Run the same prompts your clients would
The fastest way to check what ChatGPT and Gemini say about your salon is to open each tool and type the questions a new client would actually ask, such as "best barbershop near your neighborhood" or "your salon name hours and services." Read the answer closely for accuracy, whether your business is named at all, and which competitors show up instead. This takes fifteen minutes and tells you more about your AI visibility than any guess.
Hair salons and barbershops depend on local trust signals: reviews, hours, specialties, walk-in policy. AI-powered search engines like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews now answer questions that used to send someone straight to Google Maps or Yelp. If those tools describe your shop with outdated hours, the wrong address, or don't mention you at all, you lose a client before they ever see your storefront. Checking this directly, rather than assuming your Google Business Profile is enough, is the only way to know where you actually stand.
Prompts to test across engines
Testing the right prompts means asking each AI tool the same questions a first-time client would type into a search bar, not questions written for your own marketing purposes. Run these across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity separately, since each pulls from different sources and can give different answers about the same shop on the same day.
Useful prompts to run include:
- "Best barbershop in your city or neighborhood"
- "your salon name reviews"
- "Where can I get a fade haircut near your city"
- "Salons that do balayage in your city"
- "your salon name hours today"
- "Is your salon name open on Sundays"
- "Walk-in barbershops near your landmark or street"
Ask each version in plain, conversational language, the way a client would speak into their phone rather than type into a search box. Note whether the AI tool names your business at all, whether it gets basic facts right, and whether it recommends a competitor by name before it mentions you. Repeat the same prompts a few days apart, since answers can shift as these tools update.
Reading the results for accuracy and mentions
Reading AI-generated answers for accuracy means checking three things every time: is your business named, is the information about it correct, and is the tone favorable. An AI tool can mention your barbershop and still steer a client away if it says you're "closed" when you're open, lists an old address, or describes services you no longer offer. Accuracy problems are often more damaging than simply not being mentioned.
Go line by line through each response. Confirm your hours, address, phone number, and service list match what's true today. Check whether the tool cites a source, such as your website, your Google Business Profile, or a review site, since that citation often reveals where the wrong information originated. If ChatGPT says you closed at 5pm but you're open until 7pm, that error likely traces back to an outdated directory listing somewhere online, and correcting it there is what will change the AI answer over time.
Also pay attention to how the AI tool frames your business. A neutral mention ("there's also a barbershop called X on Main Street") does far less work for you than a specific, favorable one ("X is known for classic fades and walk-in availability"). The second kind comes from detailed, consistent information about your specialties appearing across the web, since AI tools tend to repeat specific language they find in multiple places rather than invent it.
Spotting competitors named ahead of you
Spotting competitors named ahead of you in an AI answer tells you exactly who you're losing clients to before you ever compete on price or skill. When you run a prompt like "best barbershop near your neighborhood" and a competitor's name appears first, or appears at all while yours doesn't, that's a direct signal about which shop has stronger, more consistent information online.
Make a short list every time you test: which competitors show up, in what order, and with what descriptions. If the same one or two shops keep appearing across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, look at what they have that you might not, such as a larger volume of recent reviews, a more detailed website describing specific services, or consistent business information across multiple listing sites. AI tools are drawing on patterns across the web, so a competitor who shows up repeatedly usually has more usable, specific content for the AI to pull from, not necessarily a better shop.
This comparison also helps you catch cases where the AI tool is confusing your business with another one nearby, especially if you share a similar name or are located close to a shop with an established online presence. That kind of mix-up is fixable once you know it's happening, but invisible if you never run the check.
Turning findings into a fix list
Turning what you find into a fix list means separating problems by cause: wrong information, missing information, and weak information. Each type needs a different response, and trying to fix all three the same way wastes time. Start by writing down every specific error or gap you noticed during testing, one line per issue, before you touch anything.
For wrong information, such as bad hours or an old address, trace it back to the source. Update your Google Business Profile, your website, and any directory listings where the incorrect detail might be living, since AI tools often pull from more than one of these at once. For missing mentions, focus on making your specialties and services more explicit and consistent everywhere your business appears online, since AI tools favor specific, repeated details over vague descriptions. For weak or generic mentions, add detail: name the exact services you're known for, the neighborhoods you serve, and what makes an appointment at your shop different from the one down the street.
Recheck the same prompts every few weeks rather than once. AI tools update their answers as new information becomes available online, so a fix list is only useful if you follow up and confirm the change actually appeared in the answer, not just on your own website.
Checking what ChatGPT and Gemini say about your barbershop is not a one-time task you complete and move past. It is a habit, similar to checking your Google Business Profile or your online reviews, because the accuracy and framing of these answers directly shapes whether a new client walks in the door or walks into a competitor's shop instead.