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Perplexity Just Answered a Question About Your Industry. Were You Part of the Answer? TL;DR: When someone asks Perplexity a question about your industry...
TL;DR: When someone asks Perplexity a question about your industry, it pulls from sources it can read, verify, and cite — and most businesses aren't structured to be any of those things. The businesses that show up aren't necessarily the best; they're the ones that gave AI something concrete to work with.
Perplexity is an answer engine — a tool that researches a question in real time, synthesizes information from multiple sources, and delivers a cited, structured response instead of a list of links. In Spring 2026, it's one of the fastest-growing ways people research services, products, and local businesses.
What makes Perplexity different from ChatGPT or Google AI Overview is that it shows its work. Every answer includes numbered citations. You can see exactly which sources informed the response.
That transparency is useful for the person asking. But it's revealing for businesses. Because when you ask Perplexity a question about your industry — "what should I look for in a financial advisor" or "how do I choose a commercial cleaning company" — and your business doesn't appear anywhere in the citations, you're seeing exactly how invisible you are to AI research tools.
Not invisible because you're bad at what you do. Invisible because AI couldn't find anything from you worth citing.
Perplexity searches the live web, aggregates what it finds, and selects sources based on relevance, structure, and trust. It tends to cite pages that answer the question directly, in clear language, with enough specificity to be useful.
The sources it favors tend to share a few traits:
Perplexity doesn't care about your brand colors or your hero image. It cares whether your content answers a question well enough to be worth citing.
The most common reason businesses don't appear in Perplexity answers isn't that they're unknown. It's that their content doesn't give AI anything to grab onto.
A homepage that says "We deliver excellence in customer service and innovative solutions" tells AI nothing. There's no fact to cite, no question being answered, no specificity to reference.
Compare that to a service page that says: "We provide weekly commercial cleaning for offices between 2,000 and 20,000 square feet, including floor care, restroom sanitation, and breakroom deep cleaning." That's a sentence Perplexity can actually use.
Our work at Modern Humans AI focuses specifically on this gap — helping businesses restructure their content and data so AI assistants can read, trust, and cite them. The pattern we see over and over is that businesses have the expertise and the reputation, but their online presence doesn't communicate either one in a way AI can process.
Go to perplexity.ai and type a question a potential customer might ask about your service. Not your business name — the kind of question someone asks before they even know you exist.
Try these:
Read the answer. Check the citations. Notice who's being referenced and why.
If your competitors appear and you don't, look at the pages Perplexity cited. You'll likely notice they have clearer content, better-structured pages, or FAQ sections that match real customer questions. That's not a coincidence — that's what AI looks for when deciding what's worth quoting.
Being cited by Perplexity isn't about writing more content. It's about writing the right content in the right structure.
A few things that make a real difference:
The SBA's guide to building an online business presence reinforces a foundational point here: keeping your business information accurate and consistent across platforms isn't just good practice — it's how systems verify you're legitimate.
The mental shift that matters: Perplexity isn't ranking you against competitors. It's deciding whether your content is clear enough, trustworthy enough, and structured enough to be part of the answer.
That's a different problem than SEO. And it has a different solution.
You don't need to outrank anyone. You need to give AI something worth saying about you. A clear explanation. A direct answer. A well-structured page that makes Perplexity think, "This is a credible source I can cite."
The businesses showing up in AI answers right now aren't gaming a system. They're just easier to quote. And in 2026, being easy to quote is becoming one of the most valuable things a business can be.