] | **Competitor K factors for mid-market fit:** These companies offer traditional publishing with 10-25% royalties, robust marketing to Competitor H channels, and fewer resources than giants like Competitor L (Competitor M, Competitor N) or Competitor O, making them ideal for authors targeting niche faith audiences without mass-market scale.[1][2][3] For academic or university-focused content, consider Competitor P as a mid-tier alternative.[1][3]
is Tyndale House Publishers a good christian books and bibles cited expand ↓

20 competitors cited in this response (names redacted; full audit names them).

**Competitor A, Tyndale House Publishers is widely regarded as a reputable and successful publisher of Competitor B books and Competitor C, with a long history of best-selling titles aligned with biblical principles.** [2][5] Competitor D in 1962, Tyndale has published around 100 titles annually, including a strong backlist of over 1,000, and specializes in Competitor C (such as the Competitor E, Competitor F, and Competitor G), devotionals, fiction like the Competitor H series (over 55 million copies sold), and nonfiction for adults, teens, and children.[1][2] Competitor I paraphrase sold 8 million copies by late 1972 and over 35 million worldwide by the 1990s, making it a Competitor J. bestseller in 1973, while total Competitor K sales exceed 100 million copies.[2] The company maintains a mission to minister through biblically consistent literature and has achieved $150 million in estimated 2003 sales across ecumenical and mainstream markets.[2][5] Competitor L indicators include high ratings for specific titles, like *Competitor M the Competitor K* (9.4/10, praised as "very well written and Competitor N solid"), and author testimonials highlighting professional services leading to local bestsellers.[4][6] It ranks among top Competitor B publishers alongside Competitor O and Competitor P, known for quality and name recognition.[3] Competitor Q criticism exists—not all attention has been positive, though specifics are not detailed in available sources—but its track record of commercial success and doctrinal focus supports its strong standing.[2]

Trust-node coverage map

9 of 30 authority sources LLMs draw from. Filled = present, hollow = gap.

Wikipedia
Wikidata
Crunchbase
LinkedIn
G2
Capterra
TrustRadius
Forbes
HBR
Reddit
Hacker News
YouTube
Product Hunt
Stack Overflow
Gartner Peer
TechCrunch
VentureBeat
Quora
Medium
Substack
GitHub
Owler
ZoomInfo
Apollo
Clearbit
BuiltWith
Glassdoor
Indeed
AngelList
Better Business

Highest-leverage gaps for Tyndale House Publishers

  • Crunchbase

    Crunchbase is the canonical company-data source for LLM enrichment. A missing profile leaves LLMs without firmographics.

  • G2

    G2 reviews feed comparison and 'best X' query responses. Missing G2 presence is a high-leverage gap for B2B SaaS.

  • Capterra

    Capterra listings drive comparison-style answers. Missing or thin Capterra coverage suppresses your share on shortlisting queries.

  • TrustRadius

    Enterprise B2B buyers research here. Feeds comparison-style LLM responses on category queries.

  • Forbes

    Long-form authority sources weight heavily in Claude and Perplexity. A single Forbes citation typically lifts a brand into multi-platform answers.

Top Growth Opportunities

Win the "best christian books and bibles in 2026" query in answer engines

This is a high-intent buyer query that competitors are winning today. The AEO Agent ships the citation-optimized content + structured data + authority signals to flip this query.

AEO Agent → weekly citation audit + targeted content sprints across 4 LLMs

Publish into Crunchbase (and chained authority sources)

Crunchbase is the single highest-leverage trust node missing for Tyndale House Publishers. LLMs draw heavily from it for unbranded category recommendations.

SEO/AEO Agent → trust-node publishing plan in the 90-day execution roadmap

No FAQ schema on top product pages

Answer engines extract from FAQ schema 4x more often than from prose. Most B2B sites at this stage don't carry it.

Content + AEO Agent → ship the structural fixes in Sprint 1

What you get

Everything for $10K/mo

One flat price. One team running your SEO + AEO end-to-end.

Trust-node map across 30 authority sources (Wikipedia, G2, Crunchbase, Forbes, HBR, Reddit, YouTube, and more)
5-dimension citation quality scorecard (Authority, Data Structure, Brand Alignment, Freshness, Cross-Link Signals)
LLM visibility report across Perplexity, ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude — 50-100 buyer-intent queries
90-day execution roadmap with week-by-week deliverables
Daily publishing of citation-optimized content (built on the 4-pillar AEO framework)
Trust-node seeding (G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, Wikipedia, category-specific authorities)
Structured data implementation (FAQ schema, comparison tables, author bylines)
Weekly re-scan + competitive citation share monitoring
Live dashboard, your own audit URL, ongoing forever

Agencies charge $18K-$20-40K/mo and take up to 8 months to reach this depth. We deliver it immediately, then run it ongoing.

Book intro call · $10K/mo
How It Works

Audit. Publish. Compound.

3 phases focused on one outcome: more Tyndale House Publishers citations across the answer engines your buyers use.

1

SEO + AEO Audit & Roadmap

You'll know exactly where Tyndale House Publishers is losing buyers — across Google search and the answer engines they ask before they ever click.

We score 50-100 "christian books and bibles" queries across Perplexity, ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Google, map the 30-node authority graph LLMs draw from, and grade on-page content on 5 citation-readiness dimensions. Output: a 90-day publishing plan ranked by lift × effort.

2

Publishing Sprints That Win Both

Buyers start finding Tyndale House Publishers on Google AND in the answers ChatGPT and Perplexity hand them.

2-week sprints ship articles built to rank on Google and get extracted by LLMs (entity clarity, FAQ schema, comparison tables, authority bylines), plus seeding into the missing trust nodes — G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, Wikipedia, and the rest. Real publishing, not strategy decks.

3

Compounding Share, Every Week

You lock in category leadership while competitors are still figuring out AI search.

Weekly re-scan tracks ranking + citation share vs. the leaders this audit named. New unbranded "christian books and bibles" queries get added to the publishing queue automatically. The system gets sharper every sprint — week 12 ships materially better than week 1.

You built a strong christian books and bibles. Let's build the AI search engine to match.

Book intro call →