When a parent asks ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity to find an orthodontist nearby, the answer they get is built largely from your Google Business Profile: your listed hours, services, photos, and review content. These AI tools cross-reference that profile data with your website and directory listings to decide who to recommend and how to describe them. If your profile is thin, outdated, or inconsistent with other listings, the AI either skips your practice or describes it incorrectly.
The role of the profile in AI-sourced recommendations
Your Google Business Profile acts as the reference point that AI search tools use to verify and describe your orthodontic practice. When someone asks an AI assistant "which orthodontist near me takes new patients" or "who offers Invisalign in my area," the assistant pulls structured details from your profile first, then supplements with your website and reviews. A sparse or inaccurate profile means the AI has less to work with, so it either omits your practice or answers with outdated details a prospective patient can't trust.
Search engines like Google have spent years building AI Overviews and conversational answers directly on top of the business profile data owners already maintain. Assistants outside Google's ecosystem, including ChatGPT and Perplexity, still draw on the same public listing data because it's the most structured and frequently updated source available for local businesses. This means one profile now influences recommendations across multiple AI surfaces, not just traditional Google search results.
Fields assistants read most often
The fields AI systems weigh most heavily are your business category, services list, attributes (like "accepts new patients" or "offers free consultations"), and the business description. These fields are structured, meaning they're easy for an AI system to extract and quote directly. A generic category like "Dentist" instead of "Orthodontist" can cause an assistant to leave you out of a braces-specific query entirely.
Fill in every services field with the specific treatments you offer: traditional braces, clear aligners, retainers, early interceptive treatment, or adult orthodontics. Vague or missing entries in this section mean an AI assistant answering "does this practice treat teenagers with braces" has nothing to confirm the answer, so it either guesses wrong or excludes you from the response entirely. Attributes matter just as much: toggle on anything accurate, from wheelchair accessibility to virtual consultations, since these are the details assistants often use to filter one practice from another.
Hours, services, and photos that reinforce trust
Accurate hours, a complete services list, and recent photos work together to signal that a profile is actively maintained, which increases the likelihood an AI assistant treats the listed information as current and trustworthy. Photos showing the office, staff, and patient-facing areas give both human searchers and AI systems visual confirmation that the practice is real, operating, and matches its description.
Hours listed incorrectly cause a specific kind of damage: a family arrives at your office based on an AI-generated answer, finds the door locked, and never returns. Keep holiday hours and seasonal changes updated in the profile itself, since AI assistants have no way to know your practice closes early on Fridays unless that detail is entered. For photos, prioritize images that show current branding, updated equipment, and a clean waiting area, since older or generic stock-style photos can make an otherwise accurate profile look neglected. Reviews also factor in here: assistants summarizing "what do patients say about this orthodontist" pull directly from review text, so recent, detailed reviews mentioning specific treatments give the AI more accurate material to summarize.
Keeping information identical across the web
AI assistants build confidence in a business's details by checking whether the same name, address, phone number, hours, and services appear consistently across your Google Business Profile, website, and directory listings like Yelp or Healthgrades. When those details match everywhere, the AI treats the information as verified. When they conflict, for example, a phone number on your website that differs from the one on your Google profile, the AI has to choose which source to trust, and it may choose neither.
This consistency requirement, often called NAP consistency (name, address, phone number consistency), matters more for AI-generated answers than it did for traditional search results, because conversational AI tools frequently synthesize an answer from several sources at once rather than linking to just one. A mismatch that once cost you a lower ranking on a search results page can now cost you an entire recommendation, since the AI may simply decide the conflicting data isn't reliable enough to include. Audit your practice's name, address, phone number, and website URL across every platform where your practice is listed, and correct any variation, even something as small as "St." versus "Street."
Common profile gaps that cost consultations
The most damaging profile gaps are missing service categories, no recent photos, outdated hours, and an empty or generic business description, all of which leave an AI assistant with too little detail to confidently recommend a practice over a competitor with a fuller profile. Each gap represents a moment where the AI has a choice to make about your practice, and incomplete information pushes that choice toward "skip."
A generic business description that only says "Orthodontic office serving the local community" gives an AI assistant nothing specific to quote when a parent asks about early treatment for a seven-year-old or ceramic braces for an image-conscious teenager. Write the description around the actual services, age groups, and treatment options your practice handles, since that specificity is exactly what gets pulled into a conversational answer. An empty Q&A section on the profile is another common gap: patients and AI systems alike often check this section for direct answers about insurance, payment plans, or appointment availability, and a blank section signals the profile hasn't been maintained recently. Filling in the Q&A with real, specific answers turns it into another source of quotable, structured information for AI tools to draw from.
The owners who see the strongest results treat their Google Business Profile as a living document, updating it whenever hours, staff, services, or promotions change, rather than something set up once and forgotten. That ongoing maintenance is what keeps an AI assistant's description of the practice accurate months or years after the profile was first created.
Many orthodontic practice owners assume AI search tools work entirely from a website's content, so a well-designed site is enough on its own to be found and recommended. The reality is that AI assistants rely heavily on structured, verified profile data, especially from Google Business Profile, to confirm details like hours, services, and location before ever citing a website's text. A polished website with an incomplete or inconsistent business profile still leaves an AI assistant unsure whether to recommend the practice at all.