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SEO

Does Your Website Show Up in ChatGPT? Here's How to Check

Patrick Scott · March 9, 2026 · 4 min read

Why this matters now

A year ago, this question would have been a curiosity. Today it's a legitimate business concern.

Millions of people are using ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews to find products, compare services, and make buying decisions. These tools don't serve up a list of ten blue links. They synthesize information from the sources they trust most, then present a single, conversational answer. If your brand isn't part of that answer, you're invisible to a growing segment of potential customers.

The good news: checking your AI search visibility takes about ten minutes. The better news: if you're not showing up, there are concrete things you can do about it.

How to check right now

You don't need any special tools for this. Just the AI platforms themselves and a few minutes of focused prompting. Here's what I recommend:

ChatGPT

Open ChatGPT (with web browsing enabled) and try prompts that your customers would actually use. Be specific. Instead of "best marketing agency," try something like:

  • "What are the best [your product/service] companies in [your city]?"
  • "Who should I hire for [specific service you offer]?"
  • "What's the difference between [your product] and [competitor's product]?"
  • "Recommend a [your service] for [your target customer type]"

Run at least five or six variations. Look for whether your brand gets mentioned by name, whether ChatGPT links to your site, and how it describes you relative to competitors.

Perplexity

Perplexity is particularly interesting because it shows its sources. Run the same types of prompts and pay attention to which websites Perplexity cites. If your competitors show up in the source list but you don't, that's a clear signal about your content's authority and structure.

Google AI Overviews

Search Google for queries relevant to your business and look for the AI Overview panel at the top of results. Note whether your site gets cited as a source. Google's AI Overviews pull heavily from pages that already rank well organically, so this is also a useful proxy for your traditional SEO health.

What the results mean

If you ran those prompts and your brand showed up consistently, you're in solid shape. Your content is structured well enough and authoritative enough that AI systems trust it as a source. That doesn't mean there's nothing to optimize, but you have a foundation to build on.

If your brand showed up inconsistently (mentioned in some queries but not others), that usually points to gaps in your content coverage. You might have strong pages on some topics but nothing on others. AI systems can only cite you when you've published content that directly addresses the query.

If your brand didn't show up at all, that's not a death sentence. It means you need to make intentional changes to how your content is structured, how authoritative it appears, and how accessible it is to AI crawlers. That's what AI Engine Optimization (AEO) is all about.

What to do if you don't show up

Start with the fundamentals. AI search engines favor content that is:

  • Clearly structured with descriptive headings that match how people ask questions
  • Authoritative, with real expertise, named authors, and credible sourcing
  • Comprehensive on the topic without being padded with filler
  • Backed by proper schema markup so AI systems can understand the context
  • Accessible to AI crawlers (check your robots.txt for blocks on GPTBot, ClaudeBot, and PerplexityBot)

The overlap with good traditional SEO is significant. If your content is already well-optimized for Google, you're likely closer than you think. The gap is usually in how the content is structured for extraction (clear, direct answers to specific questions) and whether your brand has enough entity authority for AI systems to trust.

For a deeper dive into the full strategy, check out the complete AEO guide. For help implementing it, take a look at my SEO services, which include AI search optimization as part of every engagement.

What to do if you do show up

Showing up is the first step. The next question is whether the information is accurate and favorable.

Check how AI tools describe your brand. Are they using outdated information? Pulling from a competitor's comparison page instead of your own site? Emphasizing the wrong features or services? If so, the fix is creating or updating content on your site that directly addresses those gaps. AI systems will eventually re-index and update their understanding of your brand based on what they find.

Also keep an eye on consistency. If ChatGPT says one thing about your company and Perplexity says something different, that's a signal that your messaging across the web isn't clear enough. The more consistent and specific your content is, the more consistent AI responses about your brand will be.

Make this a recurring check. AI search results change as these systems update their training data and web indexes. I recommend running these visibility checks monthly so you can catch changes early and adjust your strategy accordingly.

Want to talk about this stuff?

No pitch, no pressure. Just a conversation about what's working, what isn't, and where to go from here.