You can tell AI search is influencing your septic business by asking new callers a simple question about how they found you, then testing what tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity actually say when someone asks for a septic company in your area. If callers mention "I asked ChatGPT" or "an AI assistant recommended," or if those tools name your competitors instead of you when you test them, AI search is already shaping your call volume. The only way to know for certain is to ask and to check directly.
Signs AI is already influencing your septic leads
Septic company owners usually notice AI-driven calls through small clues rather than a single obvious source. Callers who reference "the AI" or "an assistant" when asked how they found you, spikes in calls after answering a homeowner forum question, or unfamiliar phrasing in inquiries ("I need someone who does perc tests near me") often signal that a generative AI tool answered a question and pointed the caller toward you or a competitor.
These clues are easy to miss because most septic businesses still track leads the same way they did before generative AI tools existed: website form, phone call, referral. AI search doesn't always show up as a separate category in that system. It hides inside "phone call" until you start asking the right follow-up question.
Questions to ask new callers about how they found you
Front desk staff and answering services can uncover AI-driven leads by asking new callers one added question: "Did you search online, ask an assistant like ChatGPT or Siri, or get a referral?" This single question, tracked consistently, reveals whether generative AI tools are already sending business your way and gives you a baseline to compare against in future months.
Most septic companies ask "how did you hear about us" but stop there, recording answers like "Google" or "saw your truck." That's not specific enough anymore. A caller who says "Google" might mean they typed a search into the browser, or they might mean they asked Google's AI Overview a question and clicked through from the summary. Train staff to follow up: "Was that a regular search, or did you ask a question and get a written answer back?" The distinction matters because it tells you whether your visibility problem is with traditional search rankings, AI-generated answers, or both.
How to test what AI engines say about your company
You can find out directly what AI search tools tell potential customers by typing the same questions a homeowner would ask into ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, then reading the exact answer returned. Ask things like "who does septic tank pumping near your town" or "best septic inspection company in your county" and note whether your business appears, what's said about it, and which competitors show up instead.
Run this test from a few different phrasings, since AI engines respond differently depending on how a question is worded. Try "septic company near me," "who installs septic systems in your town," and "septic emergency service your county." Pay attention to details in the answer: does it mention your service area correctly, your specialties (pumping, inspection, installation, repair), or your reputation? If a competitor is named and you aren't, that's a concrete gap you can address rather than a vague feeling that "something's off" with your online presence.
Do this test on a recurring basis rather than once. AI-generated answers change as these tools update their sources and as your business's own online information changes. A one-time check tells you where things stand today; repeating it tells you whether your visibility is improving or slipping.
Tracking changes in inquiry patterns over time
Comparing inquiry patterns month over month reveals whether AI search is becoming a bigger or smaller part of your septic business's lead flow. Once you've added the "how did you hear about us" follow-up question and started periodic AI engine testing, keep a simple log: date, number of calls attributing AI assistants as the source, and what your test searches turned up that same period.
Look for correlation between the two. If your AI engine tests start showing your business named more often in answers, and your call log starts showing more callers mentioning an assistant, that's a real signal, not a coincidence. If the tests show competitors dominating the answers and your AI-attributed calls stay flat or drop, that also tells you something concrete about where potential customers are being directed instead of to you.
This tracking doesn't need to be complicated. A shared spreadsheet that front desk staff update after each call, reviewed monthly alongside your AI search tests, is enough to spot trends most septic business owners currently have no visibility into at all.
What to adjust based on what you learn
Once you know whether AI search is sending you customers, naming competitors instead, or barely mentioning septic services in your area at all, you can decide where to focus. If competitors are consistently named and you aren't, look at what information about their business is publicly available online, things like service descriptions, service area details, and customer reviews, since AI tools draw on this kind of published information when constructing answers.
If your own business is missing entirely from AI-generated answers, the immediate priority is making sure basic information, service offerings, coverage area, and how you're described online, is accurate, current, and consistent across the places AI tools pull from. If you're already appearing but the description is incomplete or outdated, that's a narrower fix: updating what's out there rather than starting from nothing.
The adjustments that matter are the ones tied to what you actually found in your testing and call tracking, not a generic list of things every septic business should do. A company that's invisible in AI answers needs different attention than one that's visible but misdescribed.
Picture a homeowner noticing a slow drain and a bad smell in the yard. Instead of opening a search engine and scrolling through listings, they ask an AI assistant on their phone, "who should I call for a septic problem near me?" The assistant responds with a confident, specific answer, naming a septic company two towns over, describing their emergency response and service area, and suggesting they call. The homeowner doesn't cross-check that answer against five other sources. They just call the name they were given. If that name isn't yours, the job, and the customer relationship that could have followed it, goes to whoever the AI assistant decided to recommend.