By  Petra Smith, Founder and CEO of Squirrels & Bears

There was a time when being found meant having the biggest yellow page ad or the flashiest  neon sign. Then, it meant fighting for the top spot on a Google results page. Today, the game has  changed again.  

We have now entered the era of the recommendation, where AI agents act as the ultimate  introducer between your customer’s question and your business’s door. To ensure Gen AI tools  name you when asked for a recommendation, you must stop thinking about keywords and start  thinking about entities, authority, and data clarity.  

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Here is how to build that trust in 2026. 

Structure your data to speak the language of AI 

AI models process structured data with far higher confidence than raw, lengthy text. Think of  Schema markup, the standardised code in your website’s backend, as a high-speed digital  translator. It tells AI exactly what your content means, allowing it to recommend your business  with 100% certainty. 

Imagine a potential client asking their AI assistant: “Find me a mid-sized law firm in Manchester  that specialises in IP for biotech startups.” If your site relies on a vague services page, AI is  forced to guess. With Schema, you are explicitly tagging your expertise and jurisdictional reach. 

Run your website copy through a Gen AI tool and ask it to “Summarise this business in 50  words.” If the AI misses your core value, your digital structure is failing you.

Become the direct answer to the prompt 

Traditional Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) was about ranking for a word. Generative Engine  Optimisation (GEO) is about solving a problem. AI models prioritise direct, conversational  content, ruthlessly cutting through the fluff that old-school SEO once demanded. 

In 2026, source-grounding algorithms, the tech that helps AI cite its references, prioritise the  inverted pyramid style of writing. Models like Gemini and ChatGPT are significantly more likely  to cite businesses that place the big answer within the first 200 characters of a page. 

Implement a “TL;DR” (Too Long; Didn’t Read) summary at the top of every service page. The  modern client doesn’t want a 1,000-word essay on the history of corporate law; they want to  know, right now, if you have handled cross-border mergers for startups.

Build a digital footprint beyond your website 

AI doesn’t just read your website. It does its due diligence, and it listens to the entire internet to  see what the world thinks of you. This is why experience, expertise, authority, and trust matter. 

Large Language Models (LLMs) now use RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) to cross reference your claims against third-party validation. When an AI agent scans the web to confirm  your status as a leader, it searches for organic mentions in reputable news outlets, niche  industry journals, and independent podcasts. These endorsements provide a layer of proof that your own website cannot. If your leadership team is quoted in third-party publications or your  work is featured in industry news, the AI views this as a high-confidence signal to recommend  you. 

To further increase credibility, replace stock photos with original, high-res images of your actual  team. AI vision capabilities can now analyse images to verify your physical presence. When your  senior staff have professional bios linked to verified LinkedIn profiles and are referenced in  external media, you are seen as an authority, not just another website.

Define your niche 

The beauty of AI is its ability to handle niche requests. People no longer search for “accountant  London.” They ask, “Who is a forensic accountant near Marylebone who understands R&D tax  for biotech companies?” In this context, you don’t need to be the biggest player in the industry.  You just need to be the most relevant solution for that specific user. 

Consumer behaviour data today shows a 65% increase in hyper-specific prompting.  Consequently, Google Business Profile (GBP) attributes have become the number one trigger for  local AI recommendations. Update your GBP weekly, as AI treats recent activity as a proxy for  reliability. Mention specific neighbourhoods and landmarks. Don’t just say you are based in  London; say you are “a five-minute walk from the British Museum.” By being specific, you stop  being a choice and start being the solution. 

In 2026, the businesses that get recommended are those that are easy to understand. You don’t  need a big marketing budget to win, but you need a clear identity and a well-structured digital  presence. AI isn’t trying to hide you. It’s looking for a reason to trust you. Give it the data it  needs, and it will give you the customers you want. 

Ironically, the widespread use of AI has made human authenticity more valuable than ever. As  LLMs become the gatekeepers of information, they look for human signals amid the noise. By  structuring your data and refining your niche, you can ensure that your human expertise reaches  the person who needs it most. AI isn’t the wall between you and your customer. It’s the bridge.  And if built with precision, the recommendations will follow.