For twenty years, "being found online" meant one thing: rank on page one of Google, collect the click, win the call. That model is breaking. When a homeowner asks ChatGPT "who should I call about a roof leak in Miami?" — or when Google answers the same question with an AI Overview — there is no page one. There's an answer. It names two or three companies, and everyone else is invisible.
AI visibility is the discipline of measuring — and then improving — how often your company is one of those names. You'll also see it called answer engine optimization (AEO) or generative engine optimization (GEO). Whatever the label, for a trades business it comes down to one question: when your next customer asks AI who to hire, are you in the answer?
Why does AI visibility matter more for the trades than almost anyone?
Trades purchases are exactly the kind of question people hand to AI: high-stakes, local, and hard to evaluate yourself. A homeowner doesn't know how to compare TPO and EPDM roofing, but they know how to type "best roofer near me for a flat roof" into an assistant. And unlike a search results page — where a determined scroller can still find you at position #8 — an AI answer has no position #8. If the engine names three companies, the market just narrowed to three companies.
2–3
Companies a typical AI answer recommends by name — versus ten blue links on a classic results page
3.5×
How much more often the same contractor can appear on one engine versus another — every engine keeps its own list
run to run
AI answers change between runs of the same question — a single search proves nothing about your standing
What does AI visibility actually measure?
1. Visibility — how often you're named
Take the real buying questions in your trade and market — "tile roof replacement cost in Coral Gables", "emergency AC repair Miami", "best solar installer for a 2-story home" — and ask each one many times, on each engine. Your visibility score is the share of those answers that mention you. It's a frequency, not a yes/no, because the engines don't give the same answer twice.
2. Position — where you land when you are named
Being the first name in the answer is not the same as being the third name after "you could also consider…". Position tracks your average slot across the answers that include you. Moving from third-mention to first-mention often matters as much as getting mentioned at all.
3. Sentiment — what the engine says about you
Engines don't just list names; they characterize them. "Known for fast emergency response" wins calls. "Mixed reviews on scheduling" loses them. Sentiment tracking records the exact language the engines attach to your company, so you know what reputation you're carrying into every answer.
Where do the engines get their opinions?
AI answers are assembled from sources: the engine retrieves pages it trusts, then writes an answer grounded in them. For local trades questions, the sources that show up again and again are review platforms (Google reviews, Yelp, Angi, Houzz), local directories, Reddit threads — and, more than anything else in our data, contractors' own websites. The single most-cited source category is pages contractors published themselves: cost guides, service-area pages, project galleries with real detail.
That's the strategic opening. You can't buy your way into an AI answer — there's no ad slot — but you can own the pages the engines cite. A priced, local, genuinely useful cost guide doesn't just rank on Google; it becomes the raw material AI uses to write its answer, with your name attached.
How do you start improving AI visibility this week?
- Baseline yourself. Run a structured check of the top buying questions in your market — many times per question, per engine, not one search.
- Baseline your competitors. The engines are already recommending someone. Find out who, and how often.
- Read the sources. For every answer that skips you, look at what the engine cited. That list is your content roadmap.
- Fix the biggest gap first. Usually it's a missing cost guide or a thin service page for a market you actually serve.
- Re-measure weekly. AI answers drift. Visibility work only compounds if you can see the needle move.
The contractors winning this channel in 2026 aren't doing anything mystical. They measured where they stood, published the pages the engines wanted to cite, and tracked the number every week until it moved. The ones losing it are mostly unaware the channel exists — which, for now, is exactly the opportunity.



