If someone asked ChatGPT or Google’s AI for a service you offer… would your business be mentioned?
For most businesses, the answer is no.
And the worrying part? It’s not because you’re bad at what you do. It’s because the way people find businesses has changed — and most websites haven’t kept up.
In this article, we’ll explain why that’s happening (in plain English) and what you can do about it.
Not that long ago, finding a business was simple.
You’d go to Google, type in what you needed, and get a list of websites. You might click on a few, compare options, and make a decision.
If your website looked professional and you were somewhere on page one, you had a decent chance of being found.
That model worked for years.
Now, people are skipping the list of links.
Instead, they ask AI tools directly:
And instead of ten blue links, they get a single answer or a short list of recommendations.
Here’s the key point:
If your business isn’t part of that answer, it doesn’t exist to that customer.
Many businesses still rely on a website that was built a few years ago and hasn’t changed much since.
That used to be fine. It isn’t anymore.
Here’s why:
If nothing on your website changes, AI assumes nothing new is happening. It prefers businesses that show signs of activity.
If you don’t have articles, updates, or helpful content, there’s very little for AI to learn from.
If your business only exists on your website, your visibility is limited. AI looks across multiple sources — not just one page.
And even if you fix all of that… there’s another problem most people don’t realise.
Your website might look great to a person.
But AI doesn’t “see” your website the same way we do.
It doesn’t care about colours, layout, or design. It reads structure, meaning, and signals — and it does it very quickly.
When AI scans your website, it’s trying to work out:
If that information isn’t clearly labelled, AI has to guess.
And if it has to guess, it often moves on.
This is where things become more technical — but also more important.
To help AI understand your website properly, you need to add extra layers of information that are written for machines, not people.
Two key examples are:
This is a type of code added to your website that clearly labels your content.
For example, it tells AI:
It removes the guesswork.
These are newer ways of helping AI tools understand and prioritise your content.
They act like a guide, pointing AI systems to the most important parts of your website and helping them interpret it correctly.
These are not things your customers will ever see.
They are built specifically for search engines and AI systems.
And this is the key point:
If your website isn’t clearly structured for AI, you’re making it work harder to understand you — and when that happens, it often moves on to a business that’s easier to read.
Most business owners won’t set this up themselves — and that’s completely normal.
In simple terms, AI is looking for businesses that are:
AI doesn’t just want information.
It wants information it can understand instantly.
You don’t need to overhaul everything overnight. But you do need to start moving in the right direction.
Here are some simple steps:
Answer the questions your customers are already asking.
Make sure your business appears on:
Your website, social profiles, and listings should all connect.
This includes:
You don’t need to do this yourself — but it does need to be done properly.
You don’t need to post every day. Just don’t leave your website untouched for years.
Imagine two businesses:
Which one do you think AI is more likely to recommend?
This shift can feel overwhelming — especially if you’ve been doing things the same way for years.
But you don’t need to figure it all out alone.
There are people who specialise in helping businesses become visible in AI search — without the guesswork.
👉 Visit our experts directory at Find An AI Expert to connect with someone who can help you get this right.