You can tell AI search is sending you daycare inquiries when new families mention phrases like "I asked ChatGPT" or "it came up when I searched," when tour requests arrive with oddly specific details about your programs before you've explained them, or when your website traffic shows visits with no clear referral source but a caller who already knows what to ask. None of these signs require special software to notice. They show up in ordinary conversations at pickup, on intake forms, and in the first thirty seconds of a phone call.
Signs that parents found you through AI, spelled out
Parents rarely say "AI search" by name. Instead they describe the experience: they asked a question on their phone, got a short written answer naming a few centers, and yours was one of them. Watch for callers who reference specific details about your center (ratios, curriculum, hours) before you've mentioned them, tour requests that come in clusters after a slow week with no obvious cause, and comments like "it said you had openings" when you never posted that anywhere public.
Tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, along with Google's AI Overviews (the summarized answers that appear above regular search results), pull information from your website, directory listings, and reviews to answer questions like "daycare near me with infant care" or "best preschool for a 2-year-old in your town." When a parent acts on that summary directly, without clicking through several websites first, the inquiry often looks different from a typical web search lead. It arrives more informed and more decided.
What "I saw you recommended" inquiries actually mean
When a parent says "I saw you were recommended," it usually means an AI tool named your center directly in response to a question, rather than the parent finding you through a list of blue links. This matters because it signals the parent did less independent comparison shopping. They arrived with a shorter mental list and a stronger initial impression already formed.
This phrase is worth treating as its own category, separate from "I found you on Google" or "a friend told me." A parent who says an AI tool recommended you is telling you that a written summary, not a webpage they scrolled through, shaped their first impression of your center. That summary was built from whatever text and reviews exist about you online. If the phrase comes up more than once or twice, it's a sign your online presence is already feeding these tools' answers, whether or not you've done anything intentional to make that happen.
Simple ways to ask new families how they found you
The most reliable way to know whether AI search is sending you inquiries is to ask directly, every time, using consistent wording. A simple intake question like "How did you hear about us?" with an open text field (not just a dropdown of "Google, Facebook, referral") lets parents describe an AI-driven search in their own words, which is often the only way you'll catch it.
Train front-desk staff and enrollment coordinators to ask this question on every call and tour, not just at signing. Add it to your paper or digital intake form as a required field. Keep the answer choices open-ended rather than limited to a fixed list, because a parent who used ChatGPT or an AI Overview may not know what to call it and will instead describe the experience: "I searched and it gave me a couple names" or "I asked a question and your center popped up." Log these answers somewhere you can review monthly, even a simple spreadsheet, so patterns become visible over time instead of getting lost in individual conversations.
Reading the gaps between website visits and calls
A noticeable gap between how many people visit your website and how many people actually call or tour can point to AI search activity, because these tools often answer a parent's question well enough that they skip your site entirely and go straight to contacting you. If your call volume holds steady or grows while website traffic stays flat or drops, that mismatch is worth investigating rather than ignoring.
Traditional web search sends parents to your website first: they read your page, look at photos, maybe check reviews, then call. AI search can shortcut that path. If a chatbot or AI Overview already answered "what are this daycare's hours" or "does this center take infants," a parent might call without ever loading your homepage. Check your website analytics for direct or "unknown" traffic sources alongside your call log for the same period. A center that's getting calls referencing details normally found only on its website, from people who never visited that website, is very likely being surfaced by an AI tool that read the page on the parent's behalf and delivered the answer directly.
What to adjust based on what you learn
Once you have a few weeks of intake answers and traffic patterns, use them to decide where to focus, rather than guessing. If several families mention an AI tool recommended you for infant care specifically, that tells you infant care is the program parents are searching for and finding clearly described somewhere connected to your center. If nobody mentions it, treat that as useful information too. It means either AI tools aren't surfacing your center yet, or parents aren't recognizing the source of their information.
The adjustment isn't about chasing a trend. It's about noticing which questions parents are already asking AI tools before they call you, and making sure the answers to those exact questions, hours, ages served, ratios, tuition ranges, availability, are easy to find and clearly written wherever your center is described online: your website, your Google Business Profile, parent review sites. If intake data shows confusion about a program you offer, that's a signal to clarify it in writing, not to guess at new marketing tactics. Review the intake answers every month or two and adjust only where the pattern is consistent, not after one or two mentions.
The question you're probably asking right now
If you're wondering whether any of this actually matters if you're already full or have a waitlist, here's the honest answer: it still matters, because enrollment changes. Families move, ages out, needs shift, and centers that stay full do it by having a steady stream of informed inquiries ready when a spot opens. You don't need to overhaul anything or add new software to figure out if AI search is part of that stream. Ask new families how they heard about you, write down what they say in their own words, and check it against your website traffic every so often. If the answers show AI tools are already sending you families who arrive informed and interested, that's worth knowing, whether your next move is to do nothing differently or to make sure your hours, programs, and openings are described clearly enough that those tools keep getting it right.