Perplexity answers homeowner questions by scanning web pages and showing numbered citations next to its answer, similar to footnotes. To get linked as a window or door replacement contractor, your website needs pages that directly answer specific homeowner questions in plain language, with clear service details Perplexity can quote and attribute back to you. Contractors who write generic "About Us" pages rarely get cited; contractors who answer real questions do.
Why Perplexity behaves differently than Google search results
Perplexity is an AI answer engine, meaning it generates a written response to a question and shows the sources it pulled from, rather than returning a list of ten blue links for a user to click through. When someone asks "who replaces windows near me" or "how much does a door replacement cost," Perplexity reads multiple pages, synthesizes an answer, and cites the pages it trusted most. Your window or door business only appears in that answer if a page on your site directly matches the question being asked. This is different from ranking for a keyword; it is about being the clearest, most specific source Perplexity can quote.
Why citation-friendly pages win with Perplexity users
Citation-friendly pages are pages written to directly answer one clear question, using specific details a search engine or AI tool can lift and attribute without guessing at intent. Perplexity favors pages that state facts plainly instead of pages built around brand storytelling or vague service claims, because plain factual statements are easier to extract and quote accurately in an answer.
For a window and door replacement business, that means a page titled "How long does a window replacement take" should answer that exact question in the first sentence, not bury it under three paragraphs of company history. Perplexity's citation logic rewards pages that reduce ambiguity. A page that says "we offer a variety of services" gives the tool nothing to quote. A page that says what materials you install, what areas you serve, and what the replacement process involves gives Perplexity language it can safely cite. The more specific and self-contained each page's answer is, the more likely it becomes the source Perplexity chooses when a homeowner asks a related question.
The homeowner research questions Perplexity handles
Homeowners increasingly ask Perplexity the kinds of questions they used to type into Google and then click through five different sites to answer, such as how long a project takes, whether a permit is needed, or what the difference is between vinyl and fiberglass frames. Perplexity tries to answer these directly in one response, pulling from whichever contractor sites, manufacturer sites, or review sites explain the topic most clearly.
This matters for window and door replacement businesses because these are exactly the questions homeowners research before they ever pick up the phone. Someone comparing energy-efficient window options, deciding whether a storm door needs a permit, or trying to understand the difference between full-frame and pocket door replacement is doing research Perplexity is built to shortcut. If your site has a page answering each of these questions in isolation, you have a chance of being the cited source at the exact moment a homeowner is narrowing down who to call. If your site only has a homepage and a contact form, Perplexity has nothing specific to pull from, and a competitor's clearer page gets the citation instead.
Structuring answers so Perplexity links to you
Structuring a page so Perplexity can cite it means answering one question per page, stating the answer in the first sentence or two, and following with specific supporting detail rather than general marketing language. Each page should stand on its own, since Perplexity extracts and quotes sections independently rather than reading a whole site as one narrative.
Practical steps that help a window or door replacement business get cited:
- Write separate pages or sections for common questions like "how much does window replacement cost in your region," "what's the difference between vinyl and wood window frames," or "do I need a permit to replace an exterior door." Each should open with a direct answer.
- State service area, materials installed, and typical project timelines in plain sentences rather than adjectives like "fast" or "affordable" without specifics.
- Avoid burying the answer under navigation text, slideshows, or long introductions. Perplexity's citation logic favors the page section that answers the question fastest.
- Keep contact and service information consistent across your site and other listings, since inconsistent details make a source less trustworthy to cite.
- Update pages when your process, materials, or service area changes, since outdated specifics reduce the chance of being quoted accurately.
None of this requires new software or a rebuilt website. It requires treating each page as the answer to one specific homeowner question, written the way you would explain it to a customer standing in your showroom.
The one-week check to see if Perplexity can find your business
Run this yourself before assuming your marketing is working: open Perplexity and ask it the three questions your actual customers ask most, such as "who replaces windows in your city," "how much does door replacement cost," and "what's the best window material for your climate." Read every answer closely. Note whether your business is cited, whether a competitor is cited instead, and which specific page each competitor's citation links to. Then open that competitor page and compare it to your own equivalent page, sentence by sentence, for how directly and specifically it answers the question. Wherever your page is vaguer or slower to get to the point, that is the exact section to rewrite this week.