When a patient asks ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity to recommend a general dentist nearby, the AI tool picks the practice whose website gives it the clearest, most specific, most current information to work with. That usually means detailed service pages, recent reviews with real detail in them, and unambiguous location and availability information. The practice with the vaguer website loses the comparison even if its actual care is just as good.
This matters more than it used to. AI search, sometimes discussed under the acronym AEO (answer engine optimization, the practice of structuring content so AI tools can find and use it), doesn't work the way a traditional search results page works. There's no scrollable list of ten blue links where a patient can eyeball two websites side by side. The AI tool picks one or two practices to name out loud, and everyone else disappears from the answer. Understanding what tips that decision is now a practical business question, not a technical curiosity.
Specific service detail versus generic pages
AI tools favor dental websites that describe exact procedures, patient scenarios, and outcomes over websites that use broad phrases like "comprehensive dental care" or "a full range of services." A page that names specific treatments, explains what a first visit involves, and answers likely patient questions gives an AI tool concrete material to quote. A page that only lists service categories gives it almost nothing to work with.
Think about how a patient actually phrases a question to an AI assistant: "which dentist near me handles a cracked tooth on short notice" or "general dentist that does same-day crowns." These are specific, situational questions. A website that only says "restorative dentistry" in a bulleted list doesn't map cleanly to that question. A website that has a page explaining how cracked teeth are evaluated, what same-day options exist, and what a patient should expect gives the AI tool a direct match. The practice that answers the specific question in plain language, on its own site, is the practice that gets named.
This is also why generic "About Us" copy hurts more than it helps. Paragraphs about a practice's mission or philosophy don't answer any question a patient is actually asking. Detailed, procedure-specific pages do. The dental practices that show up in AI answers tend to be the ones that wrote for the actual questions instead of writing marketing copy about themselves.
Review depth and recency as tiebreakers
When two practices offer similar services, AI tools lean on reviews to break the tie, and they weigh reviews that describe specifics more heavily than short, generic praise. A review that mentions a particular procedure, a wait time, or how a staff member handled a nervous patient carries more usable information than a five-star rating with no text. Recency matters too: a pattern of recent reviews signals an active, currently operating practice, while a long gap since the last review reads as a weaker signal even if the older reviews are positive.
This changes what "good reviews" should mean to a dental practice. It's not enough to have a high star average. An AI tool assembling an answer is effectively scanning for evidence: does this practice actually do what its website claims, according to people who were recently there? A stream of dated reviews mentioning specific visits, specific treatments, and specific staff interactions gives the AI tool exactly that evidence. A page of unlabeled five-star ratings from years ago does not.
Practices sometimes assume review volume alone settles this, but volume without detail or recency is a weaker signal than a smaller number of detailed, recent reviews. Encouraging patients to mention what they came in for and how it went, in their own words, does more for AI visibility than simply asking for a rating.
Clear location and availability information
AI tools need to confirm, without ambiguity, where a practice is located, what hours it keeps, and whether it's currently accepting new patients before they'll recommend it for a location-based question. Inconsistent addresses across a website and other listings, outdated hours, or no clear statement about new patient availability all create doubt that a competing practice's cleaner information doesn't have.
A patient asking an AI tool "general dentist near me open Saturdays" is asking a question with a factual, checkable answer. If a practice's website, its Google Business Profile, and any directory listings don't agree on hours, the AI tool has no reliable way to confirm the claim, so it's more likely to recommend a practice whose information matches everywhere it appears. The same logic applies to accepting-new-patients status, insurance information, and whether a practice offers walk-in or emergency slots.
This is a case where consistency matters as much as content. A practice doesn't need elaborate technology to fix this. It needs its address, phone number, hours, and patient-acceptance status to say the same thing on its website, its Google listing, and any directory it appears in, and it needs to update that information promptly when anything changes. Practices that let this information drift out of sync are handing the comparison to whichever nearby practice keeps its listing current.
Standing out as the clearer answer
A general dentistry practice becomes the obvious recommendation when it removes every point of ambiguity that would otherwise make an AI tool hedge or pick a competitor instead. That means specific service pages instead of vague category lists, a steady stream of detailed and recent reviews, and location and availability information that matches everywhere it's published. None of these require new technology, just clarity and upkeep.
It helps to think about this from the AI tool's position rather than the practice's. The tool isn't judging chairside manner or clinical skill directly, it's judging how confidently it can answer a patient's question using what's publicly available. A practice that makes every likely question easy to answer, using its own website and its own review history, gives the AI tool the least reason to hedge or look elsewhere. Schema markup (structured data added to a webpage that labels information like business hours, address, and services in a format machines can read directly) can reinforce this by making the same details machine-readable, but it works only as a supplement to information that's already clear and consistent, not as a substitute for it.
Practices that treat this as an ongoing habit, not a one-time project, tend to keep their edge, because AI tools are re-checking this information continuously rather than caching an old page indefinitely.
The practice that gets recommended isn't the one that simply exists closest to the patient. It's the one that has removed every reason for an AI tool to hesitate, by being specific where a competitor is vague, current where a competitor is stale, and consistent where a competitor is scattered across mismatched listings.