People ask AI tools questions like "how much does it cost to hire movers," "how far in advance should I book a move," and "do movers provide insurance for broken items" before they ever contact a moving company. These are the same questions they used to type into Google or ask a friend who moved recently, but now an AI answer engine like ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity gives them a direct answer and, often, a short list of companies worth contacting. If your website doesn't answer these questions clearly, the AI has nothing of yours to cite, and it will recommend a competitor instead.
The pre-booking questions customers ask answer engines about moving
Before hiring a mover, people ask AI tools a predictable set of questions: what a local or long-distance move costs, how much to tip movers, what items movers won't take, whether they need to be present during the move, and how to spot a moving scam. They also ask comparison questions like "should I hire full-service movers or rent a truck myself," which is where a company with clear, specific answers on its site has the best shot at being named.
These questions cluster into a few categories: cost, timing, trust and safety, and logistics. A person planning a move two months out is not yet ready to call anyone. They're using AI the way people used to use a knowledgeable neighbor, asking basic questions to build a mental model of what's normal before they start reaching out to specific companies. Whoever answers those basic questions in plain language, on a page the AI can read and quote, tends to show up when the person finally asks "who should I hire near me."
How AI answers cost, timing, and insurance questions
When someone asks an AI tool how much movers cost, the AI pulls from whatever pages online state pricing factors clearly, such as move size, distance, and additional services like packing. Without published numbers from you, the AI will describe cost ranges in general terms or cite competitors who do publish specifics, which puts your business at a disadvantage in that answer.
The same pattern holds for timing and insurance questions. If someone asks how far ahead to book movers, or whether movers carry insurance for damaged belongings, the AI looks for a source that states the answer directly rather than burying it inside a long paragraph about the company's history. A moving company that publishes a clear breakdown of its insurance coverage options, or a straightforward answer to "how many weeks before moving day should I book," gives the AI something concrete to lift. Vague marketing language about being "trusted" or "reliable" doesn't answer the question, so it doesn't get quoted.
Why answering these on your site gets you cited
Getting cited by an AI answer engine means your business name and details show up when someone asks a moving-related question, even if they never visit your website first. This matters because AI tools increasingly produce zero-click answers, meaning the person gets their question answered directly in the chat and may only click through, or call, one of the businesses mentioned by name.
To be one of those names, your site needs pages that answer specific questions in a format the AI can extract cleanly: a direct answer near the top, followed by supporting detail. This is different from writing for a person who lands on your homepage and reads top to bottom. AI answer engines scan for the clearest, most specific answer to the exact question asked. A page titled "how much do local movers cost" that opens with a direct, specific answer will outperform a page that only mentions pricing in passing on an "about us" page.
Mapping questions to pages a mover should have
A moving company that wants to show up in AI answers needs individual pages, or at least clearly labeled sections, that match how customers actually ask questions. Instead of one generic "services" page, the site should have separate, direct answers for cost questions, timing questions, insurance and liability questions, and logistics questions like what happens to furniture that doesn't fit through a doorway.
Practical examples of pages worth having: a pricing page that explains what drives cost up or down, a page answering how far in advance to book during busy versus slow seasons, a page explaining what your insurance or valuation coverage actually protects, and a page listing items you won't move (propane tanks, plants, valuables) and why. Each of these should open with a direct answer in the first sentence or two, since that's the portion most likely to get pulled into an AI response. Local details matter too. Naming the neighborhoods, buildings, or towns you serve most often helps an AI tool connect your business to a "movers near me" style question.
Turning answered questions into inquiries
Answering a question well is only useful if it leads somewhere. Every page built to answer a specific pre-booking question should include a clear next step: a phone number, a quote request form, or a scheduling link placed where someone who just got their question answered can act on it right away without hunting for contact information.
The goal is to catch the moment when curiosity turns into intent. Someone who asked an AI tool "what does it cost to move a two-bedroom apartment" and then read your page explaining exactly that is closer to booking than someone browsing a general services page. That person doesn't need another sales pitch; they need a simple way to get a quote for their specific situation. A short form asking for move size, distance, and date, paired with a fast response time, converts that page visit into an actual inquiry instead of a bounce.
If you're wondering whether all this is worth doing when you already rank on Google and get referrals, here's the honest answer: AI answer engines are becoming a separate front door, not a replacement for the one you already have. You don't need to abandon what's working. You need your existing site to answer the specific questions people are now asking a chatbot instead of typing into a search bar, so that when the AI hands someone a short list of movers to call, your name is on it. That's not extra work on top of your marketing, it's making sure the marketing you already have gets read by the tool your future customers are increasingly asking first.