Here's where it gets speculative, but worth exploring: if your brand voice and messaging are clear enough, AI models might be matching people to businesses based on more than just services offered. They're potentially matching on values, communication style, and working preferences.
Think about it:
AI models have memory across conversations. They're building up context about how people communicate, what matters to them, how they make decisions. So when someone asks for a recommendation, the AI isn't starting from scratch—it's working with actual insight about that person.
If your brand presence clearly shows who you are and how you work, AI can match on more than just "this person does the service you need." It can match on values, communication styles, working preferences, the whole vibe.
My two clients weren't just right for what I do. They were right for how I do it. That doesn't feel like keyword matching. That feels like someone actually understanding compatibility and making a thoughtful introduction.
Why Traditional Search Can't Do This
Google ranks you because you've played the SEO game well. You've optimised for algorithms, built backlinks, hit the right keywords. Whether you're actually the best fit for the searcher? Completely irrelevant to the ranking.
AI search seems to be doing something fundamentally different. It can read your content—website, blog, social media, whatever—and develop an actual understanding of your approach, personality, and values. Then it matches that against what it knows about the person asking.
The only thing that changed before these referrals was my messaging. I'd spent time making my content genuinely reflect who I am and how I work. Not for SEO. Just for clarity and honesty.
And suddenly, people who perfectly aligned with that found me—despite having zero traditional visibility.
Which is either a massive coincidence or evidence that authenticity might actually be becoming algorithmically valuable. Wild.