Google Business Profile and AI answer tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity are not two separate lead sources for a concrete or masonry business anymore — they draw from overlapping signals. The map pack still runs on your Business Profile data, but AI answers increasingly pull from that same profile, plus reviews and web mentions, to decide which contractor to name by name. A concrete company that keeps both sources accurate and consistent shows up in more places a homeowner actually looks.
What the Business Profile still does for map and local pack results
Google Business Profile remains the backbone of local search for masonry and concrete companies. It's what populates the map pack, the three-listing block that appears when someone searches "concrete contractor near me" or "masonry repair your city." Categories, service areas, photos, hours, and review counts on the profile directly influence whether a business appears in that block at all, and where it ranks inside it.
If your profile is thin, mis-categorized as "general contractor" instead of "masonry contractor," or missing recent photos of finished patios and retaining walls, you lose visibility in the exact spot where most local searches still resolve. This part of local search has not changed. What has changed is who else is reading that same profile data before a customer ever clicks a map pin.
What AI answers add on top of the profile
AI answer engines take the same raw material — your Business Profile listing, your reviews, your website, mentions on other local sites — and compress it into a direct recommendation instead of a list of ten links. When someone asks ChatGPT or Gemini "which masonry contractor in my area does stone veneer well," the engine is not running its own separate local index. It's synthesizing what's already public about your business, including much of what lives on your Google profile, and deciding whether to say your name.
This is the layer people mean when they talk about AEO (answer engine optimization, or making a business easy for AI tools to summarize and recommend) and GEO (generative engine optimization, tuning content so generative AI tools cite it accurately). Neither replaces the profile. Both depend on it being complete and current, because a sparse or outdated profile gives the AI engine less confident material to work with, and less confidence means it names a competitor instead.
Why consistency between the two sources decides who gets named
A concrete or masonry business that gets named in AI answers almost always has a Business Profile, website, and review history that all tell the same story. Mismatched information — a phone number that's different on the profile than on the website, service areas listed inconsistently, a business name that appears three different ways across directories — creates the kind of uncertainty that makes an AI engine either hedge with a generic answer or skip mentioning you entirely.
Think of it less as two competing channels and more as one trust signal viewed from two angles. The map pack rewards a profile that's complete and active. AI answers reward a business whose identity, services, and reputation are stated the same way everywhere they're mentioned. When your hours, address, service list, and business name match across your Google profile, your website, and the directories AI tools scan, both systems read you as a real, established contractor rather than a listing that might be outdated or unreliable. Inconsistency is the single biggest reason a legitimate, well-reviewed masonry company gets passed over by an AI answer in favor of a competitor with a plainer but more coherent footprint.
How to keep both working together for a concrete business
Keeping a Business Profile and AI visibility aligned is not two separate projects. It's one discipline: make sure the facts about your masonry business are accurate, complete, and identical everywhere they appear, then keep them that way as your business changes. A few habits carry most of the weight.
Start with the Business Profile itself. Confirm the primary category matches what you actually do (masonry contractor, concrete contractor, or both, if that's accurate), fill in every service area you genuinely cover, and add photos of recent, specific work — a stamped concrete driveway, a repointed brick chimney, a poured retaining wall — rather than generic stock images. Respond to reviews, since AI engines weigh review content and recency when forming an opinion of a business, not just the star rating.
Next, check that your website states the same business name, phone number, address, and service list as the profile, word for word where possible. Small discrepancies, like listing "brick and stone masonry" on one and "masonry and hardscaping" on the other, are the kind of soft inconsistency that erodes confidence over time even though no single instance looks like an error.
Finally, look at how your business is described on third-party sites: supplier directories, local chamber listings, review platforms, past customer mentions. You can't control every one of these, but you can correct the ones that are wrong and make sure your own primary sources — profile and website — are the accurate version those other mentions should match. AI answer engines cross-reference multiple sources before naming a business, so the more of those sources that agree, the more likely your name comes up when a homeowner asks an AI tool who to call for concrete or masonry work.
The one move that outranks everything else this month
If you do nothing else, spend this month making your Google Business Profile and your website say the exact same thing about your business name, phone number, service area, and core services, word for word. This single alignment matters more than any other action because both the map pack and every AI answer engine are ultimately checking your information against itself before they check it against your competitors. A masonry company with a modest but perfectly consistent footprint will out-perform a busier but mismatched one, because consistency is what turns a search result into a spoken recommendation.