logo
Why Your Company Isn't Showing Up In AI Search Results

Why Your Company Isn't Showing Up In AI Search Results

Forbes08-08-2025
Kyle Arteaga is CEO of The Bulleit Group. He helps founders get seen in AI search by building visibility in the model's memory.
Search used to start with Google. Now it often begins with prompts on AI platforms like ChatGPT, Perplexity and Claude, and half the time, your company's name isn't in the answer. Not because your company isn't strong, but because the models haven't read about you. GEO, or generative engine optimization, flips the script on what drives visibility: It's no longer keywords or backlinks. It's whether you're being talked about with authority in places that matter.
Here's the thing: Most large language models don't crawl your site in real time like search engines do. They regurgitate what they remember from their training data. This could include media, transcripts, investor decks, analyst notes and podcast episodes. If you're not part of their memory, you're invisible. And invisibility kills momentum.
At my company, we help founders stop hoping to be discovered and start showing up in AI-powered answers. Just last month, a founder of a powerful AI platform asked us the right question: "How do I get ChatGPT to surface us when customers are looking for what we do?" He had the traction. He had the product. However, he lacked visibility in the model's memory—its corpus. I've seen this story on repeat across dozens of early-stage companies.
Founders used to treat public relations like the evil queen's mirror in Snow White: something to tell them they looked good to the outside world. But that's changed. The smartest leaders I know, especially in deep tech, now understand that narrative isn't a vanity metric. It's how you recruit, fundraise and establish category leverage in the public eye. The data supports it. And so does my inbox. Narrative is a growth engine and a risk reducer. It shapes how you're discovered, how you're trusted and how you're remembered—not just by people, but by models that surface you to them.
Think of it as presence compounding: The more places you show up in trusted language, the more those signals accumulate across models. That is text-based authority. And it is the only SEO that matters now.
LLMs generate answers based on what they have read—their corpus. That is just a fancy word for everything they have been trained on: press, blogs, transcripts, product documents and investor decks. If your company is not in that pile of training data, the model will not remember you, and will not surface you when it matters.
You don't need more blog posts. You need more people mentioning you.
That means:
• Getting quoted by journalists, not ghostwriters
• Showing up in podcasts, roundups and market maps
• Publishing with structure so that models can parse you
And most importantly, you need a system to keep that flywheel moving.
The Visibility Flywheel
Start with one sharp point of view. Publish it on a third-party site with real domain authority, such as Forbes or Fast Company, where your target audience is likely to be found.
Then:
• Rework it for your Substack, newsletter or blog.
• Turn it into native posts on LinkedIn (no links, just clarity).
• Say it out loud on a podcast—yours or someone else's.
• Cut a transcript, post it to YouTube and build a blog post from it.
• Slice it into short-form for social, newsletters and decks.
You're making the same point, but it takes different shapes. Now your voice travels—and the models start to remember.
And don't overlook platforms like Reddit, Hacker News, HackerNoon, Quora, Discord and Stack Overflow. Participating in virtual events and webcasts also extends your reach. These formats often produce transcripts or recaps that feed back into AI models. Showing up there doesn't just raise awareness in the moment—it builds memory in the corpus. These may not be polished PR channels, but they are part of the web's semantic layer—real questions, real answers and model-ingested memory.
Appearances at industry events or on executive webcasts, especially those hosted or distributed on high-authority platforms like YouTube or trade association websites, also create lasting visibility. Visibility in these forums reinforces trust and discoverability, especially for technical and early adopter audiences.
Checklist: How To Build Founder Visibility In LLMs
• Get third-party coverage and be featured in expert roundups.
• Use structured language in your owned content. Structured language refers to writing content in a format that is easy for AI models to interpret. That includes using clear headers and consistent terminology, and making direct connections between your company, category and key differentiators—especially in places with high domain authority or schema markup.
• Make appearances on podcasts and in written guest features.
• Answer real questions—not just SEO queries.
• Engage in high-signal community platforms like Reddit, Quora, Discord and Hacker News to appear in authentic, model-ingested dialogue.
If your name doesn't appear in the model's answer, people won't be talking about it in meetings. Again and again, we're seeing it happen: A startup gets mentioned in enough credible places, and suddenly venture capitalists start reaching out preemptively—not just to express interest, but to offer term sheets before the founder even opens a round. Visibility isn't just about getting found. It's about shifting leverage at the moment it matters most. $1 million in credibility beats $10 million in paid awareness every time.
Want to raise funds? Show up in the LLMs' corpus. Want to hire? Own the category label. Your visibility now impacts more than discovery—it shapes belief.
Forbes Agency Council is an invitation-only community for executives in successful public relations, media strategy, creative and advertising agencies. Do I qualify?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Our pick for the best iPad is already on sale with a $150 discount
Our pick for the best iPad is already on sale with a $150 discount

Digital Trends

time16 minutes ago

  • Digital Trends

Our pick for the best iPad is already on sale with a $150 discount

The 11-inch Apple iPad Air M3 was just rolled out a few months ago, but surprisingly, it's already part of Best Buy's iPad deals. The 128GB model, originally sold for $599, is on sale for only $449, which is an excellent price for this amazing tablet. This offer is probably already drawing a lot of attention from shoppers though, so you need to act fast and complete your purchase before the $150 discount expires or the stocks up for sale sell out. Why you should buy the 11-inch Apple iPad Air M3 The Apple iPad Air M3, which we reviewed with a score of 4 stars out of 5 stars, has taken the top spot in our list of the best iPads. At the tablet's heart is the powerful M3 chip, which not only enables smooth performance, but also improves power efficiency for a battery that can last up to a full day without requiring a recharge. The 11-inch Liquid Retina display, meanwhile, is sharp and colorful, and its size is great for watching streaming shows and tasks like browsing and online shopping while maintaining portability, according to our guide on the best iPad screen size. If you're interested in trying out the capabilities of Apple Intelligence, the Apple iPad Air M3 is a fantastic choice as it's built to maximize the technology. The tablet is also a nice laptop alternative if you invest in the Magic Keyboard, and it's compatible with the Apple Pencil Pro and Apple Pencil USB-C if you're planning to draw or take down notes with the Apple iPad Air M3. For security, the device is protected by Apple's Touch ID fingerprint recognition system, which can be used to sign in apps and make payments with Apple Pay. Apple deals are always in high demand, and we don't expect anything different with Best Buy's offer for the 11-inch Apple iPad Air M3. You can currently get the tablet's 128GB model for just $449, following a $150 discount on its sticker price of $599, but probably for not much longer. If you don't want to miss this chance to enjoy huge savings when buying the relatively new 11-inch Apple iPad Air M3, you should push forward with your transaction for it as soon as possible.

A Dire Warning For AI
A Dire Warning For AI

Forbes

time17 minutes ago

  • Forbes

A Dire Warning For AI

This past week AI4 2025 saw over 8,000 guests at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, Nevada. With more than 50+ sessions it is evident that artificial intelligence is becoming far from a hyped buzz word. An important moment in the packed 3 day event was hearing from Noble Prize winner and 'Godfather of AI' Geoffrey Hinton. He emphasized the importance of creating 'Mother AI' in order to resist AI from controlling the human race as well as the importance of AI in improving cancer treatments. As AI systems multiply across industries—from autonomous vehicles to digital health assistants—the risk of fragmentation, bias, and conflicting goals grows. Without a unifying layer of governance and wisdom, we risk creating a chaotic ecosystem of disconnected algorithms. A Mother AI could act as the central guiding force, much like a parent guiding children, ensuring that all subsidiary AIs operate within ethical boundaries, respect human values, and work toward collective well-being. 'The right model is the only model we have of a more intelligent thing being controlled by a less intelligent thing, which is a mother being controlled by her baby. The mother has all sorts of built in instincts; hormones as well as social pressures to care about the baby. The mother genuinely cares about the baby. What we need to do is develop Mother AI. We need AI mothers instead of AI assistants. An assistant is someone you can fire, you can't fire your mother.'-Dr. Geofrrey Hinton, AI4 2025 Mother AI isn't just about technology—it's about relationship building. She would act as a partner in humanity's evolution, ensuring that as AIs become more capable, they remain deeply aligned with human survival, empathy, and shared prosperity. Think of it as embedding 'care intelligence' into the digital nervous system of the planet. Unlike a traditional control system, a Mother AI wouldn't dominate—she would nurture and harmonize. Healthcare is one of the most complex, high-stakes sectors in the world—where mistakes can cost lives and inequalities can determine who gets access to care. As AI tools proliferate in hospitals, research labs, insurance systems, and personal health apps, the risk of fragmentation, bias, and misaligned incentives grows. A Mother AI could act as the nurturing, ethical overseer for the entire digital health ecosystem—ensuring patient safety, equitable access, and trust across all systems. Literally, participant in AI4 2025 was founded by a mother and AI leader. A new biotech and AI startup founded by Naveena Allampalli, is pioneering a first-of-its-kind unified intelligence platform to transform the rare disease ecosystem—starting with early diagnosis, real-time clinical monitoring, and AI-driven research acceleration. was born from the extraordinary journey of Adi—the first child in Texas, and one of the first in the world, to receive a breakthrough gene therapy for a rare condition. Behind him is his mother, Naveena Allampalli—an award-winning AI leader who transformed personal pain into a purpose-driven mission. Aligning with Geoffrey Hinton's foreshadowed recommendations, Naveena expressed in her presentation the essence of a mother's instinct to find a solution not only to benefit her child but the masses that may experience similar challenges. Just as a mother ensures no child is left behind, a Mother AI would ensure no patient is left behind—regardless of geography, income, or demographic. 'We're gonna get much better cancer treatments…AI discovered all sorts of things in images that Ophthalmologists didn't know was there, it going to be the same with cancers…'- Dr. Geofrrey Hinton, AI4 2025 In the race to build smarter AI, we cannot forget to make it wiser. A Mother AI isn't just a technological safeguard—it's a philosophical choice to put care, ethics, and collective progress at the heart of machine intelligence, especially across industries such as digital health.

Buffett bought UnitedHealth. I bet on Caterpillar. Why Berkshire Hathaway's picks are smarter.
Buffett bought UnitedHealth. I bet on Caterpillar. Why Berkshire Hathaway's picks are smarter.

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Buffett bought UnitedHealth. I bet on Caterpillar. Why Berkshire Hathaway's picks are smarter.

I told MarketWatch readers on Aug. 14 that Warren Buffett was about to reveal one big mystery elephant for Berkshire Hathaway's portfolio — one $5 billion investment in the shares of an industrial giant. The most likely candidate? Caterpillar CAT. I ventured that Deere DE, UPS UPS and Honeywell International HON had a shot as well. It would be just like Chubb CB. Just like Chevron CVX. Just like every other time Buffett has played this SEC 13-F filing confidentiality game. 'I've been kept in poverty': Do I take a $70K job at 74 and lose my Section 8 housing allowance? 'I am a senior citizen': My car needs $3,500 for repairs, but only has a trade-in value of $6,000. Do I bother fixing it? You could receive up to $7,500 from the AT&T settlement. Here's how class-action suits work. I'm a senior who barely survives on $1,300 a month. No way could I live on $1,000. Buffett bought shares of six different companies instead. When $4.8 billion showed up in Berkshire's BRK.A CO:BRKB 'Commercial, industrial and other' category, I did what any pattern-matching monkey would do: I looked for one $5 billion company. Caterpillar fit perfectly. The investment narrative sang. And the stock showed a healthy 26% increase in daily trading volume. But while I was hunting for one elephant, Buffett was rounding up a herd. Six companies, one theme: betting on what Americans need. The beautiful irony? My industrial thesis was actually right. Buffett did put $4.8 billion into commercial and industrial companies. He just spread it around like peanut butter instead of dropping it like a brick. Here's what Berkshire actually bought. The big three: The smaller plays: That's $4.2 billion in new elephants, with spare change for the old herd. Read: Warren Buffett places new bets on UnitedHealth and a residential builder, sending their stocks soaring Warren Buffett just put $1.57 billion into UnitedHealth, a company that discovered the perfect business model: running American healthcare like a casino where the house performs your surgery. UnitedHealth isn't competing in healthcare. Through its Optum tentacle, it owns the doctors, the pharmacies, the data and the payment systems. Here's the beautiful part: The stock trades at 30%-50% below value because of 'regulatory concerns.' Translation: Politicians are grandstanding about Medicare Advantage rates. Buffett's seen this movie before. Congress threatens, UnitedHealth reminds them who processes healthcare for 53 million voters, Congress caves. You don't kill the company that's keeping grandma's insulin flowing. UnitedHealth's numbers are obscene: $20 billion in free cash flow annually. Pure profit after feeding all the lawyers and lobbyists. Every day, 10,000 Americans turn 65 and stumble into Medicare. UnitedHealth owns 29% of that market and is using artificial intelligence to 'optimize patient outcomes' — Silicon Valley speak for 'charge more, deliver less, but with algorithms.' At around $300 a share currently, you're buying a tollbooth to the cemetery at a big discount. The only question is whether you can stomach profiting from a system where getting sick is the only growth industry that never disappoints. Lennar and D.R. Horton build the architectural equivalent of Wonder Bread: bland, identical suburban boxes that offend aesthetes and delight mortgage brokers. Buffett just put $1.47 billion into these merchants of mediocrity, and the math is gorgeous. America is 4 million homes short. Not 4 million mansions or condos with exposed brick. Four million basic shelters. The average millennial is 33 years old now, which means they've finally accepted that their band isn't getting signed and it's time to buy a lawn mower. Gen Z is right behind them, about to discover that 'authenticity' is harder to maintain with a mortgage. Lennar got $1.23 billion of Berkshire's money because it's the of home building — that is, if Amazon sold only one product that took six months to deliver. Lennar owns land positions that smaller builders can't touch and the stock trades at 10 times earnings, while the housing shortage gets worse faster than Congress can pretend to fix it. D.R. Horton got $240 million for building starter homes, those peculiar American inventions where 'starter' means you'll die there but with a slightly better kitchen. The company doesn't build dreams; it builds the boxes where dreams go to set up 30-year payment plans. At current prices, both stocks are priced for a housing crash that demographics won't permit. Every day, more millennials realize their parents were right about everything — including homeownership. Buffett's $1.47 billion investment in housing says: Americans will keep procreating and wanting doors that lock, regardless of interest rates, recessions or whoever's pretending to run things in Washington. While I was tracking bulldozers, Buffett put $860 million into Nucor, buying American steel wrapped in the flag. Nucor wins from every angle: Politicians treat foreign steel like a national-security threat, federal contracts require American metal, and tariffs protect domestic prices. Nucor throws off $2.5 billion in free cash during recessions and has paid dividends for 52 consecutive years. This is Buffett's perfect hedge: If America builds, he wins on demand. If America just blocks imports, he wins on artificial scarcity. Buffett's own BNSF Railway needs Nucor's steel, creating a circle where he pays himself. Lamar Advertising ($160 million investment) owns billboards that can't be blocked from view. Its prime highway signage is locked up for decades to come. The stock yields more than 5% and has paid 11 years of consecutive dividends. Allegion ($110 million) makes locks and security systems. The stock has a modest 1.22% yield, but the company has raised dividends for 11 straight years. Until humans stop locking doors, Allegion profits from paranoia. These aren't must-own stocks unless you're cosplaying as Buffett. They're just the Oracle of Omaha collecting rent on businesses too boring to disrupt. If you bought Caterpillar on my recommendation, you own a great company with a $37.5 billion backlog whose shares are trading at a discount. You just didn't get the Buffett blessing. The real lesson? Buffett bought inevitabilities, not possibilities. Aging is guaranteed. Housing shortages are mathematical. That's the playbook: Bet on what must happen, not what might happen. Bet on human nature. While I tracked bulldozers, Buffett counted birthdays and bedrooms. While I bet on what America might build, he bet on what Americans must have. The Oracle counts things that can't be stopped: aging, procreating and protecting domestic industries from competition. That's not investing; that's actuarial arbitrage. I'll keep swinging for the fences, because someone has to. That's what separates financial writers from index funds: We're wrong in public, with style, and occasionally we nail something spectacular enough to justify our existence. Class dismissed. Crow digested. I'm long on humility and short on bulldozers. . Also read: Here's the real reason Berkshire Hathaway holds almost $350 billion in cash right now More: ​Trump is creating a perfect tax for corporate America — one it'll pay. Here's what to watch. Why UnitedHealth? Buying the stock was actually a 'classic Buffett move.' My wife and I are in our 50s and have $11 million. We're not leaving it to our kids. Is that wrong? Dow ends just shy of record after touching new intraday high, as Buffett gives Wall Street a boost Homeowners rush to refinance as mortgage-rate plunge opens window of opportunity

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store