TL;DR: The comparison between AI discovery and early Google adoption is useful — but only if you understand where the analogy holds and where it breaks down. AI discovery is real, the opportunity is real, but the businesses that win won't be the ones who treat this like SEO 2.0.
Somewhere around 2001, a small business owner could have built a basic website, shown up on Google, and captured customers for years before competitors caught on. That window existed. It was real. And the businesses that moved early built advantages that lasted decades.
AI discovery gets compared to that moment constantly. Including by us.
But here's what's worth examining: is this actually the same kind of moment? Or are we pattern-matching onto something that feels familiar because we want the comparison to be true?
The honest answer is somewhere in between. And understanding the difference matters more than picking a side.
Early Google rewarded businesses that simply showed up when others didn't. The bar was low. A basic website with accurate information beat having no website at all. Most businesses didn't take it seriously because they couldn't see how searching on a computer would replace the Yellow Pages.
AI discovery is in a similar place right now. Most businesses haven't done anything to become readable, quotable, or trustworthy to AI systems. The bar to stand out is genuinely low — not because the technology is simple, but because almost nobody is paying attention yet.
That part of the analogy is accurate. When you ask ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation in most industries, the same few names come up. Not because those businesses are necessarily the best — but because they're the easiest for AI to understand and talk about.
The window of low competition is real. You can verify it yourself in about 30 seconds.
Early Google was positional. You ranked #1, #2, or #3. Someone clicked your link or they didn't. The game was clear: get higher, get more clicks.
AI doesn't work that way. There's no #1 position. There's no fixed list. Every query is a fresh conversation, and AI tailors its recommendations based on what the person actually asked.
Someone asking "good Italian restaurant for a date night" gets a different answer than "family-friendly Italian place with a kids menu" — even in the same city. AI isn't ranking restaurants. It's having a conversation and pulling in whoever seems most relevant to that specific moment.
This means the "land grab" metaphor has limits. You're not claiming a plot of digital real estate. You're building a relationship with a system that decides, in real time, whether you're worth mentioning.
That's a fundamentally different game than early Google.
With Google, once you ranked, you could coast for a while. Algorithms updated, sure. But a well-built site with good backlinks could hold position for months or years without much effort.
AI trust doesn't work on autopilot the same way. AI systems pull from live data, recent content, and fresh signals. They check whether your information is current, whether people are still reviewing you, whether your content is still relevant.
Building AI visibility isn't a one-time project. It's closer to maintaining a reputation than holding a ranking. You don't "set it and forget it." You stay present, stay accurate, and keep giving AI reasons to bring you up.
That's not a flaw in the analogy — it's actually better news for businesses that are genuinely good at what they do. A competitor can't just outspend you once and lock you out. They have to keep earning it, same as you.
Yes. But for the right reasons.
Not because "the window is closing" (it's actually still wide open in spring 2026 — most businesses still haven't touched this). Not because your competitors are beating you (some are, some aren't, and it doesn't matter either way).
It's worth acting on because AI assistants are becoming a normal part of how people find businesses. The Small Business Administration encourages businesses to stay current with technology shifts, and this one is moving fast.
When someone asks Perplexity for help choosing a service provider, that's a real potential customer having a real conversation. If AI doesn't have enough to say about you — clear facts, structured data, trust signals, recent activity — it simply talks about someone else. Not maliciously. Just practically.
The businesses getting this right aren't the ones treating AI like a new SEO channel to game. They're the ones making it genuinely easy for AI to understand what they do, who they help, and why they're worth mentioning.
That means clear, structured content. Accurate information everywhere you exist online. Recent reviews. Answers to the questions people actually ask.
None of that is a trick. None of it expires when an algorithm changes. It's just good business communication — the kind that happens to be exactly what AI needs to feel confident mentioning you.
The Google Moment comparison is useful as motivation. Just don't let it fool you into thinking the playbook is the same. AI isn't a search engine you optimize for. It's more like a very well-read person deciding who to recommend — and it refreshes that decision every single time someone asks.
Build something worth recommending. That's the part of the analogy that actually holds.
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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