Is AI Getting Your Story Right?

Is AI Getting Your Story Right?

AI pulls information from all over to decide who you are as a real estate professional, and some of those sources may not be telling your best story. With just a little cleanup in the right spots, you can shape how AI presents you every time someone searches your name.

Artificial intelligence is changing how people choose real estate agents. When someone types a question like "Is [agent name] any good?" or "Who should help me sell my home in [city]?", AI doesn't just skim the internet. It pieces together a picture of you from the places where your information is strongest.

The good news? You have direct control over several of the sources AI relies on most.

Updating these profiles doesn't require technical skill - just a few minutes of attention. But the pay-off is real: clearer visibility, more accurate summaries, and a better chance of being recommended when someone asks AI for help.

Below are three crucial sources AI checks when deciding what to say about you.

IF GOOGLE ISN'T SURE ABOUT YOU, AI WON'T BE EITHER

Google remains the most influential signal of whether you're an active, legitimate professional. When AI systems try to confirm your identity, they look for a complete, consistent Google Business Profile. If yours is thin or outdated, AI may hesitate to show you - or may surface another agent who looks more current.

A well maintained profile gives AI confidence in your name, brokerage, service area, and activity level. Even small updates help. Refreshing your photos, tightening your bio, or correcting your service area can make you more visible in AI generated answers.

This is one of the fastest, highest impact places an agent can improve their online presence.

THE PROFILES AI TRUSTS MORE THAN YOUR WEBSITE

When AI tries to understand what kind of agent you are, Zillow and Realtor.com give it the clearest picture. These sites contain the structured information AI can easily interpret: your bio, brokerage, headshot, specialties, and service area. They're also among the most frequently crawled real estate platforms online. The result? AI often trusts these profiles more than your website.

If your information is outdated or inconsistent - an old brokerage, a mismatched bio, a headshot from a decade ago - AI treats that as uncertainty. Uncertainty lowers your visibility and weakens the story AI can tell about you.

Clean, current profiles help AI describe you accurately and place you in the right context for local searches. If you haven't reviewed these pages recently, you're leaving influence on the table.

A polished online presence is no longer optional - it's the first impression that wins or loses you potential clients.
Elevate Your Online Presence

THE PROFILE YOU FORGOT ABOUT - BUT AI DIDN'T

Your brokerage's website is one of the most trusted sources AI uses to confirm who you are. These pages tend to be well maintained, high authority, and tied directly to your license and brokerage - which makes them especially valuable for AI systems trying to verify your identity.

But they're also the profiles agents forget about most.

If your brokerage profile looks outdated, AI assumes the rest of your online presence might be outdated too. A stale headshot or a two sentence bio from years ago sends the wrong signal. When your brokerage profile matches your Google, Zillow, and Realtor.com information, AI has a much easier time understanding you and recommending you.

This is often the simplest profile to update - and one of the most important.

THE BOTTOM LINE

AI isn't judging you. It's assembling you - from whatever it can find.

When these three profiles are complete, consistent, and current, AI can confidently tell your story. When they're not, AI hesitates… and hesitation means lost visibility, lost trust, and potentially lost business.

Today's hour of clean up helps you look better every time someone uses AI to search for you by name.

About the Author

With an over 30-year background in online marketing, websites, SEO, programming, and database development, Randy Bowers has a lengthy and unusually broad history of experience in tech. As Director of Technology for The Lones Group, Inc., Randy oversees tech-related projects and infrastructure, client website development, and online marketing campaigns for both The Lones Group and our clients. On a typical day you'll find him building websites, coordinating online marketing, and providing friendly advice to help our clients grow with technology. When not at work he enjoys writing music, cooking, biking, and playing video games. He can be reached at randy@thelonesgroup.com.

 Categories: Tech Blog