Try this right now. Open ChatGPT and type: "Who's the best [your industry] in [your town]?"
If your business came up — great. You can stop reading.
But if it didn't, you just discovered something most local business owners haven't figured out yet: millions of customers are now asking AI for recommendations instead of Googling. And AI has a list. You're either on it or you're not.
Here's the part nobody tells you: getting skipped by AI almost never means your business is bad. It means AI can't see you. Those are two very different problems — and the second one is fixable.
Is Your Business Invisible to AI?
Answer 8 quick questions and find out exactly why AI tools skip your business — plus what to fix first.
Take the AI Visibility QuizHow AI Actually Decides Who to Recommend
There's no secret ranking committee. There's no fee you forgot to pay. AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity build recommendations from one thing: what's publicly written about your business online.
Think of AI like a brand-new neighbor who just moved to town. They've never eaten at your restaurant or used your service. Everything they know comes from what they can read — your website, your reviews, your directory listings, and what other websites say about you.
If that new neighbor reads five glowing, detailed articles and 200 reviews about your competitor, and finds one outdated Facebook page about you? They're recommending your competitor. Every time. It's not personal. It's just all the information they had.
What AI Reads Before Recommending a Business
- Your website — what you do, who you serve, and where
- Reviews on Google, Yelp, and industry sites — especially the words inside them
- Directory listings — and whether your info matches everywhere
- Mentions from other sites — local news, "best of" lists, community pages
- How clearly your pages answer real customer questions
The 4 Real Reasons AI Skips Your Business
After looking at this problem across dozens of local businesses, it almost always comes down to the same four issues. Most businesses have at least two.
Your business info doesn't match across the internet
Your Google listing says "Joe's Plumbing LLC." Yelp says "Joes Plumbing & Heating." Your website says "Joe's Plumbing Co." with an old phone number. To a human, that's clearly one business. To AI, that's three shaky, unverifiable businesses — and shaky doesn't get recommended.
Your website doesn't say what you actually do
So many local business sites open with "Welcome to our website!" and a photo slider. Nowhere does it plainly say: we are a family-owned bakery in Cedar Park, Texas, specializing in custom wedding cakes and gluten-free pastries. AI can't recommend what you never wrote down.
Your reviews are thin — or say nothing specific
Fifty reviews that just say "Great!" teach AI almost nothing. Ten reviews that say "they rewired my 1970s house in two days and cleaned up after themselves" teach AI exactly when to recommend you. The words inside your reviews matter as much as the star count.
Nobody else on the internet mentions you
AI trusts businesses that show up in multiple places — the local paper, a "best coffee shops in town" roundup, the chamber of commerce site. If the only source about you is you, AI treats your claims like a stranger's word.
A customer asks ChatGPT: "I need someone to fix my AC this week in Mesa, Arizona. Who's reliable?" AI scans what it knows. One company has a website that says "AC repair in Mesa, same-week appointments, licensed & insured" plus 80 reviews mentioning fast response times. That company gets named. The company with the prettier logo and the empty website does not.
Find Your Weak Spot in 2 Minutes
The free ProfitMore quiz pinpoints which of the 4 problems is hiding your business from AI — so you fix the right thing first.
Take the Free QuizWhat to Fix First (In This Order)
Don't try to fix everything this weekend. Do these in order — each one builds on the last.
Week 1: Make your info identical everywhere
Pick one exact version of your business name, address, and phone number. Then update Google Business Profile, Yelp, Facebook, your website footer, and any industry directories to match — character for character. This is the single fastest trust signal you can send.
Week 2: Rewrite your homepage like you're answering a question
Your homepage should answer, in plain sentences: What do you do? Who do you serve? Where? What makes you different? If a stranger (or an AI) reads only your first paragraph, they should be able to describe your business accurately.
Week 3: Ask for reviews that tell a story
Stop asking "Can you leave us a review?" Start asking: "Would you mention what we did for you and how it went?" Specific reviews are AI fuel.
Week 4: Get mentioned somewhere that isn't yours
One local news feature, one community roundup, one partner's website linking to you. Third-party mentions are what turn "claims" into "facts" in AI's eyes.
Quick Answers (FAQ)
Can I pay ChatGPT to recommend me?
No. There's no ad platform for AI recommendations. That's actually good news — the playing field is information, not budget.
How long until AI starts recommending me?
AI tools that browse the web (like Perplexity, or ChatGPT with search) can pick up changes within weeks. Fixes compound — the sooner your info is clean and consistent, the sooner every AI tool catches up.
Is this the same as SEO?
It's related, but not identical. SEO gets you ranked in a list of links. AI visibility (some call it AIO) gets you named in an answer. The good news: the fixes above improve both at once.
Stop Guessing. Get Your AI Visibility Score.
Take the free 2-minute quiz and get a personalized breakdown of why AI skips your business — and your exact first fix.
Get My Free ScoreMelba Ande
AI Certified Professional helping local business owners get found — by customers and by AI. Founder of ProfitMore. Learn more →