When someone asks ChatGPT for a recommendation in your industry, one of three things happens: you get mentioned, a competitor gets mentioned, or AI scrambles to find anything useful to say.
That third option is more common than you'd think. And it's not necessarily bad news.
AI doesn't refuse to answer questions. It always says something. But when it can't find solid information about local businesses in a category, it falls back on generic advice. "Look for someone with good reviews." "Check their credentials." "Ask friends for referrals."
Translation: AI couldn't find anyone worth recommending, so it punted.
Pay attention to how AI answers questions about your industry in your area. When the response is vague and unhelpful, that's a signal.
It might list broad criteria for choosing a provider. It might suggest checking directories or review sites. It might give you a framework for evaluation without naming anyone specific.
This isn't AI being cautious. It's AI being honest about what it knows. If there were businesses that clearly communicated what they do, demonstrated expertise, and made themselves easy to understand, AI would mention them.
The absence of specific recommendations means nobody in that space has given AI enough to work with.
That's your opening.
AI builds confidence in recommendations the same way you would. Before suggesting a dentist to a friend, you'd want to know some things: Do they actually specialize in what your friend needs? Are they still practicing? Do other people vouch for them?
AI asks the same questions. And for most businesses, the answers aren't clear.
The website hasn't been updated in three years. The service descriptions are vague marketing language that could apply to anyone. There's no structured data telling AI what the business actually does. The same basic information appears across the internet, but nothing substantial.
AI sees this and thinks: I don't have enough confidence to recommend this business for anything specific.
It's not that you've been rejected. You just haven't given AI any reason to say yes.
Some businesses are genuinely invisible to AI. No online presence, no citations anywhere, nothing for AI to find.
But most businesses have a different problem: they exist online, but nothing about their presence is clear enough to quote.
AI can find your website. It can see you have a Google Business Profile. It knows you exist. The problem is that when someone asks "who's a good option for X," AI can't confidently say "this business, because Y."
There's no specific claim to make. No clear expertise to cite. No quotable answer to the question being asked.
Being visible isn't the same as being useful to AI. A website AI can crawl is step one. A website AI can understand and cite is the actual goal.
Think about what would make you confident recommending a business to someone.
You'd want to know exactly what they do. Not "we provide excellent service" — actual specifics about their work. You'd want some evidence they're good at it. Reviews, sure, but also demonstrations of expertise. Content that shows they understand the problems their customers face.
You'd want consistency. The same name, address, and phone number everywhere. Information that matches across platforms. Signs that this is a real, active business, not an abandoned listing.
And you'd want something quotable. A clear statement about who they help and how. An answer to "why this business?" that you could actually repeat.
AI wants the same things. Without them, it has nothing to say.
Look at who AI does recommend in any category. Search for recommendations in your industry and see what comes up.
The businesses AI mentions tend to have a few things in common:
Their websites clearly state what they do and who they help. Not buried in marketing language — stated plainly, early, and repeatedly.
They have structured data (schema markup) that explicitly tells AI their business type, location, services, and other key facts. This isn't visible to humans, but AI reads it like a label.
They answer questions people actually ask. FAQ pages, educational content, blog posts that address real concerns. AI can quote these directly when they're relevant to a query.
Their information is consistent everywhere. Same details on their website, Google Business Profile, directories, and social media.
None of this is complicated. It's just specific. And specificity is what AI needs to feel confident making a recommendation.
You can see exactly what AI knows about you right now.
Ask ChatGPT or Perplexity for a recommendation in your category and location. Not your business name — ask for the service you provide. See if you come up.
If you don't, ask a follow-up: "What about [your business name]?" See what AI says.
The response tells you everything. If AI gives a confident, accurate summary, you're in decent shape. If it hedges, gets details wrong, or says it doesn't have enough information — that's your answer.
AI isn't hiding you on purpose. It's just working with whatever you've given it. And most businesses haven't given it much.
Here's the useful part: when AI can't recommend anyone in a category, the first business to become recommendable tends to own that space.
There's no entrenched competitor to unseat. No established trust relationship to compete against. AI is actively looking for businesses to recommend, and the bar is lower than you'd expect.
You don't need to be perfect. You need to be clear. A well-structured website, accurate business listings, some content AI can quote, and consistent information across platforms.
That's enough to change AI's answer from "here are some general tips" to "you might want to check out [your business]."
The silence isn't a problem. It's a gap waiting to be filled.
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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