The business AI recommends when someone asks "who should I call for a roof leak?" isn't always the best roofer in town. It's the roofer who answered that exact question somewhere AI could find it.
That's a subtle but massive distinction.
Nobody outranked you. Nobody outspent you. Somebody just said the thing out loud — clearly, specifically, in a place AI could read it — and you didn't.
When someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity for help choosing a service provider, AI has a problem to solve. It needs to find a business it can confidently mention without looking foolish.
So it scans everything available and asks itself a version of this: "Who can I talk about with enough detail and confidence that my answer actually helps this person?"
If your website says "We offer comprehensive roofing solutions for residential and commercial clients" — AI has almost nothing to work with. That sentence could describe 10,000 roofing companies. There's nothing to quote. Nothing to anchor a recommendation around.
But if another roofer's website has a section that says "If you notice water stains on your ceiling after heavy rain, you likely have a flashing issue around your vents or chimney. Here's what to check before calling anyone" — now AI has something real. It has specific language, useful information, and a clear signal that this business knows what they're talking about.
AI didn't decide that roofer was better. It just had more to say about them.
There's a pattern that shows up across every industry. The businesses AI tends to mention aren't the ones with the biggest ad budgets or the most five-star reviews. They're the ones who took the questions their customers ask every day and wrote the answers down.
A dentist who explains the difference between a crown and a veneer in plain language on their website gives AI something to reference when someone asks that exact question.
An accountant who breaks down the difference between an LLC and an S-Corp for small business owners gives AI a reason to bring them into the conversation.
A landscaper who explains why spring aeration matters for clay-heavy soil gives AI a specific context to cite them in.
None of this is flashy. None of it requires a marketing degree. It's just answering the question — the one your customers are already asking, except now they're asking AI instead of asking you directly.
Think about the last ten phone calls you got from new customers. What did they ask? Not the "I'd like a quote" calls — the real questions. The ones where someone was trying to figure out what they actually needed before choosing who to hire.
"How do I know if my AC needs a repair or a replacement?" "What's the difference between deep cleaning and regular cleaning?" "Do I really need a home inspection if the house looks fine?"
You answer these questions five times a week. You've been answering them for years. You probably answer them so naturally you don't even think of them as expertise.
But AI doesn't know any of that — unless you've written it somewhere AI can find it.
Your competitor who shows up in AI recommendations might not be better at the work. They might just be the one who took 30 minutes to write a clear answer to a question both of you get asked constantly.
A lot of businesses hear "you need more content" and start churning out blog posts about industry news nobody reads or generic tips they copied from somewhere else.
That doesn't help. AI doesn't reward volume. It rewards usefulness.
One genuinely helpful answer to a question real people ask is worth more than twenty blog posts about "Top 5 Trends in [Your Industry] This Spring."
The most effective content for AI discovery reads like something you'd actually say to a customer sitting across from you. Direct. Specific. No jargon. No filler.
If someone asked you face-to-face "how do I know if I need your service?" — whatever you'd say in that moment is probably the best content you could put on your website.
Grab a notebook or open a note on your phone. Over the next week, write down every question a customer or prospect asks you. Don't filter. Don't edit. Just capture them.
After a week, you'll have a list of 10-15 real questions. Pick the five you hear most often. Write a clear, honest answer to each one — two to four sentences is plenty for most of them.
Put those answers on your website. An FAQ page works. A dedicated section on a service page works. Even a blog post per question works, as long as the answer is front and center and not buried under three paragraphs of introduction.
Add FAQPage schema markup so AI knows these are question-and-answer pairs (your web developer can handle this in minutes, or it's something we set up for clients automatically).
Then go ask ChatGPT a version of one of those questions and see what comes back. You might be surprised how quickly you enter the conversation once you've given AI something concrete to work with.
The business AI recommends isn't the one that spent the most. It's the one that said the right thing in a place AI could hear it. And you already know exactly what to say.
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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