Your business doesn't appear in AI search because AI engines don't recommend you. They recommend what third parties say about you. Our research shows that 85% of AI citations come from third-party sources like Reddit threads, review sites, and editorial roundups, not from brand websites. If those sources don't mention you, AI has nothing to cite.
This creates a visibility problem that traditional SEO alone does not address. SEO gets you discovered by AI (it searches Google and Bing), but being discovered is only stage one. AI then independently researches your brand and decides whether to recommend you based on the user's specific intent.
AI Search Builds on Google, Then Adds a Layer
AI search engines discover brands by searching Google and Bing (so your SEO rankings matter). But after finding candidates, they independently research each brand and build a recommendation based on the user's specific intent. When ChatGPT or Perplexity recommends a product, it has pulled from Reddit discussions, expert reviews, listicles, and comparison articles, then evaluated each candidate brand against what the user actually asked for.
Your website IS read during this evaluation stage. But AI weighs what others say about you alongside what you say about yourself. If your site only has generic marketing copy without addressing specific buyer intents, AI may find you but recommend a competitor whose content better matches the question.
What to do: Ensure your SEO foundations are solid (so AI can discover you), then focus on two things: making your own content answer specific buyer intents, and building third-party coverage so AI sees consensus that you solve the problem.
You're Not in the Sources AI Actually Cites
ChatGPT links to brand websites in only 24% of citations. For Grok, that number drops to 2%. The rest comes from Reddit, review aggregators, niche publications, and community forums. If your brand doesn't appear in those places, you effectively don't exist in AI search results.
The distribution is uneven, too. Grok cites Reddit 13x more than other engines. Perplexity leans on YouTube transcripts and editorial publications. Each engine has preferred source types, and none of them agree on a universal best source. Our data shows AI search engines disagree on their top recommendation in 50% of queries.
What to do: Map which AI engines matter for your audience, then identify their preferred source types. For B2B, that's typically editorial coverage and comparison posts. For local services, it's Google Business Profile data and review sites. For consumer products, Reddit and YouTube carry disproportionate weight.
Smaller Brands Have a Structural Disadvantage
Startups and small businesses average 6.6 mentions across AI-cited sources, compared to 16.8 for enterprise brands. This isn't because enterprise brands have better products. It's because they have more PR coverage, more reviews, more Reddit discussions, and more years of accumulated mentions across the web.
AI engines essentially count votes. More mentions across more independent sources equals higher confidence in a recommendation. A brand with three mentions will lose to one with fifteen, regardless of product quality.
What to do: Focus on density over breadth. Pick 3-5 queries where you want to be recommended and build citation density specifically for those. Get mentioned in the Reddit threads, comparison articles, and review roundups that AI engines already cite for those queries. One well-placed mention in a frequently-cited source outweighs ten mentions on obscure blogs.
Your Content Isn't Structured for AI Extraction
Even when AI engines do visit your site, they may not extract useful information. AI search engines use retrieval-augmented generation (RAG): they find pages, scan for passages that directly answer the query, and cite the source if the passage is good enough. If your page opens with "Welcome to our company, we are passionate about..." instead of a direct answer to the question someone asked, the engine skips you entirely.
Our research tracked ClickUp for 8 consecutive weeks. It was mentioned by every AI search engine in every cycle, yet received zero citations. The engine knew ClickUp existed but couldn't find a specific, retrievable passage on a third-party source worth linking to. Brand awareness without citable content produces mentions, not recommendations.
The brands that earn citations consistently (ActiveCampaign, Amplitude, PostHog) have content structured as what we call "answer capsules": the first 2-3 sentences of a page or section directly answer a specific question with names, numbers, and a clear position. AI search engines extract these passages because they can stand alone as a complete answer.
What to do: Audit your top 5 pages. Does the first paragraph directly answer a question someone would ask an AI search engine? If it starts with your company story, a generic industry statement, or marketing copy, rewrite it. Lead with the answer. Include specific numbers, pricing, comparisons, or claims. One well-structured paragraph that directly answers "how much does [your service] cost" or "what's the best [your category] for [use case]" is worth more than ten pages of marketing content that no AI engine can extract from.
Reddit Is a Bigger Factor Than You Think
If your business operates in a category where people ask for recommendations (software, services, local businesses, consumer products), Reddit is likely influencing your AI visibility more than any other single platform. Grok cites Reddit 13x more than other engines, but ChatGPT also pulls heavily from Reddit discussions when answering "best X for Y" queries. Perplexity rarely cites Reddit (2%), relying instead on editorial and YouTube sources.
The problem: you can't control Reddit. You can't post promotional content without getting flagged. And most Reddit recommendations come from genuine users sharing genuine experiences.
What to do: Make your product remarkable enough that real users mention it. Respond to relevant threads with genuinely helpful answers (not pitches). Encourage satisfied customers to share their experience in relevant subreddits. Monitor which Reddit threads AI is citing for your target queries and understand what makes those threads authoritative.
The Fix Isn't One Channel. It's a System.
Appearing in AI search requires consistent presence across the specific sources each engine trusts. That means editorial mentions, community discussions, review sites, and structured on-site content working together. No single tactic moves the needle alone.
The brands that appear consistently in AI recommendations treat this as an ongoing operation, not a one-time optimization project. They track which sources get cited, identify gaps, and build presence systematically.
Loudmink automates this across citation tracking, source analysis, and competitive monitoring. Start with a free scan or see pricing.
What to do: Build a repeatable process for showing up in AI search. Track your mentions across AI-cited sources weekly. Identify which competitors appear where you don't. Prioritize the source types that your target AI engines prefer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why doesn't my website appear when I ask ChatGPT about my industry?
ChatGPT pulls recommendations primarily from third-party sources. Only 24% of ChatGPT citations link to brand websites directly. The remaining 76% come from review sites, Reddit, editorial publications, and comparison articles. If your brand isn't mentioned in those sources, ChatGPT has no basis to recommend you.
How long does it take to start appearing in AI search results?
Most businesses see initial results in 4-8 weeks after building third-party mentions in AI-cited sources. AI models update their knowledge bases at different intervals. Some, like Perplexity, cite real-time sources. Others, like ChatGPT, rely on training data that updates less frequently. Consistent presence across multiple source types accelerates visibility.
Is AI search optimization different from traditional SEO?
They share the same foundation but AEO adds a layer. SEO gets your content ranked on Google and Bing, which is how AI discovers you. AEO adds: structuring your content to answer specific buyer intents (so AI recommends you, not just finds you), building third-party presence (reviews, Reddit, editorial) so AI sees corroborating signals, and monitoring AI answers across engines. The content craft is the same. AEO requires going further on intent coverage and third-party validation.
Can I pay to appear in AI search results?
As of May 2026, no AI search engine offers paid placement within its generated answers. Visibility is earned through third-party mentions, structured content, and citation density. Some engines display sponsored links alongside AI answers, but the recommendations themselves are algorithmically generated from cited sources.
Why do my competitors appear in AI search but I don't?
Your competitors likely have more mentions across the sources AI engines trust. Enterprise brands average 16.8 mentions across AI-cited sources compared to 6.6 for startups. Check which sources AI is citing when it recommends your competitors. Those are the exact publications, threads, and review sites where you need to build presence.