Your reviews are fine. Your website hasn't changed.
But the calls are a little slower. And you can't explain why.
Here's something most business owners haven't heard yet.
People are starting their search differently
Before opening Google, more people are asking AI tools a direct question:
- "Which Botox clinic in Vancouver do people actually trust?"
- "Best immigration lawyer in Toronto?"
- "Who's a good accountant in Calgary for a small business?"
They type it into ChatGPT. Perplexity. Google's AI Overview.
And the AI doesn't give them a list of links to scroll through.
It gives them names. Three clinics. Two lawyers. One accountant.
Why this is different from a Google ranking
If you drop a few spots on Google, you're still visible. The client might still find you.
AI works like a referral. Your friend asks: "Know a good dentist?" You give one name — maybe two. If you're not mentioned, you're not in the running.
That's what's happening now. AI tools act as a referral layer. And for high-consideration services — cosmetic treatments, legal advice, financial planning — people are starting there.
If your business isn't named, the client may never reach your website.
What shapes the AI shortlist
AI tools don't guess. They pull from sources:
If those sources are thin or inconsistent, the AI has little to work with. So it names whoever has more. That might be your competitor who's never run an ad — but has 200 detailed reviews and a full service page for every treatment they offer.
Quick check: is your business showing up?
Ask yourself right now:
- Do I have a complete Google Business Profile?
- Are my service pages specific — not one vague paragraph covering