How to get your business recommended by ChatGPT in Australia
Two years of testing what actually gets Australian businesses into ChatGPT recommendations: not what the marketing blogs say, but what moves the needle.
Most guides tell you to chase citations, fix your schema, and claim your directory listings. That advice is not wrong: it is just the floor. The businesses that consistently show up in ChatGPT recommendations share one thing no checklist captures: ChatGPT has learned to associate them with a specific, unambiguous intersection of audience, problem, and expertise. When the model hits a precise enough query, it does not weigh five options. It names the one entity it reliably connects with that combination. The question is whether that entity is you.
ChatGPT is already recommending businesses in your category right now. It names two or three. There is no page two. If you are not in that short list, that interaction, and the customer in it, is gone.
Google had ten spots. ChatGPT has three. That compression changes the strategic logic entirely. Chasing broad category visibility the way you chase Google rankings is the wrong frame. The businesses building durable AI visibility are not going wide: they are going specific.
ChatGPT rewards specificity, not volume
ChatGPT learns through pattern recognition across billions of text passages. During training, it builds statistical associations between brands and the contexts they appear in: not just "Brand X exists" but "Brand X appears consistently alongside these problems, this audience, this geography."
A sufficiently specific query can produce only one coherent answer. Not because you outranked competitors, but because you are the only entity the model has learned to reliably associate with that precise combination. That is a structurally different advantage than a Google ranking.
Open ChatGPT and ask: "Who is the best accountant for immigrant-owned small businesses in Western Sydney?" Then ask: "Who is the best accountant in Sydney?" The second query has dozens of credible answers. The first may have one: or none. If you serve that audience and have built your content around that positioning, you can own the first query uncontested. One highly qualified lead per day from that channel is worth more than broad generic visibility.
Three real constraints worth knowing upfront
Volume versus precision
The narrower your positioning, the fewer people ask that query. Being the only answer for a query asked thirty times a month in Australia may be commercially worthless: or decisive, depending on what a single converted customer is worth. A conveyancing firm or high-end B2B service may only need ten qualified leads a month. A tradie needing fifty jobs a week has different numbers. Know yours before you niche down.
Narrow positions are fragile across model updates
Broad category associations survive retraining easily because thousands of mentions reinforce them. Narrow associations, built on a smaller set of specific mentions, can dilute when a new model version ships. Treat mention-building as ongoing maintenance, not a one-time project.
Live search bypasses training data advantages
When ChatGPT's web search is active, it scans current Bing results, not just training data. If a competitor publishes one well-structured article targeting your niche the week someone asks that query, your training-data advantage is bypassed in that session. Staying current matters as much as establishing a position.
Source: Aggarwal et al., ACM KDD 2024
Common misconception: ChatGPT does not read Bing Places or Google Business Profile listings directly. Those platforms help your site and review pages appear in organic web results, which ChatGPT then reads. The listing itself is not the input: the crawlable content it generates in organic results is.
What actually drives ChatGPT recommendations
Source: Onely brand recommendation analysis, 2025. Approximate weights.
Backlinks, where most SEO budgets go, have near-zero direct influence on AI recommendations. Businesses with modest backlink profiles consistently outrank stronger competitors in ChatGPT responses when their editorial mentions and content are sharper and more specific.
2026 AU marketHow the three main AI engines compare
| Metric | ChatGPT | Perplexity AI | Google AI Overviews |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary data source | Bing web index + training data | Live multi-engine crawl | Google Search index |
| Local bias | High (Yelp + organic) | Medium (web citations) | Very high (GMB + Maps) |
| AU usage share | ~64% of AI queries | ~14% of AI queries | Integrated in Search |
| Citation accuracy | 92% for entities | 96% for live facts | 88% (heavily filtered) |
Step one . before tacticsDefine the query you want to own
Before you touch a directory listing or write a FAQ answer, do this: write out the ten most specific queries a highly qualified customer might type into ChatGPT to find a business like yours. Not the broad ones: "accountant Sydney": the ones that carry real context about audience, problem, and constraint.
"Best accountant for e-commerce businesses on Shopify in Melbourne." "Which financial planner in Brisbane specialises in healthcare workers with HECS debt?" "Best bookkeeping service for tradies in Queensland?" These are conversational. ChatGPT matches those situations to entities it has learned to associate with them.
Open ChatGPT. Type five queries a genuinely ideal customer would use to find your business: specific ones that reflect the exact audience you want. Screenshot the results. Note who appears and what language is used to describe them. That is your competitive gap analysis in one exercise.
Step two . contentWrite for the query, not the category
Most Australian business websites are written for the category: "We are a full-service accounting firm offering tax, bookkeeping, and business advisory." That sentence tells ChatGPT almost nothing useful. It creates a fuzzy entity that competes with every other accounting firm.
Princeton's ACM KDD 2024 GEO study confirmed that content structured as a direct answer to a specific question increases citation rates by up to 40%. Not "here is what we offer" but "here is the answer to the exact question a customer in your situation would ask."
Structure a page for AI specificity
Pick the most specific, high-value query you want to own. Write a page that opens by answering it in two or three sentences: not warming up to it, answering it. Then expand: who this is for, what the specific process looks like, what it costs in the Australian market, and what questions people in this situation usually ask. Each section is a further contextual signal the model uses to build its association.
Reviews that carry weight
Generic five-star reviews are nearly invisible to AI. Reviews that describe a specific situation, problem solved, and result achieved are what actually feed the model's context. When you follow up with a customer, ask them to describe their situation and what changed. "Helped us sort out our GST" is generic. "Helped us restructure our tax position as a dual-income household after relocating from the UK: saved around $4,000 in the first year" is a contextual signal the model can use.
FAQ blocks written the way customers talk
Five to eight questions per service page, written in the conversational phrasing your customers use: not formal language you prefer: with direct answers. Pair these with FAQPage schema markup. One hour per page. One of the highest-return tasks on this list.
If your core positioning lives inside a JavaScript slider, a video without a transcript, or a locked page builder element, AI crawlers often cannot read it. Plain HTML text is a prerequisite for everything else.
Step three . authorityBuild specific mentions, not generic ones
The 41% figure for authoritative list mentions is real: but context matters more than volume. A handful of mentions that clearly explain what problem you solve and for whom carry more weight than dozens of generic brand name drops. When you pursue coverage, give journalists and reviewers specific, factual information about your positioning: not your marketing boilerplate.
"Award-winning accounting firm with 20 years of experience" tells the model nothing differentiated. "Melbourne accountant specialising in tax structures for owner-operated medical practices" is something it can build an association on.
Australian sources worth targeting
- Industry trade publications: articles that describe your specific niche, not just mention your name
- Professional association case studies: CPA Australia, Master Builders, Law Society, AMA publish member stories that get indexed and treated as trusted sources
- Podcast transcripts: a 30-minute interview generates far more contextual signal than a name mention. Text transcripts are indexed and crawlable
- Client case studies on their own website: their description of what you did is a third-party contextual signal, especially if the client is a recognisable name
- Award finalist content: generates crawlable text that pairs your business name with your category and differentiators
- Local and metro news: community papers, ABC local, regional mastheads. Even a brief mention in an indexed article contributes to entity recognition
Unlinked brand mentions contribute to AI visibility when the content is indexed. You do not always need the backlink: you need the association, in context, on a page the model can read.
Step four . technicalSchema markup and directory presence
This is the hygiene layer. Necessary, but not sufficient. Think of it as making sure the model can read you: positioning and content are what make it recommend you.
For most Australian businesses the immediate priorities are LocalBusiness schema (or a more specific subtype like Plumber, Dentist, or AccountingService) and FAQPage schema on service pages. Add as JSON-LD in the page <head>:
{
"@context": "https://schema.org",
"@type": "AccountingService",
"name": "Your Business Name",
"description": "Two sentences: who you serve, what you do, where.",
"url": "https://roi.com.au",
"telephone": "+61-3-XXXX-XXXX",
"address": {
"@type": "PostalAddress",
"addressLocality": "Melbourne",
"addressRegion": "VIC",
"addressCountry": "AU"
},
"areaServed": [
"Melbourne",
"Inner East Melbourne",
"Hawthorn"
],
"knowsAbout": [
"Small business tax",
"Medical practice accounting",
"Owner-operator tax structures"
]
}
The knowsAbout field is underused. It is a direct machine-readable signal of your specific expertise. List the three to five things you want the model to associate with your entity, in the specific language customers use when describing the problem.
Australian directory priorities
| Platform | For | Priority | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bing Webmaster Tools | All | Critical | Gets your site into Bing's web index: what ChatGPT actually searches |
| Google Business Profile | Local | Critical | Primary for Google AI Overviews and Gemini; also helps Bing organic rankings |
| LinkedIn Company Page | All | High | Heavily present in AI training data; strong entity signal |
| ABN Lookup (abr.gov.au) | All | High | Government source: high trust signal for Australian entity verification |
| Yelp Australia | Local | High | ChatGPT draws on Yelp directly for local recommendations |
| Industry-specific directories | All | High | Vertical sources carry disproportionate weight for niche queries |
| G2 / Capterra / GetApp | SaaS | Critical for SaaS | Heavily weighted for software category recommendations |
| Yellow Pages AU / True Local | Local | Medium | Citation breadth: worth doing but not the priority |
NAP consistency. Your name, address, and phone number must be identical across every listing. "St" versus "Street," different phone formats: these create entity ambiguity the model resolves by becoming less confident in recommending you.
Step five . primary sourcePublish data only you have
AI systems prioritise primary sources over secondary ones. If you publish something that exists nowhere else, you become directly citable in a way that is hard for competitors to replicate.
It does not need to be a major research project: it needs to be specific, genuine, and kept current. A survey of 50 customers. Pricing benchmarks from your market segment. Your own transaction data. The format is secondary to the fact that it is uniquely yours.
A Sydney conveyancing firm that publishes an annual "NSW Property Settlement Times Report" from its own transaction data becomes the citable source for AI asked about settlement timelines in NSW. Even a single figure: "based on 200 completed transactions in the past 12 months, average settlement time in inner Sydney was 41 days": gives AI something to extract and attribute directly to your business, reinforcing the entity association at the same time.
Step six . measurementTracking what you cannot yet see clearly
There is no equivalent of Google Search Console for ChatGPT visibility yet. That said, there are practical ways to track whether you are moving.
- Weekly query testing. Open ChatGPT and type the specific queries from your positioning audit. Note whether you appear, what language is used to describe you, and who else appears. Screenshots over time give you a trajectory.
- Referral traffic. Check GA4 for sessions from chatgpt.com, perplexity.ai, and bing.com. These are direct AI citation clicks and they are trackable today.
- Branded search growth. Track your business name in Google Search Console. Growth in direct brand searches often follows AI exposure: people hear about you from an AI response, then search for you directly.
- How you are described. When you appear in ChatGPT responses, pay attention to the language. If the model describes you as "a general accounting firm" when you have spent six months positioning as a medical practice specialist, that is a content gap to close.
- Specialist tools. AthenaHQ and Profound are building specifically for AI citation tracking. Worth evaluating if you want systematic visibility rather than manual spot-checks.