TL;DR: Most business websites describe their services in ways that make perfect sense to humans but read like mush to AI. If AI can't parse exactly what you offer, who it's for, and where you do it, you won't get recommended — no matter how good you are.
A person visiting your website fills in the blanks. They see a photo of a clean, modern office and think "professional." They read "We treat every client like family" and feel warmth. They click around, get the vibe, and decide whether to call.
AI doesn't get vibes.
When an AI assistant tries to understand your services, it's reading your site like a very literal, very smart research assistant. It wants to extract specific facts: What does this business do? What specific services do they offer? Who are these services for? What area do they cover?
If your service pages don't answer those questions in clear, direct language, AI moves on to a business that does. Not out of spite — it just can't work with what you gave it.
One of the most common patterns: businesses that list everything they do on a single page, in a single paragraph, with no clear separation between services.
A med spa might write: "We offer a full range of aesthetic treatments including injectables, skin rejuvenation, body contouring, and wellness services to help you look and feel your best."
That sentence makes sense to a human. But AI can't do much with it. When someone asks an AI assistant "who does body contouring near me?" — that med spa's single vague sentence is competing against a business that has a dedicated page explaining their body contouring services in detail.
AI needs discrete, clearly defined services. When everything bleeds together under an umbrella description, AI can't confidently match you to specific queries.
This one catches a lot of businesses off guard. You spent real money naming your signature service "The Clarity Method" or "The Total Home Reset" or "Project Glow-Up." Your customers love it. Your branding is on point.
AI has no idea what any of that means.
When someone asks an AI assistant for a deep cleaning service, AI doesn't know that "The Total Home Reset" is a deep cleaning service. It's looking for the words "deep cleaning" — the plain-language description of the thing you actually do.
Branded names are fine for marketing. But somewhere on that page, in clear text AI can read, you need to say: "The Total Home Reset is our comprehensive deep cleaning service for homes that need a fresh start."
Give AI the translation. Keep your branding. Just don't make AI guess what it means.
"We believe in transforming spaces into sanctuaries." Beautiful copy. Terrible for AI.
AI is trying to build a factual profile of your business. It needs concrete details: what you do, how you do it, what it includes, what makes your approach specific. Emotional language is important for converting human visitors, but it can't be the only thing on the page.
A good service page has both. Lead with clear, factual information AI can extract. Then layer in the emotional, brand-voice copy that connects with human readers.
Think of it this way: if someone asked you at a dinner party "what exactly does your business do?" — your answer would be plain and specific. That plain, specific answer needs to exist on your service pages too, not just the polished marketing version.
AI can't watch your explainer video. It can't read the text inside your beautifully designed infographic. It can't parse the service menu that's embedded as a PDF or a photograph of a printed brochure.
If your service details live primarily in visual formats, AI is looking at a blank wall. This is one of the most fixable problems — and one of the most overlooked. Every service detail that exists in an image or video should also exist as actual text on the page.
This doesn't mean your site needs to look boring. It means the information AI needs should be in the HTML, in real text, in addition to whatever visual elements you use for human visitors.
There's a quick way to check: ask an AI assistant what services your business offers. If it gets them wrong, lists them vaguely, or can't name them at all — that's your answer.
Then compare what AI says to what's actually on your website. Usually, the gap isn't because AI is dumb. It's because the information isn't structured in a way AI can extract cleanly.
Some specific signs your service pages need work:
Each of these points to the same root issue: AI couldn't parse your services clearly enough to talk about them with confidence.
The fix isn't writing more. It's writing more clearly, and organizing what you have so AI can read it the way it needs to.
One service per page, or at minimum one clearly defined section per service. Plain-language descriptions alongside your branded names. Real text instead of text-as-images. Specific details about what's included, who it's for, and what problem it solves.
None of this requires a redesign. Most of it is editing what already exists — stripping away the ambiguity and giving AI the clean, structured information it's looking for when someone asks about exactly what you do.
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
View full profile