TL;DR: Many business websites describe what they do in language so vague that AI assistants can't figure out what they actually sell. If AI can't identify your specific products or services, it will never recommend you — no matter how good your site looks or how high you rank on Google.
Most businesses think they're being clear on their website. They're not.
Read your homepage right now. Does it say something like "We provide innovative solutions for modern families" or "Your partner in wellness" or "Elevating your experience since 2004"?
That language might sound polished. A human visitor can usually click around, look at photos, and piece together what you do. But when ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI Overview scans your site to answer someone's question, it doesn't browse. It reads. And if what it reads doesn't clearly state what you sell, it moves on to a business that does.
This isn't a design problem or a traffic problem. It's a clarity problem. And it's one of the most common reasons businesses never show up in AI recommendations.
You might not realize your site is vague because you already know what you sell. You have context. AI doesn't.
A spa that says "Rejuvenate your mind, body, and spirit" hasn't told AI whether they offer massages, facials, IV therapy, float tanks, or all of the above. A consulting firm that says "We help businesses grow" could be a marketing agency, an accounting firm, or a business coach. AI can't guess. It won't guess.
When AI encounters ambiguity, it doesn't flag your business as bad. It just doesn't have enough information to mention you confidently. There's a meaningful difference between AI deciding you're not worth recommending and AI simply not knowing what to say about you.
Most businesses fall into the second category. AI isn't skipping you — it just can't figure out what you do well enough to bring you into a conversation.
Specificity is what gives AI something to work with. When someone asks "Where can I get a deep tissue massage near me?" or "Who sells organic dog treats online?", AI is matching that question against what it knows about businesses.
If your website clearly states "We offer deep tissue massage, Swedish massage, and sports recovery massage," AI can connect you to that query. If your website says "We help you feel your best," it can't.
Think of it this way: AI needs nouns. Products. Services. Categories. Descriptions with real words that match real questions people ask.
This applies whether you're a local service provider or an eCommerce brand. A skincare company that describes its products as "clean beauty essentials" without listing that they sell hyaluronic acid serums, vitamin C moisturizers, and SPF lip balm is leaving AI with nothing concrete to recommend.
Homepages get the most attention, but service pages and product pages are often just as vague.
A plumber whose service page says "We handle all your plumbing needs" hasn't told AI whether they do water heater installation, slab leak detection, sewer line replacement, or emergency drain clearing. Each of those is a different query someone might ask AI about. Each one is a chance to be recommended — but only if AI can find that specific information on your site.
The same goes for product descriptions. "A versatile everyday bag" doesn't tell AI the material, the dimensions, whether it has a laptop sleeve, or whether it's a crossbody, tote, or backpack. When someone asks Perplexity for "a leather crossbody bag with a laptop compartment," your product can't surface if those words aren't anywhere on your page.
Specificity isn't just good for AI. It's good for humans too. But AI makes it non-negotiable.
Pull up your website. Read only the text — ignore images, videos, and design. Then ask yourself: if someone read just the words, would they know exactly what you sell, who it's for, and where you operate?
Better yet, copy your homepage text into ChatGPT and ask: "Based on this text, what does this business sell?" If the answer is wrong or vague, that's what every AI assistant sees when it evaluates your site.
This takes sixty seconds, and it's one of the most revealing exercises a business owner can do in 2026. The gap between what you think your site communicates and what AI actually understands is often enormous.
You don't need a new website. You need clearer sentences.
Start with your homepage. Add one paragraph that plainly states what you sell and who you sell it to. Not a tagline. Not a mission statement. A straightforward description a stranger could read and immediately understand.
Then look at each service or product page. Does it name the specific service or product in the first two sentences? Does it describe what's included? Does it mention who it's for?
Layer in structured data through schema markup — specifically Service, Product, or LocalBusiness schemas that explicitly tell AI your offerings, service area, and business type. Schema is like handing AI a cheat sheet instead of making it read between the lines.
This isn't about writing more. A single clear sentence does more for AI visibility than ten pages of beautifully written ambiguity.
The bar for AI recommendations isn't perfection. It's not having the most reviews or the best content strategy. The very first bar is: can AI tell what you sell?
Right now, a surprising number of businesses can't clear it. Which means the opportunity for businesses willing to just be specific and direct is wide open. No tricks. No complex strategy. Just say what you do in words AI can actually read, parse, and repeat back to someone who's asking.
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