2026-04-13

Millions of people now ask AI for recommendations instead of scrolling Google. If your business is not in those answers, you are invisible to a growing share of your market.

By Tyler Stocks · Stocks Local

When someone asks ChatGPT "Who should I hire to build a Shopify store?" the response is not a list of links. It is one name. Maybe two.

That is how search works now. Not for everyone, not yet. But for a growing share of your potential customers, the first place they look is not Google. It is an AI.

And if your business is not in those answers, you do not exist to those people.

The shift is already happening

ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, Copilot, and Google AI Overviews have made recommendation-style search normal. These tools are not a niche research habit anymore. People use them to compare businesses, products, services, and local options before they ever reach a website.

This is not a prediction about 2030. This is what is happening right now, in 2026.

Why this matters for your business

Traditional Google search gives you ten links on a page. If your business is on that page, you have a chance of getting clicked. Even position 7 or 8 gets some traffic.

AI search gives a compressed answer. If your business is not part of the answer, the user may never learn you exist.

That does not mean SEO is dead. It means your website needs to be clear enough to support both normal rankings and answer-style discovery: strong pages, specific proof, clean structure, and a business entity that makes sense across the web.

Most businesses are invisible to AI

Many businesses are still hard for AI systems to understand.

The reason is straightforward. Most business websites were built as thin brochures. They were not built to explain the business clearly, prove the offer, and expose useful structure to both customers and machines.

AI models decide what to recommend based on different signals than Google uses. They look at:

Whether your business entity is clearly defined across the web. Your name, location, services, and credentials need to appear consistently on your website, Google Business Profile, directories, and review platforms. AI aggregates all of this.

Whether your website has structured data. Schema markup tells AI systems exactly what your business does, where it operates, and what makes it credible. Without it, the AI has to guess. Models that guess tend to skip you.

Whether your content answers questions directly. AI models extract content at the paragraph level. Clear, factual paragraphs of 60 to 100 words that directly answer a query are far more likely to be cited than vague marketing copy.

Whether AI crawlers can actually access your site. Many websites accidentally block GPTBot, ClaudeBot, and PerplexityBot through their robots.txt file. If the AI cannot read your site, it cannot recommend you.

Whether other credible sources mention you. Reviews, directory listings, press mentions, and professional profiles all contribute to how AI models assess your authority.

This is not about replacing Google

Google is not going anywhere. Traditional SEO still matters. 76% of the sources cited in Google's AI Overviews come from pages that already rank in the top 10 organic results.

But relying only on traditional SEO is no longer enough. Only 45% of brands that are visible in traditional local search are also recommended by AI platforms. The overlap is smaller than you would expect.

The businesses that will win over the next two years are the ones investing in both: strong Google rankings and strong AI visibility.

What you can do right now

You do not need to overhaul everything. Start with the basics.

Ask the AI about yourself. Open ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google and ask it to recommend a business in your category and location. See if you appear. If you do not, you know there is work to do.

Check your Google Business Profile. Make sure your name, address, services, hours, and categories are complete and accurate. AI models treat the profile as a primary data source.

Check your robots.txt. Make sure you are not blocking AI crawlers. This is one of the most common and easiest issues to fix.

Look at your website content. Does it clearly state what you do, where you do it, and who you do it for? Vague copy does not get cited. Specific, factual content does.

Get reviews. Recent, specific reviews give both people and machines better evidence. A review that names the job, location, product, or outcome is more useful than a generic "great service".

These are not expensive changes. Most of them cost nothing. But they are the difference between being recommended and being invisible.

The window is open

Right now, most businesses have not heard of AI search optimisation. Most have not checked whether AI recommends them. Most have not done anything about it.

That is the opportunity. The businesses that act now will establish positions in AI results that become harder to displace over time. AI models are trained on historical data. The longer your business has been consistently present, structured, and cited, the stronger your position becomes.

The window will not stay open in the same way. As more businesses catch on, the bar for clear pages, reviews, schema, and proof will rise.

If you want to know where the website stands, request a free written teardown. No sales call required. Just a clear read on trust, clarity, mobile experience, SEO structure, and the first useful fixes.

Questions

Asked and answered.

  • How do I check if AI recommends my business?

    Open ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google and ask it to recommend a business in your category and location. For example, 'Who is the best plumber in Bournemouth?' If your business does not appear, you are currently invisible to AI search.

  • Is AI search replacing Google?

    No. Google is not going anywhere. But AI is changing how people use Google and how recommendations are surfaced. Businesses need to be understandable in both traditional results and AI answers.

  • Does my business need a new website to appear in AI results?

    Not necessarily. Many improvements like adding structured data, fixing robots.txt, and updating your Google Business Profile can be done on any existing website. However, sites built with AI visibility in mind from day one perform significantly better.

  • How long does it take to start appearing in AI search results?

    Some changes like fixing robots.txt and adding schema markup can take effect within weeks. Building broader authority through reviews, citations, and content typically takes two to four months. The sooner you start, the sooner results compound.

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