TL;DR: AI discovery works differently depending on whether you're a local business or an ecommerce brand. Local businesses compete in a smaller pond where location signals matter most, while ecommerce brands need to win on niche expertise and use-case content. Understanding which playbook applies to you changes everything about your approach.
When someone asks an AI assistant for a recommendation, the type of business completely changes what AI evaluates.
For a local business — say a plumber or a med spa — AI is essentially asking: "Who's trustworthy and available in this specific area?"
For an ecommerce brand — say a skincare line or a pet supply company — AI is asking something else entirely: "Who genuinely knows this product category, and which option fits this person's specific needs?"
Same recommendation engine. Completely different evaluation criteria.
If you're a local business, your competitive pool is inherently limited. There are only so many chiropractors or HVAC companies in any given area. That's actually great news.
AI narrows the field for you. When someone asks for a service provider nearby, AI immediately filters by location. Your competition isn't every business in your industry — it's every business in your industry within a reasonable distance.
The signals AI leans on for local recommendations:
Most local businesses only need to be clearly better-structured than a handful of nearby competitors. In Spring 2026, most still aren't optimized for AI at all. The bar is low. That's the opportunity.
Ecommerce is a different game. You're competing nationally — sometimes globally. AI can't narrow the field by zip code, so it narrows by something else: who seems to genuinely understand this product category?
When someone asks AI "what's the best organic sunscreen for sensitive skin," AI isn't looking for the brand with the most backlinks. It's looking for the brand that has actually explained — clearly and specifically — why their product fits that exact use case.
The signals AI leans on for ecommerce recommendations:
A general "shop our products" page gives AI almost nothing to work with. A page titled "Best Running Shoes for Flat Feet: What to Look For" gives AI a quotable, specific answer it can confidently pass along.
Both local and ecommerce businesses benefit from specificity, but the mechanics differ.
A local dentist who clearly communicates "we specialize in pediatric dentistry for kids with dental anxiety" gives AI a precise context to recommend them. They won't show up for every dental query — but they'll own the ones that matter most to their practice.
An ecommerce brand selling candles has a harder road. "Best candle" is a query with thousands of potential answers. But "best soy candle for migraine sufferers" or "non-toxic candles safe for homes with birds" — those are queries where a focused brand can become the answer AI reaches for.
For local businesses, niche means who you serve and how. For ecommerce, niche means what specific problem your product solves.
Despite the differences, both local and ecommerce businesses share the same foundational needs for AI discovery:
| Element | Local Business | Ecommerce Brand | |---|---|---| | Schema markup | LocalBusiness, Service, FAQPage | Product, FAQPage, BreadcrumbList | | Content AI quotes | Service descriptions, local FAQs | Buying guides, use-case articles | | Trust signals | Local reviews, citations, GBP | Product reviews, expert mentions | | Freshness | Recent posts and updated info | New content, updated product data | | Consistency | Same info across all directories | Same product details across platforms |
Both need structured data. Both need content AI can parse and cite. Both need trust signals from third parties. The specifics change — the principles don't.
The SBA's guide to understanding your market is a solid starting point for figuring out where you actually compete.
Local businesses have a natural advantage: a smaller pond. Fewer competitors means less work to become the obvious recommendation.
Ecommerce brands need to create their own small pond by going narrow. The more specific your positioning and content, the fewer brands AI has to choose from when matching you to a query.
Either way, the question AI is trying to answer is the same: "Can I confidently recommend this business for this specific person's specific need?"
Make the answer obvious — on AI's terms, not yours.
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Modern Humans helps local businesses get discovered by AI assistants like ChatGPT, Google AI, and Perplexity.
Franklin, Tennessee
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