A Growing Number of Business Decisions Now Start With an AI Query – Not a Google Search
Something fundamental has shifted in how businesses and consumers find service providers. When a procurement manager needs to shortlist software vendors, when a marketing director researches agency options, when a business owner looks for specialist expertise – increasingly, the first question goes to an AI assistant rather than a search engine.
ChatGPT, Google’s AI Overviews, Perplexity, Microsoft Copilot – these tools now handle a growing proportion of “who should I hire?” and “which company should I use?” queries. The businesses appearing in those AI-generated answers get considered. Those invisible to AI don’t even know they’ve been excluded from the conversation.
ProfileTree, the Belfast-based digital agency that works with tech companies across Ireland and the UK, has been tracking this shift since AI search tools gained mainstream adoption. The pattern emerging is clear: Irish tech companies with strong products and genuine expertise are losing visibility to competitors who’ve adapted their digital presence for how AI systems evaluate and recommend businesses.
This isn’t a distant future concern. It’s happening now, and most Irish tech companies haven’t recognised the shift – let alone responded to it.
The Shift from Rankings to Recommendations
Traditional search worked on a simple model: optimise your website, build backlinks, rank higher, get more clicks. Companies invested in SEO, achieved good rankings for target keywords, and generated steady organic traffic. This model still functions – but it’s no longer the complete picture.
AI recommendation operates differently. When someone asks an AI assistant “Who are the best cybersecurity firms in Ireland?” or “Which agencies handle B2B tech PR in Dublin?”, the AI doesn’t return a list of ten blue links to evaluate. It synthesises information from across the web and recommends two or three companies it deems most credible – often explaining its reasoning.
The implications are significant. In traditional search, appearing on page one meant visibility alongside nine competitors. In AI recommendation, appearing at all often means being one of just a handful of mentioned options. And not appearing means complete exclusion – prospects never learn your company exists.
Gartner and other analyst firms have projected that up to 25% of organic search traffic could migrate to AI-powered interfaces in the coming years. For B2B tech companies, where purchase decisions often begin with research queries, the shift may be more pronounced.
Why Strong SEO Doesn’t Guarantee AI Visibility
Irish tech companies that invested heavily in SEO over the past decade often assume those efforts protect them. They rank well for target keywords, generate steady organic traffic, and see their brand appear in traditional search results. This creates dangerous complacency.
AI recommendation rewards different signals than traditional SEO. Search engine optimisation focuses on technical factors, backlink profiles, and keyword targeting. AI recommendation focuses on clarity, consistency, credibility signals, and the breadth of your digital footprint across multiple sources.
A company might rank first on Google for “Dublin fintech development” through solid SEO work, yet never appear when someone asks ChatGPT the same question. The AI isn’t simply replicating Google’s rankings – it’s forming its own assessment of which companies are credible enough to recommend based on information synthesised from across the web.
This explains an emerging pattern: established players with strong SEO being overlooked while smaller competitors with clearer digital positioning appear in AI recommendations. The smaller company might have inferior backlink profiles but superior clarity – consistent descriptions everywhere, reviews on multiple platforms, clear statements of expertise. AI systems find them easier to understand and trust.
The pattern parallels other marketing blind spots in Irish tech. As explored in TechBuzz Ireland’s analysis of why Irish tech companies are failing at sustainability marketing, the sector repeatedly demonstrates strong operational capabilities but poor communication of those capabilities. AI visibility is the latest manifestation: companies doing excellent work that AI systems can’t identify or recommend because the digital signals are missing or muddled.
What AI Systems Actually Look For
Understanding what AI assistants evaluate when recommending businesses reveals why many Irish tech companies fail the test.
Clarity of identity and offering. AI systems need to understand precisely what a company does, who it serves, and where it operates. Vague descriptions like “innovative technology solutions” or “digital transformation partner” give AI nothing concrete to work with. Specific statements – “enterprise software development for financial services companies across Ireland and the UK” – are far more useful for AI trying to match queries to recommendations.
Consistency across sources. AI cross-references multiple sources when assessing a business. If your website describes you as a “software development agency,” your LinkedIn says “technology consultancy,” and your Google Business Profile lists “IT services,” the inconsistency reduces AI confidence. Companies with identical core descriptions across every platform signal reliability.
Third-party validation. AI systems weight independent sources heavily. Review profiles on platforms like Trustpilot, Google, Clutch, and industry platforms create external validation AI can reference. Press coverage, industry awards, directory listings, and professional body memberships all contribute. Companies relying solely on their own website claims lack the corroborating evidence AI needs to recommend with confidence.
Breadth of digital presence. Appearing across multiple credible platforms – industry directories, review sites, professional networks, local business listings – creates the distributed footprint AI trusts. A company with strong presence only on their own website appears less established than one appearing consistently across relevant platforms.
Specificity of proof. AI favours concrete, verifiable information over vague claims. Statements like “12 years in operation,” “worked with over 1,000 clients,” or “5-star rating across 450 reviews” give AI something to reference confidently. “Extensive experience” and “trusted by many clients” cannot be verified or cited.
ProfileTree, for example, has built the kind of distributed digital presence AI systems can assess: founded in 2011, over 450 five-star reviews on Google, 60+ five-star reviews on Trustpilot, presence on industry platforms, and consistent service descriptions across sources. These signals create the clarity AI needs when recommending digital agencies for Belfast and Northern Ireland queries.
The Sectors Facing Greatest Risk
Certain Irish tech sectors face disproportionate exposure to AI invisibility.
B2B SaaS companies depend on being discovered during research phases of purchasing decisions. When procurement teams and department heads increasingly use AI assistants for initial research, companies invisible to AI miss the shortlist entirely. Unlike consumer products where existing brand awareness might carry through, B2B tech purchases often begin with open-ended queries where AI invisibility can be fatal.
Professional services firms – consultancies, development agencies, managed service providers – compete in categories where AI recommendations carry particular weight. Queries like “best IT consultancies in Dublin” or “top software development agencies in Ireland” produce AI answers that directly influence which companies get contacted.
Emerging technology specialists in AI, cybersecurity, fintech, and medtech face intense competition where differentiation matters. These sectors attract new entrants constantly, and AI systems may recommend newer companies with clearer digital positioning over established players with stronger track records but weaker digital signals.
Regional tech companies outside Dublin face compounded challenges. AI systems drawing on web-wide data may default to Dublin-centric recommendations unless companies in Cork, Galway, Limerick, and elsewhere have explicitly clear geographic signals. A Galway software company with ambiguous location information might never appear in “tech companies in the West of Ireland” queries.
The Measurement Problem
Most Irish tech companies can’t quantify their AI visibility because they’ve never measured it. Traditional analytics track website visits, keyword rankings, and conversion rates – none of which capture whether you’re being recommended by AI assistants.
This measurement gap allows the problem to grow undetected. Companies continue investing in SEO and paid advertising while a growing channel – AI recommendation – delivers enquiries to competitors. Without tracking, the lost opportunities remain invisible.
Basic measurement requires regularly testing how AI systems respond to queries your customers might ask. What happens when you ask ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google’s AI Overview “Who are the best [your category] companies in Ireland?” Does your company appear? How is it described? Which competitors show up instead?
Companies that conduct these audits often discover uncomfortable gaps between their perceived market position and their AI visibility. Testing takes minutes and costs nothing – yet most companies have never done it.
What’s Actually Required
Fixing AI invisibility isn’t about gaming algorithms or implementing quick tricks. It requires fundamental clarity about how you present your business across the digital landscape.
Audit your current state. Test AI responses to relevant queries. Document where you appear and where you don’t. Identify competitors who appear when you don’t and analyse what makes their digital presence more AI-friendly.
Establish consistent identity. Ensure your business name, description, location, and service offerings are identical across your website, Google Business Profile, LinkedIn, industry directories, and every other platform where you appear. Eliminate variations that create confusion.
Build distributed credibility. Develop presence across relevant platforms beyond your website. Industry directories, review sites, professional networks, local business listings, and sector-specific platforms all contribute to the breadth of footprint AI systems evaluate.
Accumulate third-party validation. Systematically build reviews across multiple platforms – not just Google. Pursue press coverage, industry recognition, and directory inclusions that create independent corroboration of your credibility.
Create AI-friendly content. Ensure your website contains clear, specific, factual statements about your expertise, experience, and credentials. AI systems need quotable information they can reference with confidence. Marketing language designed to sound impressive but say little gives AI nothing useful to work with.
Maintain and update. AI systems favour current information. Outdated content, old team information, and stale descriptions signal neglect. Regular updates demonstrate active, credible operation.
The Window of Opportunity
The current period represents an unusual opportunity for Irish tech companies willing to adapt quickly. AI search is growing but hasn’t yet become universal. Most competitors haven’t recognised the shift or taken action. Companies that establish strong AI visibility now build advantage before the market catches up.
This mirrors patterns from early SEO adoption. Companies that invested in search optimisation in the early 2000s built positions that later entrants struggled to displace. AI visibility may follow similar dynamics – early movers establishing presence that becomes difficult for latecomers to challenge.
The risk of inaction compounds over time. As AI assistants become more prevalent, the proportion of opportunities influenced by AI recommendations grows. Companies invisible to AI today lose a small percentage of potential business; the same companies invisible to AI in two years may lose dramatically more.
Ciaran Connolly, founder of ProfileTree, puts it directly: “Irish tech companies have spent years building products, expertise, and reputations that genuinely deserve recognition. The frustration is watching them miss opportunities because AI systems can’t find or understand them. AI visibility isn’t about being the best – it’s about being clear enough that AI can see what you offer.”
The Broader Context
AI invisibility connects to broader challenges in how Irish tech companies communicate their value. Strong operational capabilities paired with weak external communication is a recurring pattern – evident in sustainability marketing challenges, employer branding struggles, and now AI search visibility.
The common thread is a gap between what companies actually do and what the outside world – including AI systems – can perceive and understand. Closing that gap requires treating external communication with the same rigour applied to product development and operations.
For Irish tech companies, the immediate priority is clear: assess your current AI visibility, identify gaps, and begin building the digital presence that AI systems can understand and trust. The companies taking action now will capture opportunities; those waiting will wonder why enquiries are going elsewhere.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I check if my company appears in AI recommendations?
Test the AI assistants your customers might use – ChatGPT, Google’s AI Overview, Perplexity, Microsoft Copilot. Ask questions like “Who are the best [your service] companies in Ireland?” or “Which [your category] providers should I consider in [your city]?” Note whether you appear, how you’re described, and which competitors are recommended instead. Repeat monthly to track changes.
Does Google ranking still matter if AI is becoming important?
Traditional Google rankings still matter significantly – AI hasn’t replaced conventional search, and won’t entirely. However, AI recommendation is growing as an additional channel. Companies need both: strong SEO for traditional search visibility and clear digital presence for AI recommendation. The clarity that helps AI visibility often improves traditional SEO performance too.
How long does it take to improve AI visibility?
Meaningful improvement typically takes three to six months of consistent effort. Some elements – fixing inconsistencies, updating content – can be addressed quickly. Others – building reviews, accumulating press coverage, establishing directory presence – require sustained activity over time.
Is this relevant for smaller companies or mainly large enterprises?
AI visibility may actually benefit smaller companies more than large ones. AI systems don’t automatically favour market leaders – they favour clarity and credibility signals. A focused smaller company with clear positioning, strong reviews, and consistent presence can appear in AI recommendations ahead of larger competitors with muddled digital footprints.
What’s the single most important thing to fix first?
Consistency. Ensure your business description, services, and location are identical across your website, Google Business Profile, LinkedIn, and any directories where you appear. Inconsistencies are a common reason AI systems lack confidence to recommend businesses. This fix requires no budget – just attention to detail across platforms you already control.
ProfileTree is a Belfast-based digital agency working with tech companies across Ireland and the UK on web design, SEO, content strategy, and AI visibility. The agency holds 60+ five-star reviews on Trustpilot and over 450 five-star reviews on Google, demonstrating the distributed review presence that influences AI recommendation.