Right now, someone is asking ChatGPT for exactly what you sell. And AI is recommending someone else — not because they're better, but because it doesn't know you exist.
That's not a dig. It's just how this works. AI can only recommend businesses it can find, understand, and verify. If you haven't given it anything to work with, you're not being rejected. You're just not in the room.
The tricky part? There's no dashboard that says "AI awareness: 0%." No notification. No ranking drop. It's a silent problem. But there are signs — clear ones — if you know where to look.
This is the simplest test. Go to ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google's AI Overview and ask for your service in your area. Ask it a few different ways — broad, specific, conversational.
"Who's a good family dentist near me?" "What's a reliable HVAC company for older homes?" "Where can I buy handmade candles online?"
If your business never shows up across multiple queries, that's a clear signal. AI hasn't built enough understanding of who you are to bring you into the conversation.
And this isn't about one unlucky query. If you try five or six different phrasings and you're absent from all of them, AI genuinely doesn't have enough information about your business to work with.
Most business websites were built to impress humans. Gorgeous photos. Clever taglines. A big hero banner that says something like "Excellence in Every Detail."
AI doesn't care about any of that.
When AI visits your site, it's looking for clear, structured information it can parse and potentially quote. Things like: what exactly you do, who you serve, where you're located, what makes you different, and answers to questions people commonly ask.
If your homepage is mostly images, vague slogans, and a "Contact Us" button — AI lands there and leaves with almost nothing useful. It's not ignoring you on purpose. There's just nothing for it to grab onto.
A good gut check: can you pull a single sentence from your website that directly, clearly answers what your business does and who it helps? If you can't find one, AI can't either.
This one requires a tiny bit of technical curiosity. Right-click on your website, hit "View Page Source," and search for "LocalBusiness" or "JSON-LD" or "schema."
If nothing comes up, your site has no structured data — the code that explicitly tells AI what your business is, where it operates, what services you offer, and how to categorize you.
Without schema markup, AI has to guess all of that by reading your content and making inferences. Sometimes it guesses right. Often it doesn't bother. Structured data removes the guesswork entirely. It's like handing AI a perfectly organized file about your business instead of asking it to piece things together from scattered clues.
Most websites — especially ones built a few years ago — don't have this. It's not a failure on anyone's part. It just wasn't necessary until AI started making recommendations.
AI cross-references. When it's deciding whether to recommend a business, it doesn't just look at your website. It checks whether other trusted sources mention you too.
That means directories, review platforms, local news mentions, industry sites, social media profiles — anywhere your business name and information appear consistently.
If the only place your business exists online is your own website, AI has a single source of truth. One source isn't enough to build confidence. AI wants corroboration. It wants to see your name, address, phone number, and services echoed across multiple platforms — and it wants that information to match.
Businesses that show up in AI recommendations tend to have a consistent presence across many sources. Businesses that don't tend to exist in one or two places, if that.
AI pays attention to freshness. A business with 200 reviews but none from the last year looks different to AI than a business with 50 reviews that are recent and steady.
Recency signals that a business is active, operational, and currently serving customers. A trail of reviews that stops in 2023 raises a quiet question: is this place still open?
You don't need thousands of reviews. You need a consistent stream of recent ones. That tells AI — and the people asking it for recommendations — that real humans are still choosing you, right now, in Spring 2026.
Different phone number on Yelp than on your website. Old address on your Google Business Profile. A business name that's slightly different across three platforms.
Humans can figure out that "Mike's Plumbing LLC" and "Mike's Plumbing" and "Mikes Plumbing Services" are the same company. AI isn't always so generous. Inconsistency creates uncertainty, and AI handles uncertainty by simply moving on to a business where the information is clean.
Every platform where your business appears should say the same thing. Same name, same address, same phone number, same services. When AI can verify your information across multiple sources without hitting contradictions, it trusts you more. Simple as that.
The good news buried in all of this: being invisible to AI isn't a verdict. It's a starting point.
Every one of these signals is fixable. Structured data can be added. Content can be rewritten so AI can actually parse it. Listings can be cleaned up and made consistent. FAQ pages can be built. Reviews can be encouraged.
AI trust builds over time. Each piece you put in place gives AI a little more to work with — and a little more reason to bring your name up next time someone asks.
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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