When someone asks ChatGPT for a recommendation in your industry, and your competitor's name comes up instead of yours, it stings. The natural assumption is they must be doing something you're not — running ads, gaming some system, pulling strings behind the scenes.
But here's what's actually happening: they earned it.
Not through a bigger marketing budget. Not through some secret AI advertising program (which doesn't exist, by the way). They earned it by making it easy for AI to understand who they are, what they do, and why they're worth mentioning.
That's the part most business owners miss. AI recommendations aren't bought. They're built.
Google sells ads. Facebook sells ads. Even Amazon sells ads. But when someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation, there's no sponsored placement. No auction. No way to pay for position.
AI assistants make recommendations based on what they've learned about businesses through publicly available information. Reviews. Website content. Structured data. Mentions across the web. Consistency of information. Freshness of content.
Your competitor showing up in AI recommendations isn't evidence of a bigger budget. It's evidence of a clearer signal.
They probably have a website that directly answers the questions people ask AI. They likely have schema markup that tells AI exactly what services they offer and where they operate. Their business information is consistent across platforms. Their reviews are recent and numerous.
None of that requires buying anything. It requires building something.
Think about how you'd recommend a restaurant to a friend. You wouldn't recommend somewhere you'd never heard of. You wouldn't recommend somewhere with outdated information or conflicting details. You'd recommend somewhere you felt confident about — somewhere you could explain clearly and trust wouldn't embarrass you.
AI works the same way.
When AI considers mentioning a business, it's essentially asking: Do I understand what this business does? Can I trust that this information is accurate? Would mentioning them actually help the person asking?
If the answer to any of those is unclear, AI moves on to a business where the answers are obvious.
Your competitor earned the recommendation by removing doubt. They made it easy for AI to say yes.
Here's what that typically involves:
Clear, parseable content. Not marketing fluff. Actual information about what they do, who they help, and how they help them. Content structured in a way AI can read, understand, and quote back to someone asking.
Structured data. The technical markup that tells AI explicitly: "We are a [type of business] located at [address] offering [these specific services] during [these hours]." Without this, AI has to guess. With it, AI knows.
Consistent information everywhere. Same name, same address, same phone number, same service descriptions across every platform. When AI sees conflicting information, trust drops. When everything matches, confidence rises.
Third-party validation. Reviews. Mentions on other websites. Citations in directories. AI doesn't just take your word for it. It looks for evidence that others recognize your expertise too.
Recent activity. Fresh content. Updated information. Signs that the business is active and engaged right now, not coasting on a website built five years ago.
None of this is secret. None of it requires special access or relationships. It's just work most businesses haven't done yet.
Here's what makes this particularly frustrating if you're not the one being recommended: AI trust compounds over time.
Once AI starts recommending a business, that business tends to get more engagement. More reviews. More mentions. More reasons for AI to keep recommending them. The loop feeds itself.
Meanwhile, businesses that aren't being recommended remain invisible to an entire category of potential customers. Those customers go elsewhere. They leave reviews for the competitors. The gap widens.
This isn't about "winning" against competitors in some zero-sum game. AI recommendations are contextual — different questions surface different businesses. But if you're not in the conversation at all, you're not competing for any of it.
The businesses building AI visibility now aren't just getting a temporary advantage. They're building a foundation that gets stronger over time. Every month of consistent, trustworthy presence makes the next recommendation more likely.
The encouraging part: nothing your competitor did is unavailable to you.
If they have better schema markup, you can add schema markup. If they have clearer service descriptions, you can rewrite yours. If they have more recent reviews, you can focus on generating reviews. If their website answers questions AI actually gets asked, you can create that content.
The gap isn't ability. It's awareness.
Most businesses don't realize AI recommendations are earned through the same fundamentals that build any kind of trust: clarity, consistency, expertise, and presence. They assume it's technical magic or pay-to-play advertising.
It's not. It's just the digital equivalent of being a well-known, well-regarded business in your community — except the community now includes AI systems that millions of people ask for advice every day.
Before you do anything else, run a simple test. Ask ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation in your industry and area. See what comes up. See what doesn't.
Then look at the businesses that do get mentioned. Visit their websites. Check their Google Business Profiles. Notice how clearly they communicate what they do.
The gap between you and them isn't mysterious. It's usually visible in about five minutes of looking.
What they built, you can build. The only question is whether you start now or wait until the gap is wider.
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