What the New AI Visibility Report Actually Means for Small Businesses

June 30, 20267 min read

Does AI really decide which businesses customers consider?

Yes. AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Google's AI answers now sit between your business and your potential customers, describing, comparing, and recommending companies before anyone ever visits a website or picks up the phone. A recent analysis of 126 million real AI prompts across 22 industries confirmed this is already happening, not someday, now. If AI cannot find clear, consistent information about your business, it cannot recommend you.

A new AI visibility report has been making the rounds, and a lot of it was written for big marketing teams. So I want to translate what actually matters if you are running a service business without a department behind you. Keep reading.


You Are Not Imagining It

You have probably felt something shifting. Maybe a new client told you they "asked ChatGPT" for a recommendation. Maybe your phone got a little quieter, and you could not figure out why. Maybe you keep hearing about AI search, and you are not sure if it is hype or something you actually need to worry about.

Here is the honest answer. It is real, and it is already in motion.

The report everyone is passing around, Semrush's AI Visibility Index, analyzed 126 million real prompts across 22 industries. Strip away the enterprise language, and the takeaway is simple. When someone is trying to decide who to hire, they are increasingly asking an AI tool first. And that tool is describing and comparing businesses before that person ever reaches out to anyone.

The part nobody says out loud is that this is not a big-business problem. It is a small-business opportunity. You can move faster than most large companies ever will.


What Is Really Happening When Someone Searches Now

Let me make this concrete, because the abstract version makes people panic.

Before AI, when someone looked up "closet designer near me," they got a list of links. Your job was to be on that list, ideally near the top. That is what SEO has always been about. That part has not gone away. People are not going to wake up tomorrow and stop using Google.

What changed is that AI tools are now layered on top of search. Instead of a list of links, people often get a generated answer with a few names in it. That is answer engine optimization, or AEO. And here is the line I keep coming back to with clients: AI can only recommend what it can find and understand about your business.

So the real question is not whether AI is taking over. It is whether AI has enough clear, accurate information about you to provide the answer. Right now, for a lot of businesses, that information is not there.

Here is what to do right now. Open ChatGPT or Google's AI answer and ask it the exact question one of your customers would ask. Something like "who is the best [what you do] in [your city]." See if you come up. See who does. That five-minute check tells you more than any report.

Why Some Businesses Show Up, and Others Disappear

The report sorted industries into winners and losers, and the pattern underneath it is the useful part.

The businesses that show up share a few traits. Clear, specific information about what they do and where. Real reviews. Consistent details across the web, the same name, address, and phone number everywhere. The businesses that disappear tend to be vague, thin on reviews, and inconsistent from one listing to the next.

None of that requires a marketing team. It requires clarity and follow-through.

I will give you the mistake I see most. A heading that says "providing exceptional solutions since 1987." That tells AI nothing. It does not know what you do, who you serve, or what city you are in. Compare that to "basement waterproofing and mold remediation serving Southern Indiana and Louisville, Kentucky." Now a machine understands exactly what you do and where. Clarity protects your visibility. If AI cannot interpret your page, it cannot recommend you.

Here is what to do right now. Read your homepage and your top service page out loud. If a stranger could not tell exactly what you do and where you do it in the first few seconds, rewrite it to say so plainly. Be specific. Specific is what gets you found.


The One Thing Big Companies Cannot Do Faster Than You

This is the piece the report leaves out, and it is the piece that matters most for you.

You do not have to wait for AI to find you. My team takes a business's information directly to the platforms instead of hoping it gets discovered. That is something a solo owner or a small team can act on in weeks, while a large company is still scheduling the meeting to discuss scheduling the meeting.

And the simplest, most powerful tool you already own costs you nothing extra. FAQs. When you answer the real questions people actually ask about your service, right on the page, you are handing AI the exact raw material it uses to build an answer. FAQs are one of the most powerful AEO tools on any service page. Put them on every service page, not just a buried FAQ page.

Here is what to do right now. Write down the five questions you answer over the phone every single week. Put those questions and your real answers on the matching service page. You just made yourself easier for both people and AI to understand.


Where Do You Start?

If you read this far, you just did something most business owners have not done yet. You stopped treating AI search as background noise and started treating it as something you can act on. That alone puts you ahead.

Here is the short version to carry with you:

  • AI tools are already sitting between your business and your customers, at the moment people are deciding who to consider.

  • Traditional search is not going anywhere. AI is being added on top of it, so you need to be visible in both.

  • AI can only recommend what it can find and understand, so clarity and consistency are everything.

  • Vague language makes you invisible. Specific language about what you do and where makes you findable.

  • FAQs on every service page are one of the fastest, free ways to improve your AI visibility.

  • You can move faster than the big companies. That is your real advantage.

You do not need a giant department to do this well. You need a clear foundation and someone who will help you keep it solid.


Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get my small business to show up in AI search like ChatGPT?
Start by making your website clear and specific about what you do, who you serve, and where. Add FAQs to your service pages using the real questions customers ask, since AI pulls from those to build its answers. Keep your business name, address, and phone number identical across every listing so AI trusts that the information is accurate.

Is SEO dead now that everyone is using AI?
No. Lazy SEO is dead, but SEO itself is not. People are still using Google every day, and AI search is being added on top of traditional search, not replacing it. You need both working together, and anyone telling you to drop one entirely does not understand how this works.

Do I need a marketing team to compete in AI search?
No. The things that make you visible to AI- clear content, real reviews, consistent information, and helpful FAQs- are things a small business can act on quickly. In fact, smaller businesses often move faster than large companies, which is a real advantage in a landscape that is changing this fast.


If reading this made you want to actually see where you stand, that is exactly the right instinct. I am happy to look at your business the way AI currently sees it and tell you honestly what is missing and what to fix first. That is what the free 15-minute call is for. You can book it atkristinastubblefield.com/book-a-call, and you will leave with a clearer picture of whether or not we ever work together.

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