The New Kind of Invisible: AI Can’t Find Your Business written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing
Does your business show up?
I’ve run this test with dozens of small business owners in the last year. Most of them disappear completely. Some show up but get described in ways that would make a prospect walk the other direction. A handful get it right.
The ones who get it right aren’t doing anything exotic. They’ve just built a presence that works the way presence has to work now, which is different from how it worked five years ago.
Presence used to have one job
For the first 20 years of the commercial web, presence meant one thing: Google could find you. Get the SEO right, show up in search, done.
That’s still necessary. It’s just not sufficient anymore.
A working presence in 2026 has to pass three tests, and most small businesses are failing at least one of them without realizing it.
Job 1: Findable
Can the right customer, searching for the right thing, actually find you? The mechanics have shifted. Less about keywords stuffed into pages, more about genuine topical authority built over time. But the test is the same.
Here’s the part most people miss: findable now means findable in three places. Traditional search (Google, Bing). Social search (people searching inside platforms). And AI-mediated search, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google’s AI Overviews, and the vertical AI tools your customers are quietly starting to use for research. Each one pulls from different signals. Build for only one and you’ve got gaps.
Job 2: Credible
When a prospect lands on your site, does the site do its job? Does it speak to their situation in their language? Does it show real proof that you’ve done this work for people like them?
I see beautiful websites every week that fail this test completely. Design isn’t the problem. Most of them look great. The problem is there’s nothing there. Generic copy, stock photos, and a contact form. A plain site with deep, specific proof of real work outperforms a polished site with nothing behind it every time.
Job 3: Retrievable
This is the new one, and it’s the one catching businesses off guard.
When an AI assistant answers a question your customer asks, “who should I hire to do X in Y city” or “what should I look for in a contractor for Z,” does your business come up? And when it does, is the description accurate?
AI systems build their answers from whatever you’ve put out publicly. Thin website. Generic content. Missing structured data. Weak third-party presence. The AI either won’t find you or won’t know how to describe you. Being un-retrievable is just the new version of being un-findable. The customer moves on and you never know it happened.
Three things to fix first
Your website
Most small business websites are expensive brochures. They describe the business but don’t sell it. Four things fix most of them: a clear core message above the fold, the ideal client named in their own language, specific proof material, and one obvious next step. Not “contact us.” One low-friction action for the person who’s ready to move.
Hub pages
A hub page is a deep, authoritative page built around one specific topic: a core service, a core customer problem, a category you want to own. Not a blog post. A real resource that earns its place as the best answer on that topic.
Search engines rank them. AI systems cite them. And they give your content something to cluster around instead of floating independently. If your site doesn’t have hub pages, you’re competing on a level playing field with everyone else in your category. Hub pages tilt that field.
Your presence beyond the site
AI doesn’t build its picture of your business from your website alone. It pulls from your Google Business Profile, industry directories, third-party reviews, and mentions across the web. Most small businesses treat this as low-priority busywork. It’s actually the scaffolding holding everything together.
A business with a solid website and strong third-party presence will beat a business with a great website and weak external presence in AI-generated answers. Every time.
Do the test today
Open an AI assistant. Type three questions your ideal customer might ask before hiring someone in your category. Screenshot what comes back.
That’s your baseline. That’s what your prospects are seeing right now. It tells you exactly where to start.
Online presence is one of the seven steps in the framework I’ve been refining for over 20 years. The full system is in my new ebook, “7 Steps to Small Business Marketing Success.” Get it at dtm.world/7steps.
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