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tipsFebruary 3, 20267 min read

5 Common Mistakes That Hurt Your AI Visibility

These common website mistakes confuse AI assistants and prevent them from recommending your business. Here's how to fix each one.

Why AI Ignores Some Websites

AI assistants like ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity want to give accurate recommendations. When they can't understand what a business does, they skip it and mention competitors instead.

Most businesses making these mistakes don't realize it. Their content makes perfect sense to human visitors. But AI reads differently.

Here are the five most common mistakes that hurt AI visibility, and exactly how to fix them.

Mistake 1: No Clear Identity Statement

The Problem

Your homepage dives straight into benefits, features, or your company story. But it never clearly states what you are.

Examples we see all the time:

  • "Transforming how teams work together"
  • "The future of customer engagement"
  • "Built for the way you do business"

These could describe literally anything. AI has no idea what you actually do.

Why It Hurts

AI needs to categorize you before it can recommend you. If it can't figure out whether you're a SaaS company, a consulting firm, a product, or a service, it moves on.

The Fix

Your first paragraph should explicitly state:

  • Your company/product name
  • What category you're in
  • Who you serve

Before: "We help businesses succeed in the digital age."

After: "Acme Analytics is a web analytics platform built for e-commerce stores with 1,000-10,000 monthly visitors."

That single sentence tells AI everything it needs to know.

How to Check

Ask ChatGPT: "What does [your company] do?"

If it gets it wrong or says "I don't have specific information," you have an identity problem.

Mistake 2: Marketing Speak Instead of Facts

The Problem

Your site is full of phrases like:

  • "Industry-leading solutions"
  • "World-class service"
  • "Innovative approach"
  • "Best-in-class results"

These sound impressive. They mean nothing to AI.

Why It Hurts

AI looks for facts it can use to answer questions. When someone asks "What companies make invoicing software for freelancers," AI can't use "industry-leading" as an answer.

It needs concrete information:

  • What you make
  • Who uses it
  • What it costs
  • What results it delivers

The Fix

Replace every vague claim with a specific fact.

Before: "Trusted by thousands of companies worldwide."

After: "Used by 2,400 companies including Basecamp, Notion, and over 300 Y Combinator startups."

Before: "Dramatically reduce your costs."

After: "Customers save an average of $450/month by switching from Salesforce."

How to Check

Read your homepage. Highlight every claim. Ask yourself: "Can AI verify this or use it in a recommendation?"

If no, replace it with something specific.

Mistake 3: Information Spread Across Many Pages

The Problem

Your pricing is on one page. Your features are on another. What you do is on a third page. Who you serve is mentioned somewhere else.

AI might only read one page. If that page doesn't have the full picture, AI gets incomplete information.

Why It Hurts

When someone asks AI "What's a good CRM for real estate agents," AI needs to know:

  • That you're a CRM
  • That you serve real estate agents
  • What your key features are
  • Roughly what you cost

If this information is scattered across five different pages, AI probably misses some of it.

The Fix

Your homepage should contain all essential information:

  • What you do
  • Who you serve
  • Key features or benefits
  • Pricing (at least a range)
  • How to get started

Other pages can go deeper. But the homepage needs the complete story.

Structure your homepage like this:

  1. Clear identity statement (what you are)
  2. Who you serve (your target customer)
  3. Main features or benefits (3-5 key points)
  4. Proof (customer count, results, testimonials)
  5. Pricing (exact or range)
  6. Call to action

How to Check

Read only your homepage. Can someone understand your entire value proposition? Or do they need to click around?

If they need to click around, consolidate.

Mistake 4: Vague Target Audience

The Problem

You say you serve "businesses of all sizes" or "anyone who wants to succeed" or "companies looking to grow."

This is positioning suicide for AI recommendations.

Why It Hurts

When someone asks "What's the best [product] for [specific audience]," AI looks for businesses that explicitly serve that audience.

If you claim to serve everyone, AI doesn't confidently recommend you for anyone.

The Fix

Get specific about who you're for. Even if you technically can serve multiple audiences, pick your primary one and state it clearly.

Before: "Perfect for businesses of any size."

After: "Built for B2B SaaS companies with 10-100 employees."

Before: "Anyone who needs better project management."

After: "Project management for creative agencies managing 5+ client projects simultaneously."

The narrower your positioning, the more confidently AI recommends you for that specific audience.

How to Check

Ask yourself: "If someone asked AI for a tool for [specific type of customer], would AI mention us?"

If you can't name the specific type of customer, that's the problem.

Mistake 5: No Structured Data

The Problem

Your website has no schema markup. AI has to guess what type of page it's looking at and what information matters.

Why It Hurts

Structured data explicitly tells AI:

  • This is a product page (or company page, or article)
  • Here's the name
  • Here's what it does
  • Here's the price
  • Here's the category

Without it, AI infers this from your content. Sometimes it gets it wrong.

The Fix

Add schema markup to your key pages.

For your homepage: Organization schema

  • Company name
  • What you do
  • Founded date
  • Location

For product pages: Product schema

  • Product name
  • Category
  • Price
  • Description
  • Availability

For blog posts: Article schema

  • Headline
  • Author
  • Publish date
  • Description

Most website builders and CMS platforms have plugins that add this automatically:

  • WordPress: Yoast SEO, RankMath
  • Shopify: Built-in for products
  • Webflow: Custom code or apps

How to Check

Use Google's Rich Results Test: search.google.com/test/rich-results

Enter your URL. If you see "No structured data found," that's what you need to add.

Bonus Mistake: Hiding Important Information

The Problem

Critical information requires:

  • Clicking through multiple pages
  • Filling out a form
  • Talking to sales
  • Creating an account

AI can't access any of that. If your pricing, key features, or what you actually do are behind gates, AI doesn't see them.

The Fix

Make essential information publicly accessible:

  • Pricing (at least ranges) on a public page
  • Key features visible without signup
  • What you do stated clearly on homepage

You can still gate detailed content, case studies, or premium information. But the basics need to be public.

How to Fix Your Site

Priority order:

Day 1: Fix your identity statement Rewrite your homepage first paragraph to clearly state what you do and who you serve.

Day 2: Replace vague claims with facts Go through your homepage and swap out marketing speak for specific information.

Day 3: Consolidate key information Make sure your homepage contains all essential details about your business.

Day 4: Specify your target audience If you say you serve "everyone," narrow it down to your primary customer.

Day 5: Add structured data Install a schema plugin or add markup manually to key pages.

Five days. These fixes alone can improve your AI visibility by 30-40 points.

Test Your Improvements

After making changes:

  1. Run your site through AI Lens to see your new score
  2. Ask ChatGPT and Claude what your company does
  3. Ask AI tools for recommendations in your category
  4. Check if you're being mentioned more often

The results should be noticeable within a few weeks as AI tools pick up your updated content.

The Bottom Line

AI visibility isn't mysterious. It's not about gaming algorithms or following complex technical requirements.

It's about clarity. Say explicitly what you do, who you serve, and why it matters. Replace vague claims with specific facts. Make important information easy to find.

Fix these five common mistakes and you'll be ahead of most of your competition.

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