TL;DR: AI doesn't rank businesses — it decides, in the moment, whether you're worth bringing up. That decision happens fast, and it's based on whether AI can understand you, trust you, and say something useful about you to the person asking.
Google gives you a position. AI makes a decision.
Every time someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation, AI isn't scrolling through a list and picking the top three. It's doing something closer to what a knowledgeable friend does when you ask them for advice — running through everything it knows and deciding who it feels confident enough to actually name.
That moment of decision is where your business either shows up or doesn't. And it happens differently every single time, based on what the person is asking, how they're asking it, and what AI has to work with about you.
AI essentially asks itself three questions before mentioning any business. If you fail any of them, you don't make the cut.
Can I clearly explain what this business does? Not vaguely. Specifically. AI needs to be able to say something like "they specialize in commercial HVAC for restaurants" or "they sell handmade ceramic dinnerware that ships within two days." If your online presence is a blur of generic marketing language, AI doesn't have a concrete thing to say about you — so it says nothing.
Do I have reasons to trust them? AI looks for evidence. Recent reviews from real customers. Mentions on other websites. Consistent information across platforms. Content that demonstrates actual knowledge. These aren't boxes AI checks off a list — they're signals that, taken together, give AI confidence that recommending you won't steer someone wrong.
Will mentioning them actually help the person asking? This is the one most businesses don't think about. AI isn't trying to give you exposure. It's trying to help the person on the other end of the conversation. If mentioning you doesn't serve that person's specific question, you're not getting mentioned — no matter how good your business is.
There's a frustrating gap between being excellent at what you do and being the kind of business AI can confidently talk about. They're two different things.
A fantastic bakery with a website that's mostly photos and no text descriptions? AI can't parse images the way humans can. It doesn't know you make the best sourdough in the county.
A top-rated accountant whose website says "We provide comprehensive financial solutions for individuals and businesses"? AI can't do anything with that. It's too vague to match against a specific question like "Who can help me with small business tax planning?"
The businesses that get mentioned tend to have something in common: specificity. They've clearly stated what they do, who they do it for, and why they're good at it — in language AI can actually pull from and quote.
There's a spectrum here, and it matters.
Sometimes AI will list your business alongside several others — a mention. Other times, AI will describe what you do, explain why you might be a good fit, and point the person toward you with real enthusiasm — a recommendation.
The difference comes down to how much AI has to work with. When your online presence gives AI rich, structured, trustworthy information, AI can do more than just name-drop you. It can advocate for you.
Think of it this way: if someone asked a friend about you, would that friend be able to give a compelling two-sentence pitch? Or would they just say "I think I've heard of them"? AI faces the same limitation. It can only say what it has the information to say.
One of the most freeing things about AI discovery is that it's not zero-sum. AI doesn't have ten blue links to fill. It's having a conversation, and different questions surface different businesses.
Someone asking for a "quick and affordable" option might get a different answer than someone asking for "the most experienced" provider. Both can be you — if you've given AI clear information about your pricing, your experience, and who you serve best.
Every piece of clear, structured content on your site builds your case. Every consistent listing across the web adds evidence. Every recent review adds freshness. AI is assembling a picture of your business from dozens of sources, and the more complete that picture is, the more confidently it speaks about you.
Pull up your website and read your homepage like you've never heard of your business. Can you answer these three questions from what's written there?
If those answers aren't obvious in plain text — not in images, not implied, not buried in clever copy — then AI is probably struggling with the same questions.
The SBA's guidance on writing effective business descriptions is a solid starting point for getting specific about what you offer. That clarity doesn't just help AI. It helps every potential customer who lands on your site.
AI's decision to mention you isn't mysterious. It's practical. Give it something clear to say, reasons to trust you, and a match to the question being asked. That's the whole formula.
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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