Here's something worth sitting with: small businesses make up 43.5% of the US economy. They employ nearly half the private sector workforce. They are, in every measurable sense, the backbone of how local economies work.
And almost none of them show up when someone asks an AI to recommend one.
According to a 2026 analysis of over 350,000 business locations, ChatGPT recommends just 1.2% of local businesses. That means 98.8% are completely invisible — not because their business isn't good enough, but because AI search tools can't find enough reliable information about them to make a recommendation.
That's the problem. Here's the opportunity: most of your competitors haven't fixed this either.
How AI search actually works
When someone opens ChatGPT and types "find me a bookkeeper in [suburb]" or asks Gemini "who's a good skin clinic near me," those tools don't search Google. They pull from a combination of sources: their training data, real-time web browsing (in some cases), and structured information from across the web.
The businesses that get recommended share the same characteristics: a well-maintained Google Business Profile, a website that clearly describes what they do and who they serve, consistent information across multiple platforms, and reviews on open platforms that AI tools can read.
"AI tools give one answer, not ten options. If your business isn't that answer, you don't exist in that customer's search."
The shift matters because of what happens after the search. A traditional Google search shows a list of results — your customer might scroll, compare, and find you on page two. An AI search gives one recommendation. Maybe two. That's it. The businesses not mentioned don't get a second chance.
Why each platform works differently
The good news: the fix is the same fix
This could feel overwhelming — four different platforms, four different systems. But here's what makes it manageable: the underlying signals that drive AI recommendations are largely the same ones that have always driven good local SEO.
A well-maintained Google Business Profile helps Gemini. Clear website content describing what you do helps Perplexity. Reviews on open platforms help ChatGPT. Consistent information across the web helps all of them.
You don't need a separate strategy for each platform. You need one solid foundation.