What determines inclusion in an AI-generated summary
AI Overviews (Google's summarized answers that appear above standard search results) and Perplexity, an AI search engine that answers questions directly and lists its sources, choose which oral and maxillofacial surgery practices to name based on how clearly a practice's website answers a specific question, how consistently that information appears across the web, and whether other trusted sites reference the practice at all. A practice that never gets named usually has a website that is vague, hard to parse, or missing from the sources these tools already trust.
For an oral surgery practice, that means the difference between showing up when someone asks "who does wisdom tooth extraction near me" or "which oral surgeon handles dental implants for patients with bone loss" often comes down to whether a page on the practice's own site answers that exact question in plain language, not marketing copy.
How AI Overviews pull from cited sources
Google's AI Overviews work by scanning indexed pages, identifying the ones that most directly answer a searcher's question, and generating a summary that often links back to a small number of those pages. The system favors content that is specific, structured, and already ranking well in normal search results, because AI Overviews draw heavily from the same index Google uses for its standard listings.
For an oral surgery practice, this means a page explaining a single procedure, such as impacted canine exposure or corrective jaw surgery, has a better chance of being cited than a general "Services" page that lists ten procedures in a few sentences each. Google's system is looking for a page it can point to with confidence, and confidence comes from depth and clarity, not keyword repetition. Practices whose sites already rank for procedure-specific searches are the ones most likely to feed the summary.
Why Perplexity shows its sources and what that means for you
Perplexity displays the exact sources it used to build an answer, which means a practice can see precisely why it was or was not named. This transparency rewards websites that are easy to read for both patients and the underlying language model, and it penalizes sites that bury procedure details behind PDFs, image-based content, or vague navigation.
Because Perplexity lists citations openly, practice owners can search the questions their patients actually ask, such as "what is the recovery time for a bone graft before implant placement," and see which competing practices are being cited. If a competitor's page appears repeatedly and yours does not, that is a direct signal about what the competitor's site does better: likely a clearer, more specific answer to that exact question. Perplexity's openness turns AI visibility into something a practice can audit rather than guess about.
The role of authoritative, clearly written procedure pages
Procedure pages that explain what a treatment involves, who it is for, and what recovery looks like give AI systems the specific, well-organized content they need to generate a citation. A page that only states a procedure name without explaining the details gives the AI nothing to summarize, so the practice gets skipped in favor of a competitor whose page actually answers the question.
Strong procedure pages tend to separate distinct topics clearly, such as candidacy, the surgical process, and aftercare, rather than blending everything into a single dense paragraph. They also use the language patients actually type into search bars, like "wisdom tooth removal cost" or "TMJ surgery recovery," instead of clinical shorthand. An oral surgery practice with ten well-developed procedure pages will generally out-cite a practice with one long, unfocused page, because each page becomes a separate opportunity to answer a separate question precisely.
How reviews and third-party mentions feed the answer
Patient reviews, directory listings, and mentions on health information sites contribute to whether AI tools trust a practice enough to name it, because these systems weigh signals beyond the practice's own website to confirm that a business is real, active, and regarded well by patients. A practice with strong content on its own site but no presence elsewhere can still be passed over in favor of a practice with a thinner site but broader third-party confirmation.
This is why an oral surgery practice's reputation across Google Business Profile reviews, insurance directories, and referring dentist websites matters for AI visibility, not just for human trust. When multiple sources describe the same practice consistently, an AI system treats that consistency as a signal of legitimacy. Gaps or contradictions between a practice's website and its outside listings can quietly reduce the chances of being cited, even when the practice's own content is strong.
Making your pages easy for engines to cite
A page is easy for an AI system to cite when it directly answers one question near the top, uses plain descriptive language, and is organized with clear headings that separate related but distinct ideas. Schema markup (structured data added to a webpage that explicitly labels information like procedure names, FAQs, and business details for search engines) also helps by giving AI systems a machine-readable confirmation of what a page is about, reducing the guesswork involved in summarizing it.
Practices that want to be named more consistently should audit their procedure pages against the actual questions patients ask, check whether their business information matches across every directory and review platform, and confirm that each page leads with a direct answer rather than a general introduction. None of this requires guessing what an algorithm wants; it requires writing the way a knowledgeable surgeon would explain a procedure to a patient sitting in the chair, then making sure that explanation is easy for both people and machines to find.
What to ask a marketer before hiring them for AI search
Any marketer who claims to improve how often a practice shows up in AI Overviews or Perplexity answers should be able to explain, in specific terms, how a page earns a citation, not just that they will "optimize" the site. Ask them to show an example of a procedure page they have written or restructured and explain why an AI system would choose to cite it over a competitor's page.
Ask how they plan to handle consistency across review platforms and directories, since a mismatch between a website and outside listings can undercut even well-written content. Ask whether they track which pages actually get cited in AI answers over time, or whether they only report traditional search rankings. A marketer who understands AI search will talk about specific questions patients ask, specific pages that answer them, and specific evidence of citations, rather than vague promises about visibility.