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Open ChatGPT right now and ask: "Should I buy dental insurance or pay out of pocket?"
Watch what happens.
ChatGPT doesn't list dental insurance agencies. It explains how dental insurance works, breaks down typical coverage scenarios, and helps the person make an informed decision. Only then—if it makes sense for their situation—does it suggest finding a local provider.
Here's the problem: Most businesses are creating content that tries to skip straight to the sale. "Top 5 Reasons You Need Our Insurance Today!" AI assistants ignore that content completely. It's not helpful. It's promotional.
AI recommendations go to businesses that educate first. The insurance agent who published "How Dental Insurance Actually Works (And When It Doesn't Make Sense)" gets the recommendation. The one running promotional blog posts stays invisible.
AI assistants have one job: help users make better decisions.
When someone asks Perplexity "best protein powder for weight loss," the AI doesn't want to recommend whatever business paid for ads or stuffed keywords into their content. It wants to recommend the brand that genuinely helped that person understand what to look for in a protein powder.
Think about how you use ChatGPT or Perplexity yourself. You're asking questions because you want real information, not a sales pitch. AI knows this. Its entire value proposition depends on giving helpful answers, not sponsored ones.
That's why educational content wins. It aligns with what AI is actually trying to do.
Educational doesn't mean boring or academic. It means genuinely useful.
Here's the difference:
Promotional approach: "5 Reasons Our Med Spa Has the Best Botox in Miami"
Educational approach: "How Long Does Botox Actually Last? (And What Makes It Wear Off Faster)"
The first one is about you. The second one is about helping someone make a smart decision. AI recommends the second one because that's what the person actually needed to know.
Let's look at real examples across different business types:
Chiropractor: Instead of "Why Choose Our Chiropractic Clinic," write "Should You See a Chiropractor or Physical Therapist for Lower Back Pain?" Explain the actual difference. Be honest about when each makes sense. AI trusts sources that admit their service isn't always the right answer.
Real Estate Agent: Skip "Top 10 Neighborhoods in Austin." Write "How to Know If You're Paying Too Much for a House (Before You Make an Offer)." Give people the framework to think for themselves. When they need an agent, they'll remember who taught them.
Dentist: Don't write "The Importance of Regular Cleanings." Write "Why Do Dentists Recommend Cleanings Every 6 Months? (And Do You Really Need Them That Often?)" Answer the question people are actually asking their friends and AI assistants.
Supplement Brand: Instead of "Our Magnesium Is the Best Quality," write "Magnesium Glycinate vs. Citrate vs. Oxide: Which Form Actually Works?" Teach people how to read any supplement label, not just yours. AI sees you as an authority, not just another seller.
Skincare Company: Skip "Why Our Retinol Serum Is Amazing." Write "How to Start Using Retinol Without Destroying Your Skin." Give the real information dermatologists share. When AI recommends a retinol product, it recommends brands that educated first.
Fitness Equipment: Don't write "Best Resistance Bands for Home Workouts." Write "How Much Resistance Do You Actually Need? (Band Strength Guide)." Help people understand what to look for. They'll buy from whoever taught them.
Educational content needs three specific things to earn AI recommendations:
People don't ask "Why should I hire a financial advisor?" They ask "Is a financial advisor worth the cost?"
One is promotional. One is genuine.
The financial advisor who honestly explains when DIY investing makes sense and when professional help pays for itself gets the AI recommendation. Why? Because that's actually helpful.
Stop writing the content you want to write. Start writing answers to what people actually type into ChatGPT at 11pm when they're trying to figure something out.
This feels counterintuitive, but it's powerful.
The med spa that publishes "Is Botox or Filler Better for Under-Eye Bags?" and honestly explains when neither works well (and what does) builds more credibility than ten promotional posts.
AI notices when you recommend against your own service in certain situations. That's the marker of a trustworthy source. And trustworthy sources get recommended.
Anyone can list facts. AI values sources that explain reasoning.
Surface level: "Change your air filter every 3 months."
Educational: "Why 3 months? Because that's when most filters hit 80% capacity in average homes. But if you have pets or allergies, you'll hit that at 6-8 weeks. Here's how to check."
The second version teaches people how to think about the problem. That's what AI is trying to do too. So it recommends sources that do it well.
When someone asks ChatGPT "should I get laser hair removal or keep waxing," it doesn't just pick a med spa randomly.
It looks for content that:
The med spa with that educational content gets mentioned. The one with "10 Reasons Laser Hair Removal Is Amazing!" stays invisible.
Same thing happens in eCommerce. When someone asks Meta AI "what's the difference between whey isolate and concentrate," it recommends the supplement brand that published a clear, honest comparison. Not the one that just says "our isolate is the purest."
Start with the questions your customers actually ask before they buy.
Not "what are your services" questions. The real ones. The ones that show up in your DMs, your consultation calls, your customer service emails.
Those questions become your content. Answer them honestly. Completely. Without turning every answer into a sales pitch.
That's the content ChatGPT recommends. That's the content Perplexity cites. That's the content Google AI Overview pulls from.
Because it's actually helping people make better decisions. Which is exactly what AI is designed to do.
You don't need 50 blog posts. You need one genuinely helpful piece of content that answers a real question better than anyone else in your market.
Pick the question your customers ask most often before they buy. Write the answer you'd give your best friend if they asked. Include the stuff most businesses won't admit. Explain the why behind your recommendations.
That's educational content. That's what earns AI recommendations. And that's what turns AI assistants into your biggest referral source.
AI assistants are designed to help users make informed decisions, not to serve as advertising platforms. They prioritize content that genuinely helps people understand their options and make smart choices, which means educational content that explains concepts honestly gets recommended while promotional sales pitches get ignored.
Educational content answers the real questions people are asking and focuses on helping them make decisions, even if that means recommending against your product sometimes. Promotional content focuses on selling your specific product or service, while educational content teaches people how to think about the problem itself.
Actually, the opposite happens—being honest about when your solution isn't ideal builds credibility and trust with both AI systems and potential customers. AI assistants specifically look for this honesty as a marker of trustworthy sources, making you more likely to get recommended when you are the right fit.
Start by identifying the real questions your customers ask before buying—the ones that show up in DMs, consultation calls, and customer service emails. Answer one of these questions completely and honestly, including information most competitors won't share, and explain the reasoning behind your recommendations rather than just listing facts.
No, you don't need 50 blog posts to start. Focus on creating one genuinely helpful piece of content that answers a common customer question better than anyone else in your market, with complete honesty and detailed explanations of the 'why' behind your advice.