A business can sit at the top of Google search results and still never come up when someone asks ChatGPT for a recommendation. That's not a glitch. It's two completely different systems evaluating your business in completely different ways.
Most business owners assume that good Google rankings translate into AI visibility. It makes sense — if Google thinks you're relevant, why wouldn't ChatGPT? But the logic breaks down once you understand what each system is actually doing when it encounters your business.
Google's job is to organize web pages and rank them by relevance to a keyword query. It's been doing this for over two decades, and the rules are well-established: backlinks, keyword relevance, domain authority, page speed, mobile optimization. You can get really good at this game, and many businesses have.
AI assistants are doing something fundamentally different. When someone asks Perplexity or ChatGPT "who should I hire for X?" — the AI isn't ranking pages. It's synthesizing everything it knows about businesses in that space and deciding which ones it trusts enough to bring up by name.
One system organizes information. The other forms opinions.
That distinction changes everything about what "showing up" means.
The tactics that push you up Google's rankings overlap with AI readiness in some places, but diverge sharply in others.
What helps with Google but doesn't move the needle with AI:
These are fine SEO practices. AI just doesn't care about them the way Google does.
What AI actually weighs when deciding whether to mention you:
A site with mediocre SEO but crystal-clear service descriptions, solid schema, recent reviews, and educational content can get recommended by AI over a site that dominates Google's first page.
When someone types "best pediatric dentist near me" into Google, the algorithm matches that query against indexed pages and ranks them. The person sees ten blue links (or fewer now, with ads and AI Overviews eating up space) and clicks one.
When someone asks ChatGPT the same question, the AI doesn't scan an index of pages. It evaluates what it knows about pediatric dentists — from training data, from live web access, from structured data it can read — and offers a direct answer. Sometimes it names specific businesses. Sometimes it describes what to look for and lets you decide.
The first process rewards optimization. The second rewards clarity and trust.
You can rank for a keyword without AI ever understanding what your business actually does. And you can have zero SEO strategy and still be the name AI brings up — because your content is structured, your information is clean, and your expertise is obvious.
This isn't an either/or situation. Some fundamentals serve both systems well:
Quality content that answers real questions. Google rewards this for rankings. AI reads it to understand your expertise. A well-written blog post about what to expect during a specific procedure helps you rank and gives AI something to cite.
Consistent business information. Google penalizes NAP inconsistencies (name, address, phone). AI gets confused by them too. If your phone number is different on Yelp than on your website, both systems lose trust.
Active, recent presence. Google likes fresh content. AI checks for recency signals to determine if a business is still operating and relevant. A website that hasn't been updated in two years raises flags everywhere.
The overlap exists, but the emphasis is different. SEO rewards technical optimization. AI rewards genuine clarity.
Think about how you'd describe a business to a friend who asked for a recommendation. You wouldn't say "they have great backlinks" or "their page loads in 1.2 seconds." You'd say "they're really good at X, they've been around a while, and everyone I know who's used them had a good experience."
AI recommends businesses the same way. It's building a picture of your reputation from every signal it can find — your content, your reviews, your structured data, what other sites say about you, how clearly you communicate what you do.
SEO rankings are positional. You're #1, #3, #7. Someone else moves up, you move down. It's a fight for slots.
AI recommendations are reputational. AI doesn't have ten slots to fill. It has a conversation to contribute to. If you're relevant and trustworthy for a specific question, you get mentioned. If you're not, you don't. Your competitor being recommended doesn't prevent you from being recommended too — for a different question or a different context.
If you've invested in SEO, that foundation still matters. Don't abandon it. But don't assume it's doing double duty for AI.
The work that makes you recommendable by AI is specific: structured data that tells AI exactly what your business is, content organized around the questions real customers ask, consistent information across every platform, and trust signals AI can verify independently.
You can check where you stand right now. Ask ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation in your industry. See what comes up. Look at the businesses that get mentioned and notice what they have in common. That gap between where you are and where they are — that's the work worth doing in spring 2026.
Ai Is How People Find Businesses Now. We Make Sure They Find You.
Modern Humans helps local businesses get discovered by AI assistants like ChatGPT, Google AI, and Perplexity.
Franklin, Tennessee
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