Six real issues we keep finding in audits — and how to fix each without rewriting your whole site.
Your customers used to find you by typing "best [whatever you do] near me" into Google. Now they're asking ChatGPT, Perplexity, or the AI Overview that sits above Google's ten blue links. And your name isn't the one coming back.
This isn't an SEO problem. AI models read the web differently than Google's crawler — they pull from a narrower set of signals, they're allergic to marketing fluff, and they weight third-party citations higher than anything on your homepage. Most small business sites were built for a search engine that's being replaced.
We run AI visibility audits through AI Clarity Index, and the same six issues come up over and over. Here they are, with the smallest fix that moves the needle on each.
1. Your site doesn't say what you actually do
Metric: ECS (Entity Clarity Score)
AI models need to answer what is this? before they can recommend you. If the answer requires clicking through three pages and interpreting a tagline like "Crafting Smiles Since 1998," the model gives up and recommends the competitor whose homepage opens with "Family dentist in Boulder, CO. Accepting new patients."
Fix: In the first screenful of your homepage, say what you do, where, and who for — in plain language. Match it in your <title> and meta description. One hour of work, highest-ROI change on this list.
2. Your services aren't on real pages
Metric: SAS (Service Association Score)
A "Services" dropdown with six nouns isn't enough. AI can't confidently associate your brand with a service it can't read about. Google would rank a thin page on backlinks alone. AI won't — it's reading the page, not the link graph.
Fix: Each core service gets its own page. Two to four hundred words. What it is, when you'd need it, what's included, how to get started. Structured like a customer would ask about it.
3. Your citations live only on your own site
Metric: NCS (Network Citation Score)
AI weights what other sites say about you — industry directories, local listings, niche publications, Reddit threads, podcast notes, review platforms. If the only place on the internet that mentions you is you, the models treat you as thin.
Fix: Pick five places your ideal customer would plausibly look for a recommendation and make sure you're listed accurately. Then aim for two or three external mentions per quarter — a trade publication quote, a guest post, a podcast. Consistency over volume.
4. Your reviews are thin or stale
Metric: CMV (Customer Mention Volume)
40 reviews from the last 18 months reads as real. 8 reviews from three years ago reads as defunct. The AI doesn't know you're still operating unless something recent tells it so.
Fix: Pick one review platform that matters for your industry and ask every customer, every time. A one-sentence post-service email with one button beats any fancy automation. Two reviews a month beats 30 once.
5. Your content doesn't answer real questions
Metric: CCI (Content-Citation Index)
"Five Benefits of Regular HVAC Maintenance" doesn't get cited, because nobody asks it. What gets cited is content that answers what a real person types into ChatGPT: "How much does commercial HVAC maintenance cost in Denver?" "Do I need a permit to replace a water heater in Boulder County?"
Fix: List the ten questions your customers actually ask before hiring you. Write a short, honest answer to each. Publish as individual pages. Link them from your service pages.
6. You don't look like a real business
Metric: DRI (Domain Reputation Index)
Boring infrastructure matters. Domain age. NAP consistency across the web. SSL. Privacy policy. A real founder or owner name somewhere. All of this feeds a signal that says legitimate business, not a Vercel template spun up last Tuesday.
Fix: Audit the basics. Address and phone on every page, matching Google Business Profile and Yelp. Real About page. SSL. Privacy and terms pages. None of this needs to be pretty — it needs to exist.
What to do Monday morning
Don't rewrite your site. Pick one issue and spend a week on it. Then the next.
Ranked by effort-to-impact for a typical small business:
- Rewrite your homepage hero (ECS) — 1 hour
- Ask your last 20 customers for a review (CMV) — 1 afternoon
- Answer the ten real questions customers ask (CCI) — 1 week
- Build proper service pages (SAS) — 1–2 weeks
- Pursue five external citations (NCS) — 1 quarter, ongoing
- Audit trust signals and infrastructure (DRI) — 1 day
None of this is a rewrite. All of it compounds.
Want to see how your site actually scores? We run full AI visibility audits at AI Clarity Index — ECS, SAS, NCS, CMV, CCI, DRI, with a ranked list of fixes specific to your site.