For contractors relying on Google rankings to bring in customers, there’s something happening you need to know about. AI search tools are now recommending as few as three businesses per query. Traditional SEO rankings overlap with those recommendations less than half the time.
The way customers find contractors is shifting faster than most people realize. This goes beyond an algorithm update - it reflects a fundamental change in how decisions get made before a single phone call happens.
A homeowner standing in their backyard asks their phone: "Who installs retaining walls near me?" They don't open a browser. They don't scroll through ten blue links. They get three names - and then they pick one.
That moment is no longer rare. AI-powered search tools, including Google's AI Overviews, ChatGPT, and voice assistants, are increasingly providing curated, conversational recommendations that appear above or alongside traditional search results, fundamentally changing how users discover information. Rather than surfacing a full list of options for users to browse, these systems act as filters - synthesizing available data and delivering a short answer.
For local contractors, the math is stark. When an AI assistant recommends three businesses, every other contractor in the market is eliminated before the customer even starts comparing. Visibility is no longer a spectrum; it's a switch. Industry analysis points to a clear conclusion: contractors who aren't optimized for AI recommendation engines are already losing leads they don't know exist. Learn more about how this impacts local businesses at profitacuity.com.
Traditional SEO was built around one goal: rank as high as possible on a search results page. Ranking third still drove traffic. Ranking seventh still got clicks. The whole page was visible, and users made their own choices.
AI search doesn't work that way. These systems synthesize information and surface only what they confidently trust. The result is a dramatic compression of opportunity - from a page of ten results to a handful of curated picks. For contractors, the competitive field has effectively narrowed to whoever the AI decides is trustworthy enough to recommend.
Traditional SEO hasn't become irrelevant - it feeds into the signals AI systems rely on. A well-optimized website, strong backlink profile, and service-specific content still matter because they contribute to what AI reads when forming recommendations. The distinction is that ranking alone is no longer sufficient. A contractor can hold a top Google spot and still be passed over entirely by an AI assistant.
Research shows that less than 50% of businesses appearing in Google's top local results also appear in AI-generated recommendations. That gap reflects the fact that AI systems weight signals differently than traditional search algorithms. Google's local 3-pack appeared in search results roughly 35.9% of the time in one analysis, while ChatGPT recommended only 1.2% of local business locations analyzed. AI visibility is an entirely different bar to clear.
When there were ten spots on a results page, losing one position wasn't catastrophic. When there are three spots in an AI response, every slot carries enormous weight. The businesses occupying those recommendations receive the inquiry; the rest receive nothing. This winner-takes-most dynamic creates urgency for contractors who haven't yet adapted - because those who do adapt early will lock in that position as AI systems grow more confident in recommending them.
Google Business Profile (GBP) is one of the most heavily weighted data sources AI tools use when forming local recommendations. An incomplete or outdated GBP actively reduces confidence in the business as a reliable recommendation. Every field matters: service categories, hours, photos, service areas, and the Q&A section. Google's AI assistant, Google Duplex, can make phone calls to businesses to verify pricing, availability, and service details - which means accuracy has become a baseline requirement, not an option.
AI systems don't just count stars - they read reviews. Sentiment analysis and the specific language customers use, such as mentioning services by name or describing the experience in detail, carry significant weight when AI evaluates which businesses to trust. A contractor with 80 recent reviews that mention "French drain installation" and "showed up on time" will outperform a competitor with a higher average star rating but vague or sparse feedback. Recency matters too - a steady stream of new reviews signals an active, reliable business.
Name, Address, and Phone number (NAP) consistency across every directory, listing, and platform is a foundational trust signal for AI systems. A mismatched phone number between Yelp, Angi, and the company website introduces doubt - and AI systems resolve doubt by recommending someone else. Keeping this data uniform across all platforms is one of the most direct actions a contractor can take to strengthen AI visibility.
Answer Engine Optimization is the strategic response to this new environment. Where SEO focused on getting indexed and ranked, AEO focuses on getting chosen - positioning a business to appear as a confident, direct answer inside AI-generated responses.
Schema markup, typically implemented as JSON-LD, tells AI systems exactly what a business does, where it operates, and what services it offers - in a language machines parse effortlessly. Without structured data, AI has to guess at this context from unstructured text. With it, the business becomes easy to classify, cite, and recommend. At minimum, contractors should implement LocalBusiness and Service schema on every relevant page.
AI tools favor businesses whose websites actively address real buyer questions. A roofing contractor who publishes a page answering "How long does a roof replacement take in cold weather?" is signaling topical authority - demonstrating deep subject knowledge while addressing what customers actually ask. Seasonal content tied to service demand, FAQ sections that mirror conversational search queries, and dedicated pages for each specific service all feed into how confidently an AI can recommend a business.
Most contractors assume they're covered because they have a website or rank somewhere on Google. That assumption is worth testing. Run through this quick check:
If two or more of these are weak, the business is likely invisible to AI recommendation engines - regardless of how it ranks on traditional Google search.
Most contractors haven't adjusted yet. Many marketing agencies are still selling rank-focused SEO packages built for a search behavior that's quickly becoming secondary. That gap between where the market is heading and where most businesses are positioned creates a real window.
Contractors who establish AI visibility now - by building strong GBP signals, generating specific reviews, deploying schema, and creating authoritative service content - will accumulate recommendation history that AI systems increasingly rely on. The longer that track record builds, the harder it becomes for a late-moving competitor to displace them. Early adoption here goes beyond being first; it's about building a lead that compounds over time.
The shift from SEO to AEO is a present-tense competitive decision. Contractors who treat it that way will be the ones getting the calls.
Profit Acuity helps local contractors build the AI visibility foundation they need to stay competitive as search continues to evolve.