A few weeks ago, I did something that many business owners haven't done yet.
I opened ChatGPT and
asked a simple question about my industry.
Not a complicated
question.
Not a technical question.
Just the kind of question
a potential customer might ask.
"Who would you
recommend?"
I expected to see a
variety of businesses.
Maybe some companies I
knew.
Maybe some competitors.
Maybe even businesses
that had built strong local reputations.
Instead, I kept seeing
the same names appear over and over again.
And one thing quickly
became clear:
Some businesses were
being recommended.
Others barely existed.
That was an uncomfortable
realization.
Not because those
competitors were necessarily better.
Not because they had
lower prices.
Not because they had more
experience.
But because they were
visible.
And many other businesses
weren't.
The more I thought about
it, the more I realized that thousands of business owners are about to
experience the exact same moment.
And many won't like what
they discover.
The Shift Most Businesses Haven't Noticed Yet
For years, businesses
focused almost entirely on Google.
They worried about
rankings.
Website traffic.
Reviews.
Search engine
optimization.
And rightly so.
Google has been the
primary gateway between businesses and customers for decades.
But something is
changing.
People are no longer just
searching.
They're asking.
They're asking ChatGPT.
They're asking Gemini.
They're asking Perplexity.
They're asking voice
assistants.
They're asking AI-powered
search tools.
Instead of scrolling
through ten websites, many people now ask one question and trust the answer
they receive.
That changes the entire
customer journey.
Because if your business
isn't part of the information these systems trust, you're invisible before the
customer even begins comparing options.
Imagine This Scenario
Imagine you've spent the
last ten years building an incredible business.
You take care of
customers.
You deliver great
results.
People leave happy.
Your reputation in the
real world is excellent.
Then one day, a potential
customer opens an AI search tool and asks:
"Who's the best
contractor near me?"
Or:
"Can you recommend a
trusted cosmetic clinic?"
Or:
"What's the best
restaurant in this area?"
Your business never
appears.
Not because you're bad.
Not because customers
dislike you.
Simply because AI doesn't
have enough evidence that you exist.
That possibility should
concern every business owner.
The Business Isn't Always the Problem
One of the biggest
misconceptions about AI recommendations is that businesses assume the
recommendations reflect quality.
Sometimes they do.
Sometimes they don't.
I've seen fantastic
restaurants that barely appear online.
I've seen highly skilled
contractors with almost no digital presence.
I've seen clinics with
incredible patient outcomes that are practically invisible outside their own
websites.
The issue often isn't the
business itself.
The issue is visibility.
AI can only work with the
information it can find.
And what it finds isn't
always what business owners think it finds.
AI Sees More Than Your Website
This is where things become
interesting.
Most business owners
believe their website tells their story.
But AI doesn't look at
your business the way you do.
It sees a much larger
picture.
It sees your website.
Your Google Business
Profile.
Your online reviews.
Industry directories.
Local citations.
Articles mentioning your
company.
Customer discussions.
Social media activity.
Community involvement.
Reputation signals.
Third-party websites.
Authority signals.
Consistency across
platforms.
Every one of these pieces
contributes to how visible your business becomes.
This creates a surprising
reality.
A business can be
exceptional in real life and almost invisible online.
Meanwhile, another
business can become the obvious recommendation simply because there is more
evidence of its existence.
Why Some Competitors Appear Everywhere
Have you ever noticed
certain businesses seem impossible to avoid?
They appear in Google.
Google Maps.
Local directories.
Industry websites.
News articles.
Blog posts.
Review platforms.
Community discussions.
And increasingly,
AI-generated recommendations.
Most people assume that's
luck.
It usually isn't.
Those businesses have
spent years creating digital trust signals.
Every review.
Every citation.
Every mention.
Every customer story.
Every piece of content.
Every local listing.
Every profile update.
Each one becomes another
signal that reinforces their credibility.
Over time, those signals
compound.
Eventually, they become
the easiest answer for AI systems to find.
Not necessarily the best
answer.
The easiest answer.
The Restaurant Down the Street Problem
Imagine two restaurants.
Both serve great food.
Both have loyal
customers.
Both provide excellent
service.
Both have similar
pricing.
Restaurant A appears on
local food blogs, review platforms, Google Business listings, community
websites, and local directories.
Restaurant B has a basic
website and occasionally posts on social media.
Which restaurant is more
likely to appear in AI search results?
The answer is obvious.
The exact same pattern
exists for clinics.
Contractors.
Law firms.
Retail stores.
Home service companies.
Professional services.
The businesses receiving
recommendations are often the businesses leaving the strongest digital trail
behind them.
The Part That Surprised Me Most
The biggest surprise
wasn't that AI was recommending competitors.
The biggest surprise was
how few business owners even know it's happening.
Most never test it.
They never ask:
"What businesses
does ChatGPT recommend in my industry?"
"What does Gemini
know about my company?"
"What businesses
appear in Perplexity AI?"
"What information
about us exists online?"
"What would a
potential customer discover before contacting us?"
When business owners
finally ask those questions, the answers can be eye-opening.
Sometimes competitors
appear repeatedly.
Sometimes outdated
information dominates.
Sometimes their business
barely appears at all.
And suddenly years of
marketing frustration start making sense.
How to Check If AI Knows Your Business Exists
If you're curious about
your own visibility, try this exercise.
Open ChatGPT and ask:
"Who are the best
companies in my industry near me?"
Then try the same search
in Gemini.
Then try Perplexity.
Look carefully at the
businesses being recommended.
Notice who appears
consistently.
Notice who doesn't.
Then ask:
"What do you know
about my company?"
You may be surprised by
how much information exists.
Or how little.
The goal isn't to obsess
over AI.
The goal is to understand
how visible your business has become in a world increasingly influenced by
AI-powered recommendations.
This Isn't Really About ChatGPT
And that's probably the
most important takeaway.
The problem isn't
ChatGPT.
The problem isn't Gemini.
The problem isn't
Perplexity.
Those tools are simply
exposing something that may have existed for years.
Visibility gaps.
Trust gaps.
Authority gaps.
Information gaps.
AI isn't necessarily
creating a new problem.
In many cases, it's
shining a spotlight on an old one.
The Businesses That Will Win Next
The businesses that
benefit most from AI search won't necessarily be the largest.
They won't necessarily
have the biggest advertising budgets.
They won't necessarily
have the fanciest websites.
The winners will be the
businesses that consistently create evidence.
Evidence that they're
active.
Evidence that they're
trusted.
Evidence that they're
relevant.
Evidence that they're
worth recommending.
Because ten years ago
businesses fought for a position on Google's first page.
Today they're fighting
for a position inside the answer itself.
The companies that
understand that shift early will have a significant advantage.
The ones that ignore it
may not realize what they're losing until their competitors become the default
recommendation.
And by then, catching up
becomes much harder.
Because whether the
question comes from Google, ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, a voice assistant, or
whatever comes next, one thing remains true:
People can only choose
you if they can find you.
And increasingly, they're
letting AI decide where they look first.
“Bio: Maede is a
content curator at Unlimited
Exposure, a company dedicated to providing a wide range of digital
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