Logo
Check Lost Sales

Fix how AI describes your business online

Ask ChatGPT about your business. Read the answer carefully. Is it accurate? Is it complete? Does it describe the business you actually run today, or a version of your business from two years ago that no longer exists?

For most business owners, the first time they see how AI describes their company is a shock. The category is wrong. The services listed are outdated. The location is off. Details are fabricated entirely. Things that sound plausible but are not true. And every day, prospective customers are reading that description and making decisions based on it, decisions that send them to you with wrong expectations or, more likely, send them somewhere else entirely.

A 2025 Forbes analysis found false information rates of 47% for Perplexity and 40% for ChatGPT across tested queries (Forbes, 2025). That is not an obscure technical problem. That is nearly half of all responses containing something that is not true. When the subject of those responses is your business, every inaccuracy costs you money in the form of confused prospects, missed opportunities, and customers who decided you were not what they needed based on information that was never accurate in the first place.

Find out if ChatGPT recommends your business. Run a free AI visibility check at yazeo.com. It takes less than two minutes and shows you exactly which AI platforms mention your business and which ones don't.

Am I on ChatGPT?

Why does AI describe your business incorrectly?

The AI is not trying to get you wrong. It is working with whatever information it can find, and for most businesses, that information is a mess.

AI platforms synthesize answers from dozens of sources across the web. Your website is one source. But so is every directory listing, every review platform, every social media profile, every cached version of a page that no longer exists, and every third-party mention of your business anywhere online. If those sources disagree with each other, the AI has to pick a version or blend them together. Either way, the result is often inaccurate.

The most common reasons AI gets your business wrong follow predictable patterns. Outdated information persists because the AI's training data includes old versions of your website and old directory listings that were never updated. Inconsistent information across directories creates confusion about your basic identity: your name, address, phone number, category, and services. Thin information means the AI does not have enough detail to describe you accurately, so it fills gaps with educated guesses. And competitor contamination happens when the AI blends information about your business with a similar business in your market because it cannot tell you apart.

Every one of these problems traces back to the same root cause: the information environment around your business is not clean enough, not consistent enough, or not deep enough for the AI to get it right. Fixing that information environment is how you fix the description.

How to audit what AI is saying about your business right now

The audit process is straightforward and every business owner should do it this week.

Open chatgpt, gemini, perplexity, and claude. for each platform, run these queries with your actual business name and location:

"Tell me about [business name]." "What services does [business name] offer?" "What do customers say about [business name]?" "Is [business name] a good choice for [your core service] in [your city]?" "How does [business name] compare to [your top competitor]?"

Document every answer word for word. Highlight anything that is wrong, outdated, incomplete, or fabricated. Pay close attention to how the AI categorizes your business, which services it lists, what it says about your reputation, and whether it gets your location and contact information right.

This audit takes 20 to 30 minutes and reveals the version of your business that prospective customers are encountering before they ever visit your website. If you have never done it, the results will almost certainly surprise you. Most business owners discover errors they did not know existed on a channel they did not know mattered.

How to fix the way AI describes your business

The correction process works from the outside in. You cannot edit the AI directly. You fix the information the AI draws from so that the next time it generates a description, the inputs are accurate.

Start with what you control. Update your website to clearly and accurately state your business name, category, services, team, location, hours, and any other details the AI got wrong. Your About page is one of the most important pages for AI accuracy. Write it like a factsheet, not a marketing pitch. State who you are, what you do, where you do it, and who you serve in plain, direct language that the AI can extract without ambiguity.

Update your Google Business Profile with the same accurate information. Make sure your primary and secondary categories match what your business actually does today. Add recent photos. Post regular updates. Respond to every review.

Fix third-party sources. This is where the real correction happens. Audit every directory, listing site, review platform, and data aggregator where your business appears. Correct every inconsistency. If your old address still shows on Yelp, fix it. If an industry directory lists services you no longer offer, update it. If there are duplicate listings with conflicting information, consolidate them. The goal is a clean, consistent citation profile across every source the AI touches.

Build new authoritative content. If the AI gets your category wrong, publish content across multiple credible sources that clearly establishes the correct category. If it describes outdated services, make sure current service information appears not just on your site but across directories, industry platforms, and any third-party source you can influence. The AI is looking for consensus. The more sources that agree on the correct information, the faster the AI updates its description.

Implement structured data. Schema markup removes the guesswork. When your website includes LocalBusiness schema with your correct name, category, services, address, phone number, and hours in machine-readable format, the AI does not have to interpret your content. It reads the data directly. This is the single most effective technical fix for AI description accuracy.

Monitor and maintain. AI descriptions drift over time as new information enters the system and models update. Set a monthly schedule to re-run your audit queries and verify that the corrections are holding. If a directory listing reverts to old data or a new source publishes wrong information, catch it early and correct it before the AI picks it up.

How long does it take to change how AI describes your business?

Minor corrections like a wrong phone number or slightly inaccurate service list typically reflect in AI responses within 60 to 90 days of correcting the source information. The AI needs time to encounter the updated information across enough sources to shift its description.

Major corrections like a wrong business category take longer, often 90 to 180 days. When the AI has confidently learned a wrong description, overwriting it requires building a significant body of correct, consistent information from multiple credible sources. The more sources reinforcing the old wrong description, the more new correct sources you need to outweigh them.

The businesses that fix their AI descriptions fastest are the ones that work with a specialist who executes all the correction work simultaneously: citations, content, schema, and authority building in parallel rather than one at a time.

What happens if you do not fix how AI describes your business?

The wrong description keeps spreading. Every day the AI tells a prospective customer the wrong thing about your business, that customer forms an impression that does not match reality. Some of them dismiss you as not what they need. Some of them contact you with expectations you cannot meet. Some of them never find you at all because the AI categorized you wrong and you do not appear in the queries that should be sending you customers.

And as more consumers shift to AI for discovery, the volume of people receiving the wrong description grows. What was a small problem six months ago becomes a material revenue impact over the next year. A 2026 Harvard Business Review study found that two-thirds of Gen Z and more than half of Millennials use AI to research products and services (HBR, 2026). If those consumers encounter a wrong description of your business, you have lost them before they even knew you existed.

The cost of inaction is not measured in rankings or impressions. It is measured in customers who made decisions based on information that was never true.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find out if ChatGPT recommends your business. Run your free AI visibility check at yazeo.com right now. See which AI platforms recommend your business and which ones are sending your customers to competitors instead. It takes less than two minutes.

Am I on ChatGPT?
Sources referenced: Forbes AI Hallucination Analysis (2025), Harvard Business Review AI Consumer Research (2026), SOCi 2026 Local Visibility Index (2026), OpenAI Weekly User Data (2026).

Most popular pages

Industry AI Search

How Physical Therapy Clinics Can Get Recommended by AI Search Engines

He has been dealing with low back pain for six weeks. He has not seen a doctor yet. He is not sure if he needs PT, a chiropractor, or an orthopedist, and he does not want to waste time or money going to the wrong place first. He opens ChatGPT and types: "I've had low back pain for six weeks, no specific injury, it's worse in the morning and after sitting. Do I need to see a doctor first or can I go straight to physical therapy?" ChatGPT explains that in most states direct access to physical therapy is legal and that six weeks of sub-acute back pain is exactly the presentation where physical therapy tends to produce strong outcomes. He asks two follow-up questions about what PT for back pain involves and whether his insurance needs a referral. Then he types: "Best physical therapy near me in [city] for low back pain, direct access, accepts Blue Cross Blue Shield." ChatGPT names two clinics. He calls the first. Your clinic accepts BCBS without a referral, has a DPT with seven years of orthopedic and spine specialization, and has dozens of Google reviews from patients specifically describing successful low back pain treatment. ChatGPT named someone else. Not because your therapist is less qualified. Because the two clinics it named had documented their direct access policy, insurance acceptance, and condition-specific specialization in AI-readable formats, and yours had not.