Ranking on Google and being cited by ChatGPT measure different things: Google ranking rewards keyword relevance and backlinks, while AI engines like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity reward content they can lift out of context and quote directly. A speech-language pathology website can rank on page one for "speech therapist near me" and still never get mentioned in an AI-generated answer, because the page was built to attract clicks, not to supply a self-contained answer an AI can reuse without rewriting it.
How AI engines gather source material
AI search tools do not browse the web the way a person clicks through search results. They pull from indexed content, chop it into passages, and select the passages that most directly answer a question in plain language. For a speech-language pathology practice, that means an AI engine is scanning for a clear, standalone sentence about what you treat, who you treat, and what happens in a session, not a full page of narrative copy that requires context from three paragraphs earlier to make sense.
This is why a site can perform well in traditional search and still be passed over. Traditional search engines index the whole page and weigh signals like links and click behavior. AI engines extract fragments. If your fragment does not answer a question on its own, it gets skipped in favor of a competitor's page that states things more plainly, even if that competitor's overall site is smaller or ranks lower on Google.
Content structure that engines skip
Content structured as flowing narrative, with answers buried inside long paragraphs or scattered across multiple sections, is difficult for AI engines to extract cleanly, so it gets passed over even when the information is accurate and well-written. Speech-language pathology sites are especially prone to this because clinical writing tends to build context gradually, easing a reader into a diagnosis or treatment description rather than stating it upfront.
An AI engine evaluating a page about pediatric articulation therapy is not looking for a warm introduction about communication milestones. It is looking for something close to "Pediatric articulation therapy helps children produce speech sounds correctly through targeted exercises." If that sentence does not exist anywhere on the page in a self-contained form, the engine has nothing to quote, regardless of how much useful information surrounds it. Bullet lists without context, FAQ sections with vague questions, and headings that describe a topic without stating the answer all fall into this same trap.
Why thin service pages fail the quote test
Thin service pages, ones that name a condition or age group without explaining what treatment actually involves, fail the quote test because there is no complete claim for an AI engine to extract. A page titled "Speech Therapy for Adults" that lists a phone number and a stock photo gives an AI engine nothing to work with, even if the page satisfies a human visitor who already knows what they are looking for.
This matters most for the specific, high-intent questions AI search is built to answer: "Does speech therapy help with stuttering in adults?" or "What does an SLP do for aphasia after a stroke?" If a practice's page on aphasia treatment does not contain a direct, quotable sentence answering that exact question, the AI engine will find and cite a competitor's page that does, even if that competitor is a general clinic with less specialized experience. Ranking position on Google does not protect against this gap, because the two systems are scoring different things.
Fixes that improve quotability
Quotability improves when each service page opens with a direct, complete answer to the question a patient or caregiver would actually type into a search bar, followed by supporting detail broken into clearly labeled sections. This means rewriting the first two or three sentences of every core service page so they work as a standalone quote, then organizing the rest of the page so an AI engine (and a human skimming on a phone) can find specifics without reading the whole page.
Practical steps that make a difference:
- Open every service page with a plain-language answer to the primary question that page is meant to address, stated in a sentence that makes sense without any prior context.
- Break long clinical descriptions into short, labeled sections such as "Who this treats," "What a session looks like," and "How progress is measured," so each section can stand alone as a source passage.
- Replace vague headings like "Our Approach" with headings that state the actual answer, such as "How stuttering therapy works for adults."
- Add a genuinely specific FAQ section with real patient questions, phrased the way people actually ask them, each followed by a direct two-to-three sentence answer.
- Define clinical terms inline the first time they appear, since AI engines favor passages that are understandable without outside context, and so do prospective patients unfamiliar with the field.
None of this requires abandoning the clinical accuracy or professional tone a speech-language pathology practice depends on. It requires stating the answer before building the case for it, which is the opposite instinct from how most clinical writing is trained.
What changes first when you fix this, and what takes longer
In the months after rewriting service pages for direct, quotable answers, the visible change tends to follow a predictable order: search engines and AI tools notice the clearer structure before patients start mentioning it. Google's own snippet and "people also ask" results often begin reflecting the rewritten pages first, since those systems re-crawl and re-index frequently. AI engines that rely on periodic retraining or less frequent indexing take longer to pick up the same changes, so citations in ChatGPT or Perplexity answers tend to lag behind the Google-side improvements.
The slower, more durable shift is in the pages themselves settling into a pattern where every service, every condition treated, and every age group served has its own direct answer stated plainly near the top. That consistency across a full site, not just a handful of updated pages, is what makes a practice a reliable source an AI engine returns to across many different patient questions rather than just one. Practices that treat this as a one-time edit to a homepage rarely see the same lift as those that carry the same discipline through every service and condition page.