What to do when AI describes your locksmith business incorrectly
If an AI answer engine states the wrong hours, services, or service area for your locksmith business, the fix is not to contact the AI provider and ask for a correction. Instead, locate and fix the public data source the AI pulled that information from, typically your Google Business Profile, a directory listing, or your own website, then wait for the engine to recrawl and update. Fixing the source is the only reliable way to change what customers see, because AI tools do not store facts about your business; they retrieve them fresh from whatever is publicly available.
Why answer engines sometimes state wrong hours, services, or areas
AI tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews do not know your business the way a human employee does. They generate answers by pulling from a mix of your website, directory listings, review platforms, and structured data on the web at the moment a question is asked. If any of those sources conflict or contain outdated information, the AI has no way of knowing which version is correct, so it may repeat whichever detail appears most frequently or most recently indexed. A locksmith that changed its hours, added mobile service, or expanded into a new neighborhood can easily be described as if none of that happened.
How outdated directory data becomes a wrong AI answer
Every online directory that lists your locksmith business, from general listing sites to industry-specific ones, is a potential source an AI system might reference when forming an answer. If your business changed its address, added 24-hour emergency service, or dropped a service it no longer offers, but a directory still shows the old details, that outdated entry can surface in an AI-generated response just as easily as your current website. The problem compounds when multiple directories disagree with each other, because the AI has no built-in way to determine which listing is authoritative and may default to the version that shows up most often across the sources it scans.
This is why a single outdated listing rarely causes a lasting problem, but several inconsistent listings across different platforms create a pattern that AI tools are more likely to pick up and repeat. A locksmith business that has moved locations, changed phone numbers, or updated its lineup of services (say, adding automotive lockout help or high-security lock installation) needs every public listing to reflect that change, not just the one or two the owner remembers to update.
Steps to correct the underlying public sources
Correcting an inaccurate AI description starts with identifying every place your locksmith business information lives publicly, then updating each one so they all agree. Begin with your Google Business Profile, since it is one of the most frequently referenced sources for local business questions, and confirm your hours, phone number, service area, and service list are current. From there, work through major directories and any industry-specific listing sites, checking that your business name, address, and phone number (often called NAP data) match exactly across every platform.
Next, review your own website for outdated pages, especially any "services" or "areas we serve" page that might not reflect recent changes. If your site has structured data (a behind-the-scenes markup that tells search engines and AI systems specific facts about your business, such as hours or service types), confirm that markup matches what is stated in the visible text on the page. A mismatch between what a page says and what its structured data says can itself become a source of conflicting information that an AI tool might draw from.
Finally, check recent customer reviews on major platforms for outdated claims repeated in owner responses, since AI systems sometimes reference review content when summarizing what a business offers. If a review mentions a service you no longer provide and your reply confirms it, that exchange can linger as a public record long after the service has changed.
Why fixing the source matters more than fixing the answer
Trying to correct what an AI tool says without fixing the underlying data is a temporary and ultimately ineffective approach, because AI answer engines regenerate responses from current public information rather than storing a fixed answer permanently. Even if a specific chatbot session gives an accurate answer after being corrected in conversation, the next person who asks the same question in a new session will get an answer pulled fresh from the same outdated sources, repeating the same mistake. There is no way to "tell" ChatGPT or Gemini a permanent fact about your business that persists across all future conversations with other users.
This is also why a locksmith business owner cannot rely on the AI vendors to notice and remove wrong information. Answer engines are not fact-checking every business detail against a trusted internal record; they are synthesizing from what is publicly available at the time of each query. If the public record is wrong, the AI answer will keep being wrong no matter how many times someone points it out in a single conversation. The only durable fix is making sure every public source, from directories to your own site, agrees on the same accurate facts.
Monitoring so errors do not return
Correcting inaccurate listings once is not enough, because directory data can drift out of date again after a move, a schedule change, or a change in service offerings. Setting a routine check, such as reviewing your Google Business Profile and top directory listings every few months, helps catch new inconsistencies before they have time to spread into AI-generated answers. It also helps to periodically ask AI tools directly how they describe your locksmith business, since this reveals what is currently being surfaced and whether recent corrections have taken effect.
Locksmith businesses that operate multiple vehicles, technicians, or service zones are especially prone to drift, since a change in one technician's coverage area or a temporary schedule adjustment can be misreported if not reflected everywhere at once. Building a habit of checking listings alongside other regular business tasks, such as monthly bookkeeping or quarterly service reviews, keeps the correction process from becoming a one-time scramble that quietly falls out of date again within a year.
A quick self-audit before you move on
Before assuming your locksmith business is described accurately across AI tools, sit down and answer these questions honestly:
- If you asked ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity right now what services your business offers, would the answer match what you actually provide today?
- Do your Google Business Profile, website, and every directory listing show the exact same hours, phone number, and address?
- When was the last time you checked whether your service area, as listed publicly, matches where your technicians actually go?
- If a customer read your most recent reviews and your replies to them, would they come away with an accurate picture of your current services?
If any of those answers made you pause, that is the starting point for your next round of corrections.