Ranking well on Google and being recommended by ChatGPT are two separate outcomes, built by two different kinds of evaluation. Google ranks your website against other websites using links, keywords, and site behavior. ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity instead try to summarize a direct answer to a question, and they pull that answer from whichever sources they can parse and trust quickly. A deck and patio builder can dominate local search results and still never get named when someone asks an AI assistant "who should I hire to build a deck near me."
Why answer engines read your content differently than Google does
Google's ranking system rewards pages that earn authority over time through links, reviews, and consistent signals, then lets a person click through and decide for themselves. AI answer engines skip the click entirely. They read a page once, try to extract a clear, self-contained fact or recommendation, and either use it or move to a competitor's page that was easier to lift a clean answer from. If your content requires scrolling, inference, or clicking to another page to understand what you actually do, the AI engine often just skips you.
This is why a deck and patio builder can have a page ranking on page one of Google for "deck builder your city" and still be absent from an AI Overview or a ChatGPT recommendation for the same question. The page was written to persuade a human who already landed on it, not to hand a machine a quotable, standalone answer about services, service area, and credentials.
The content structure that gets skipped by AI
Most builder websites bury their most useful facts inside long paragraphs, hero images, or PDF-style brochures that read well but don't extract cleanly. AI systems favor content that states things plainly: what you build, where you build it, and what makes you qualified, all in sentences that don't depend on a photo caption or a prior paragraph to make sense.
If your homepage opens with a slogan like "Turning backyards into memories" instead of a sentence naming your services and service area, an AI engine has nothing concrete to extract. Pages that mix marketing language with concrete facts, like project types, materials used, warranty terms, and licensing, give answer engines something they can pull out and cite word-for-word. Pages that are all tone and no stated facts get passed over, even when the tone is exactly what a homeowner would find persuasive if they read it themselves.
The fix isn't to strip out personality. It's to make sure every page has at least a few sentences early on that state, without requiring interpretation, who you are, what you build, and where you serve, in language a machine can lift as-is.
How inconsistent business info gets you dropped
AI systems cross-check facts across multiple sources before including a business in an answer, and a deck and patio builder with mismatched details across the web is a common reason for exclusion. If your city's business directory lists one phone number, your Google Business Profile lists a slightly different service area, and your website mentions a third variation of your company name, the answer engine has no confident, single version of the truth to cite. Rather than guess, it often leaves you out and cites a competitor whose name, address, phone number, and service list agree everywhere they appear.
This matters more for a seasonal, project-based trade like deck and patio building than for businesses with a single fixed location and hours. Builders often serve a spread of towns and counties, list slightly different service areas on different platforms, and update their site copy without updating directory listings to match. Each inconsistency is a small thing individually, but stacked together, they tell an AI system that your business identity is unreliable enough to skip.
What to change to become citable
Becoming citable, meaning your business gets named directly in an AI-generated answer, starts with treating your website's factual core as more important than its persuasive language. Every core page should state your services, service area, and credentials in plain sentences near the top, not buried under a hero video or scattered across a photo gallery.
Beyond the website itself, your business name, address, phone number, and service list need to match exactly across your Google Business Profile, Facebook page, industry directories, and any local citation site that mentions you. Reviews matter too: AI engines increasingly draw on review platforms to confirm what a business actually does and how customers describe the work, so a review that clearly states "they rebuilt our composite deck and matching patio in your town" does more citation work than a five-star rating with no detail.
Adding structured data, known as schema markup, that labels your business type, service area, and services in a format search engines and AI crawlers can read directly also increases the odds an answer engine picks you up correctly rather than guessing from unstructured text. None of this requires abandoning the persuasive, story-driven content that turns browsers into leads. It requires making sure the plain facts sit next to that story, stated clearly enough that a machine doesn't have to guess at them.
How to confirm the fix worked
Confirming whether your deck and patio business has become citable means testing the same questions a prospective customer would ask an AI assistant, not just checking your Google ranking. Ask ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity questions like "who builds decks in your city" or "recommend a patio contractor near your town" and see whether your business appears, and whether the details cited about you are accurate.
If you're absent, check whether a competitor with more consistent listings and clearer on-page facts is being cited instead, since that comparison usually reveals what's missing. If you appear but with the wrong phone number, an outdated service area, or a service you no longer offer, that points directly to a mismatch somewhere in your listings that needs correcting. Repeat this test every few months, since AI engines re-crawl and re-evaluate sources continuously, and a fix that works today can drift out of date as your listings or website change.
This kind of testing isn't a one-time project. It's closer to checking your voicemail greeting or your Google Business Profile hours, a small recurring check that keeps your business accurately represented wherever a customer might be asking about you.
If you're evaluating a marketer to help with this, ask them directly: can they show you an example of a business becoming citable in an AI-generated answer, not just ranking higher on Google? Ask how they'd audit your name, address, and phone number consistency across the directories and platforms that mention your business. Ask whether they test AI assistants directly, using real customer questions, rather than relying only on traditional search ranking reports. And ask what they'd change on your website's structure, not just its wording, to make your services and service area easier for an AI system to extract. A marketer who understands AI search will have specific, concrete answers to all four questions. One who doesn't will steer the conversation back to keyword rankings.