TL;DR: Google asks "which websites match these words?" AI asks "who would I actually recommend for this?" That single difference changes what your business needs to communicate online — from keyword-matching to being genuinely worth suggesting.
For twenty years, search worked like a librarian. You typed words in, Google found pages that contained those words, and it ranked them by a mix of relevance and authority signals. The underlying question Google asked was mechanical: "Which pages best match this query?"
AI assistants ask a fundamentally different question: "If I were a knowledgeable friend, who would I recommend for this?"
That's not a subtle distinction. It changes everything about what your online presence needs to do.
Google never judged whether your business was actually good. It judged whether your website was well-optimized. A mediocre business with great SEO could outrank an excellent business with a clunky website. The system rewarded marketing skill, not business quality.
AI flips that. It's trying to give advice, not return results.
When AI evaluates your business, it's doing something closer to what a thoughtful person does before giving a recommendation. It's not scanning for keywords. It's assembling a picture.
A person recommending a plumber thinks about:
AI processes those same concerns, just through data. It asks whether it can understand what you do clearly enough to describe you. It checks whether other sources corroborate that you're trustworthy. It considers whether you're relevant to the specific question being asked — not just the general category.
This is why a business can have perfect SEO, rank on the first page of Google, and still never get mentioned when someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation. Being matchable and being recommendable aren't the same thing.
There's something AI does that Google never had to worry about: AI puts its reputation on the line with every answer.
Google shows you ten links and says "here, pick one." If link #3 turns out to be terrible, that's not really Google's fault. You clicked it.
AI doesn't have that buffer. When someone asks "who's a good orthodontist near me?" and AI names a specific practice, that's a direct recommendation. AI systems are built to avoid giving bad advice — which means they have a confidence threshold your business needs to clear before they'll mention you.
That threshold comes down to: "Do I know enough about this business to feel confident saying its name out loud?"
If your online presence gives AI clear, structured, verifiable information — what you do, who you serve, what others say about you — AI can cross that threshold. If your presence is vague, inconsistent, or hard to parse, AI simply won't risk it. It'll recommend someone else whose information gave it more to work with.
Google could work with vague content. If your homepage said "We provide quality solutions for all your needs" but had the right keywords buried in meta tags, you could still rank.
AI can't recommend vague. It needs to be able to say something specific about you.
Compare these two business descriptions:
Vague: "We offer comprehensive dental services for the whole family in a comfortable, modern environment."
Specific: "We specialize in cosmetic dentistry and dental implants, with same-day crowns and evening appointments available for patients who can't take time off work."
The second one gives AI material. It can confidently say "this practice does same-day crowns and has evening hours" in response to a relevant question. The first one gives AI nothing to grab onto.
AI recommends businesses it can describe. If it can't quote you, paraphrase you, or make a specific claim about you — it moves on.
Knowing that AI asks "would I recommend this?" rather than "does this match?" gives you a clear framework for what to focus on.
Make your expertise unmistakable. Don't just list services — explain who they're for and why someone would choose you specifically. Give AI something to work with beyond a category name.
Provide verifiable facts, not just marketing language. Hours, service areas, specializations, credentials, pricing ranges when appropriate. AI values information it can cross-reference and confirm.
Keep your information consistent everywhere. AI checks multiple sources. If your website says one thing and your listings say another, that's a trust problem. AI won't recommend a business it can't verify.
Create content that answers questions people ask AI. When someone asks "what should I look for in a [your service]?" — your content should be the answer. The SBA's guide to marketing your business emphasizes clarity and specificity for the same reasons AI does.
The question AI asks — "would I recommend this?" — rewards businesses that are genuinely good at what they do. In 2026, as AI handles more and more of the discovery process, substance matters more than marketing polish.
If you're great at your job but never had the budget or patience to master SEO, AI gives you a real shot. Not because AI is easier to game — it's harder. Because AI is looking for the thing you already have: real expertise worth recommending.
You just have to communicate it in a way AI can understand.
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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