Open ChatGPT right now. Ask it "best dentist in [your city]" or "where should I get my car fixed in [your city]."
If you see a competitor's name and not yours, they didn't get lucky. They did something specific that made AI think they were worth recommending.
Here's what actually happened: AI looked for proof they exist, found it, and decided they were trustworthy enough to recommend by name. When AI looked for you, it found nothing—or worse, it found conflicting information that made it skip you entirely.
The gap between "shows up in AI" and "doesn't show up in AI" isn't magic. It's three specific things your competitor has that you don't. Yet.
AI assistants don't browse your Instagram. They don't watch your Facebook videos. They can't see your beautiful storefront or shake your hand at a networking event.
They read text. And they check if other sources confirm what you're saying about yourself.
Your competitor passes three tests that you're probably failing:
AI needs written content that explains who you are, what you do, and who you help. Not a homepage with "Welcome to ABC Services—Your Trusted Partner Since 2005." That tells AI nothing useful.
Your competitor has blog posts that answer real questions people ask AI. When someone asks ChatGPT "how often should I get my HVAC serviced," your competitor's article explaining seasonal maintenance schedules shows up in AI's training data or search results.
You have a website with service pages that say "We offer HVAC maintenance" and nothing else. AI can't cite that. It can't reference that. It's functionally invisible.
AI doesn't just trust what you say about yourself. It looks for third-party validation. When the local Chamber of Commerce website mentions your competitor, when industry directories list them, when local news sites reference them—AI sees proof.
Your competitor shows up on 15-20 trusted sites beyond their own website. Not spam directories from 2008. Real sites AI recognizes as legitimate sources.
You show up on your own website and maybe one outdated Yelp page. AI sees no external validation that you're a real, active business worth recommending.
For local businesses, AI checks Google Business Profile. Not just "do you have one" but "is it actually maintained."
Your competitor has recent reviews from the past 3 months. They post updates. Their business information matches everywhere it appears online. Their hours are current. Their phone number works.
Your GBP hasn't been touched since 2022. Your last review is from 2023. The address on your website doesn't match the address on your GBP. AI sees inconsistency and moves on to someone it can verify.
The good news: This isn't complicated. It's just specific. Here's exactly what your competitor did, and what you need to do to catch up—then pass them.
Start publishing blog posts that answer questions your customers actually ask. Not promotional content about how great you are. Educational content that helps people.
If you're a plumber, write about "what to do when your water heater starts making noise" or "how to tell if that pipe needs replacing or just repair." When someone asks ChatGPT these questions, you want your content in the mix.
Write like you're explaining it to a customer who called your business. Simple language. Real scenarios. Actual advice.
Aim for one solid post per week. 800-1200 words. Answer one specific question per post. Do this for 12 weeks and you'll have a library of content AI can actually reference.
AI weighs mentions from established, trusted websites more heavily than your own claims. You need your business name, service, and location appearing on third-party sites.
Start here:
The goal isn't thousands of mentions. It's 15-20 quality mentions from sites AI recognizes as legitimate. When AI sees your business referenced across multiple trusted sources, it treats you as verified.
Old information makes AI nervous. If your most recent review is from 2022, AI assumes you might be closed or irrelevant.
Here's how to show AI you're currently operating and trustworthy:
AI reads differently than humans. It looks for structured data—specific formatting that clearly identifies what it's reading.
Your competitor probably has schema markup on their website. That's code that tells AI "this is a business, here's the name, here's the address, here's what they do, here are their hours."
You don't need to become a developer. Most website platforms (WordPress, Squarespace, Wix) have plugins or built-in tools that add this automatically. Enable local business schema if you're location-based. Add FAQ schema to pages where you answer common questions.
This is invisible to human visitors but critical for AI reading your site.
Your competitor didn't do this overnight. But they also didn't wait years.
Here's the realistic timeline:
Week 1-2: Audit your current presence. Check what AI currently says about you. Fix obvious problems (update GBP, correct inconsistent NAP information, enable schema).
Week 3-8: Create 6-8 solid blog posts answering real customer questions. Get listed on 10-15 trusted third-party sites. Request reviews from recent satisfied customers.
Week 9-12: Continue publishing weekly content. Monitor what AI says when asked about businesses in your category and city. You should start seeing improvements in responses.
Month 4+: Maintain momentum. Keep publishing. Keep getting reviews. Keep showing AI you're active and trustworthy.
Most businesses see their first AI mention within 60-90 days if they do this consistently. Your competitor probably started 3-6 months before you noticed them showing up everywhere.
Right now, most businesses in your market aren't doing this. Your competitor figured it out early—or got help from someone who knew what AI looks for.
That's their current advantage. They're getting recommended while everyone else is invisible.
But this window won't last forever. Six months from now, half your competitors will figure this out. A year from now, it'll be table stakes—just like having a website or social media presence.
The businesses moving now are establishing themselves as the names AI defaults to. When ChatGPT has to pick three dentists to recommend in your city, it's going to favor the ones it's been seeing mentioned consistently for months.
Your competitor got a head start. That doesn't mean you can't catch up. It means you need to start this week, not next quarter.
Test where you currently stand. Open ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google and ask for recommendations in your category and location. See if you appear. See if your competitor appears.
If they show up and you don't, you now know exactly what they did differently. They gave AI readable content, third-party validation, and current trust signals.
You can do the same three things starting today. Write your first helpful blog post this week. Update your Google Business Profile. Get listed on your local Chamber of Commerce site.
Or keep doing what you're doing and watch more competitors figure this out before you do.
The gap between "visible to AI" and "invisible to AI" is closeable. But only if you actually close it.
Most businesses see their first AI mention within 60-90 days if they consistently implement the recommended strategies. Your competitor likely started 3-6 months before you noticed them appearing in AI responses, so starting now gives you a realistic timeline to catch up.
You need to pass three tests: create readable educational content that answers real customer questions, get mentioned on 15-20 trusted third-party sites AI recognizes, and prove you're currently active with recent reviews and updated information. All three work together—doing just one won't be enough.
No, most website platforms like WordPress, Squarespace, and Wix have plugins or built-in tools that add schema markup automatically. You just need to enable local business schema and FAQ schema where appropriate—no coding knowledge required.
AI assistants primarily read text-based content from websites and trusted online sources, not social media posts or visual content. They need written articles, directory listings, and structured website information they can reference and verify across multiple sources.
Start with one solid 800-1200 word post per week answering a specific customer question. After 12 weeks, you'll have a library of content AI can reference, which is typically enough to start seeing improvements in AI recommendations.
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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