How to spot AI-influenced leads without perfect tracking
There is no single dashboard that labels a lead "sent by ChatGPT," but you can still measure AI search leads for contractors by combining three habits: asking new inquiries a direct question about how they found you, reading specific patterns in your website analytics, and periodically testing what AI tools actually say when someone asks about remodelers in your area. None of these require new software, only consistency in checking them.
Homeowners increasingly research contractors by typing a question into an AI chat tool instead of scrolling a search results page. Tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews (the summarized answers that appear above standard search results) often name a small number of local businesses directly in their response. If your business is one of them, a homeowner may call you having already decided you are a strong candidate, without ever clicking a traditional ad or visiting a review site first. That behavior leaves different footprints than a typical Google search, and learning to notice those footprints is the first step to understanding whether this channel is working for you.
Questions to ask new inquiries about how they found you
The fastest way to find out if AI tools are sending customers is to ask them directly during the first phone call or estimate visit. A simple "How did you hear about us?" often gets a vague answer like "I looked it up online," but a slightly more specific follow-up question can reveal whether an AI assistant was part of that research process.
Train whoever answers your phone or books estimates to ask two follow-up questions instead of stopping at "online." First: "Did you search for us by name, or were you looking for a remodeler in general and found us that way?" Second, when the answer suggests general research: "Did you use ChatGPT, Gemini, or something like that, or a regular search engine?" Many homeowners will not know the technical distinction between an AI Overview and a normal search result, but they usually remember if they typed a full question like "who's a good kitchen remodeler near me" into a chat window versus clicking through a list of blue links. Log these answers in whatever system you already use to track leads, even a simple spreadsheet, so patterns show up over weeks rather than getting lost in memory.
Signals in your analytics worth watching
Certain patterns in website traffic and search visibility tend to show up when AI tools are referencing a business, even without a dedicated tracking tool. Watching for these signals over time gives a clearer picture than any single data point, since AI-referred visits often behave differently than traffic from paid ads or direct searches.
Check your website analytics for referral traffic sources you may not recognize by name, since some AI tools pass along a referral tag when a user clicks a link from a generated answer. Look also at direct traffic that arrives on an inner page, like a specific service page or project gallery, rather than the homepage; this pattern can suggest someone clicked a specific citation rather than typing your URL from memory. Pay attention to search queries in your Google Search Console data that read like full questions ("best general contractor for a bathroom addition in your town") rather than short keyword phrases, since AI tools tend to train users toward asking full questions. Finally, watch whether the length of time between a website visit and a phone call or form submission gets shorter for a segment of leads. Someone arriving after already reading an AI-generated summary of your services has done more research before ever landing on your site, so they often convert faster.
Testing your own visibility across chat tools
Watching analytics tells you what already happened, but testing chat tools directly tells you what a homeowner would see right now if they asked about remodelers in your area. This kind of testing takes a few minutes and does not require any technical background, just a willingness to ask the same questions a prospective customer might ask.
Open ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity and ask each one a version of the question a homeowner would type, such as "Who are good general contractors for a home addition in your city?" or "Recommend a remodeling company near your neighborhood." Note whether your business is mentioned by name, whether competitors are mentioned instead, and what details the tool includes about you, since these often come from your website, your Google Business Profile, or review sites. Repeat the same test with slightly different phrasing, since AI tools can give different answers depending on how a question is worded. Also check Google directly for a search that would trigger an AI Overview, and see whether your business appears in that summary box above the regular results. Doing this test on a recurring schedule, rather than once, matters because these tools update their answers as new information about your business and your competitors becomes available online.
Adjusting based on what you learn
The value of tracking questions, analytics signals, and chat tool tests comes from acting on what they show, not just collecting the information. If your business rarely appears when you run these tests, or if new leads never mention AI-assisted research, that tells you where attention is currently missing and where it might be worth focusing effort on your website content, your Google Business Profile details, and the consistency of your business information across review sites and directories.
If testing shows competitors mentioned more often than your business, look at what those competitors have in common: detailed service pages, current project photos, active review profiles, or clear service-area information. AI tools tend to pull from sources that state information plainly and consistently, so gaps in your own online presence are often the reason a competitor gets named instead of you. If your analytics show a growing pattern of question-style search queries or unfamiliar referral sources, treat that as a sign to keep watching rather than a one-time fix, since this channel continues to shift as the tools themselves change.
Checking your own progress without waiting on anyone else's report
You do not need to depend on a third party to know whether this is working. Once a month, run the same three or four AI tool questions you started with and write down whether your business appears and what it says about you. Check your Google Search Console query list for question-style searches and note whether that list is growing. Review your lead log for how many new inquiries mention an AI tool by name when asked how they found you. Comparing these month over month, in your own records, is the most direct way to see whether AI search is sending more customers to your remodeling business over time.