AI search rewards a different kind of website than the one most businesses built for Google. When someone asks ChatGPT or Perplexity for the best provider in their city, the model does not show ten blue links and let the person sort it out. It reads, summarizes, and hands back a short recommendation, often naming just a few businesses. Optimizing your website for AI search means making yours the page a model can confidently quote and the business it feels safe recommending.
The good news: the work is concrete, and most of it is within your control. You are not trying to game a ranking algorithm. You are giving answer engines clean, well-structured, trustworthy information and making sure the rest of the web agrees with it. Below is the practical playbook we use across the audits we run, organized so you can start at the top and work down.
Understand how AI search reads your site
Traditional search ranks pages. AI search extracts answers. A large language model crawls the open web, pulls passages that look like they answer the user's question, and synthesizes a response in plain language. Sometimes it cites the sources it leaned on; sometimes it simply repeats what it learned. Either way, your job is to be the clearest, most citable source on the questions your buyers ask.
That shift changes what "optimized" looks like. A page stuffed with keywords but vague on specifics is hard to quote. A page that opens with a crisp, self-contained answer and then proves it with details is easy to quote. It also changes who you are competing against: instead of fighting for one of ten visible slots, you are trying to be one of the two or three names a model is willing to put its credibility behind. That bar is higher in some ways and lower in others, because it rewards substance over volume. If you want the full background on how this discipline works, our guide to answer engine optimization covers the foundations; this article focuses on the website-side execution.
Write answer-first content
The single highest-leverage change you can make is structuring content as direct answers. Models favor passages that resolve a question in the first sentence or two, before any throat-clearing.
For each page that matters, identify the exact question a buyer would type or speak, then answer it immediately:
- Lead with the answer. Put a two-to-four sentence response at the top of the section, then expand underneath.
- Use the buyer's words. Headings should read like real questions: "How much does X cost?" not "Pricing."
- Keep passages self-contained. A model may lift one paragraph out of context, so each should stand on its own.
- Add specifics models can repeat. Numbers, service areas, timelines, and credentials are exactly what gets quoted.
An FAQ section on each service page is one of the most efficient ways to do this, because the question-and-answer format mirrors how people prompt AI. If you want to go deeper on the mechanics, our step-by-step playbook for getting cited by AI breaks the pattern down further.
Add structured data and schema markup
Schema markup is code that tells machines, in unambiguous terms, what your page and business are. It does not change what a human sees, but it gives answer engines facts they can trust instead of inferences they have to make. For AI search, the schema types that earn their keep most often are:
| Schema type | What it confirms |
|---|---|
| Organization / LocalBusiness | Your name, address, phone, hours, and service area |
| FAQPage | Question-and-answer pairs models can lift directly |
| Service or Product | What you offer and who it is for |
| Review / AggregateRating | Social proof tied to your business entity |
| Article | Authorship, publish date, and topic of your content |
Implement schema cleanly and validate it. The goal is consistency: the facts in your markup should match the visible page and your listings everywhere else. For a plain-English walkthrough, see our guide to structured data for AI search.
Consider an llms.txt file
An llms.txt file is an emerging convention that points AI crawlers to your most important, well-structured content in one place. It is not a magic bullet and not yet universally honored, but it is low-effort to add and signals that you have organized your site with answer engines in mind.
Make your business details consistent everywhere
AI models cross-reference. If your name, address, and phone number say one thing on your website, another on Google Business Profile, and a third on an old directory, the model sees conflict and trusts you less. Consistency is quiet but powerful.
- Lock your NAP. Use the exact same name, address, and phone format on your site, Google Business Profile, and every major directory.
- Fully complete your Google Business Profile. Categories, services, hours, and photos all feed how AI describes local businesses.
- Clean up stale listings. Outdated addresses and disconnected numbers actively work against you.
- Match your schema to reality. The LocalBusiness data in your markup should mirror your listings exactly.
When the whole web agrees on who you are, a model can recommend you without hesitating.
Earn reviews and trusted citations
Answer engines weigh reputation heavily because they are trying to give safe, defensible recommendations. Two signals do most of the work here: recent reviews and citations on sources the model already trusts.
Reviews give models evidence that real customers vouch for you, and recency matters as much as volume; a steady stream of recent reviews reads as an active, trustworthy business. Citations are the other half. When reputable directories, industry associations, and publications mention your business by name, you become part of the training and retrieval data models draw on. This is the same reason a page can rank well in Google yet stay invisible in AI; if you are not cited where models look, you are easy to overlook. Our breakdown of why your business is not showing up in AI search digs into the most common gaps.
We have watched this play out. One Seattle mortgage broker, Keith Akada, went from invisible in AI search to the number-one AI-recommended broker in his market, generating roughly 30 leads and four closed deals in about six weeks once the answer-first content, schema, and citation work were in place. Nothing exotic; the fundamentals, executed consistently.
Keep the technical foundation clean
AI search still rides on the open web, so the basics of a healthy site continue to matter. If a crawler cannot reach or render your content, it cannot quote you.
- Stay crawlable. Do not block AI user agents you want to reach you, and keep a current sitemap.
- Load fast and render server-side where possible. Content buried behind heavy JavaScript is harder to extract.
- Write descriptive titles and headings. They help models map your page to the right questions.
- Use clean, logical URLs and internal links. Clear site structure helps models understand topical authority.
None of this replaces traditional SEO; it sits alongside it. The two reinforce each other, and a site that is technically sound gives your answer-first content the best chance of being read.
Measure what AI says about you
You cannot improve what you do not watch. Optimizing for AI search is not a one-time project, because models update and competitors move. Periodically prompt the major engines, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI Overviews, with the questions your buyers ask, and note whether you appear, how you are described, and who is recommended instead. Those answers tell you where to focus next: a missing citation, a vague service page, or details a model is still getting wrong.
Keep the loop tight. Track the same handful of buyer prompts on a regular cadence, screenshot the results, and watch the trend rather than any single answer, since model outputs vary run to run. When a competitor starts appearing where you do not, that is usually a citation or review gap you can close. When a model describes you inaccurately, trace it back to the source on your site or listings that needs correcting. Over time this turns AI visibility from something that happens to you into something you steer.
Optimizing your website for AI search comes down to clarity and trust: answer real questions directly, give machines clean facts through schema, keep your details consistent, and earn the reviews and citations that make a model comfortable naming you. Do that, and you stop hoping AI mentions your business and start expecting it. If you would rather see exactly where you stand before you start, that is what our work begins with.