Key takeaways
- There is no official ChatGPT business listing or submission form; the GPT Store is separate and does not function as a company directory.
- AI systems pull facts from your own site, directories, review platforms, partner pages, and pages cited in AI search answers.
- Fix high-visibility sources first: Google Business Profile and major directories for local businesses, G2 or Capterra style pages for SaaS.
- Build a company facts page with consistent entity fields, then track whether repeated prompts stop echoing outdated information.
Is there a ChatGPT business listing?
No public, universal ChatGPT business listing works like Google Business Profile. There is no form to submit hours, address, or services directly into ChatGPT for guaranteed placement in answers.
No public, universal ChatGPT business listing works like Google Business Profile. There is no dashboard where you claim your company, verify a phone number, upload photos, or pay for a guaranteed card inside chat answers, regardless of how the request is phrased or which plan you use. Owners searching for a submission form are often chasing something that simply does not exist in this form yet.
The GPT Store is frequently confused with a business directory, but it publishes custom GPT apps built by developers, not company profiles or storefronts. ChatGPT search gives answers with links to relevant web sources, which means visibility depends on what the open web already documents about your company, not a profile page you personally create, verify, or pay to promote inside the product.
Where does AI get business information?
AI systems can reflect information from your own site, directories, review platforms, partner pages, press coverage, and pages cited inside AI search answers. Each source type needs its own repair path.
AI systems can reflect information from your own site, directories, review platforms, partner pages, market lists, press pages, and pages cited inside AI search answers. Some sources are fully under your control, like site copy and structured data, while others require outreach, claim verification, or platform-specific edit requests that take time to process and confirm before they reliably surface again.
OpenAI's crawler documentation describes OAI-SearchBot and GPTBot preferences, confirming that crawlable pages feed these systems directly through independent robots settings you can configure. Google's generative AI optimization guidance notes that local business and ecommerce details can matter in AI responses, specifically referencing Google Business Profiles and Merchant Center as inputs worth maintaining alongside your primary website content.
| Source type | Facts it may influence | Repair action |
|---|---|---|
| Your website | Name, category, services, contact | Publish a clear facts page |
| Google Business Profile | Hours, address, category, reviews | Edit directly in the profile |
| Industry directories | Category, service area, credentials | Request correction or claim listing |
| Review platforms | Reputation signals, service details | Respond and update details |
| Press or partner pages | Descriptions, positioning, quotes | Contact publisher for updates |

Which listings should businesses fix first?
Fix listings defining your name, category, location, services, hours, pricing, and reviews before chasing obscure directories. High-authority sources carry far more retrieval weight than minor listings nobody searches.
Fix listings that define your name, category, location, services, hours, pricing, and reviews before chasing obscure directories that rarely appear in any search result a customer or AI system would actually retrieve. For local businesses, start with Google Business Profile, then move to major industry directories and any chamber of commerce or association listing that ranks when you search your own brand name in an incognito browser.
For SaaS companies, priority often includes G2, Capterra, Product Hunt, and partner integration pages, treated as examples worth checking rather than a universal mandate every company must follow identically. Search your business name plus a key fact like pricing or headquarters location, note which pages actually surface on page one, and resist the urge to correct listings nobody encounters during real searches or AI queries.
How do you make your own site the source of truth?
Create a crawlable company facts page repeating the same entity details found across trusted listings and linking to service, pricing, and contact pages. Consistency reduces the odds of AI echoing outdated facts.
Create a crawlable company facts page that repeats the same entity details found across trusted listings and links to relevant service, pricing, and contact pages so nothing important lives only in an image, a PDF, or a JavaScript widget that crawlers may skip. Include legal name, brand name, category, services, areas served, support contact, a pricing caveat, and a visible last-updated date so freshness is obvious.
Schema.org Organization markup adds structured fields like legalName, contactPoint, location, areaServed, brand, and logo that reinforce the same facts in machine-readable form crawlers can parse without ambiguity. AnswerMentions' about page is one working example of laying out these details clearly without burying them under marketing copy, testimonials, or animations that push the actual facts further down the page.

How do you fix conflicting business listings?
Fix conflicts by building a source map, ranking sources by visibility and authority, correcting the highest-impact profiles first, and documenting each change so you can retest later.
Fix conflicts by building a source map, ranking sources by visibility and authority, correcting the highest-impact profiles first, and documenting each change so you can retest later instead of guessing whether an edit actually took effect. Search your business name plus hours, location, or pricing to see which pages surface and where they disagree with your own current, correct information.
Work through a directory correction workflow that logs the source name, the conflicting fact, the corrected version, the submission date, and the expected confirmation timeline for that specific platform. The local service directory conflict case study shows how duplicate profiles caused inconsistent hours across three directories until each correction was tracked, submitted, and reconfirmed individually rather than assumed fixed after one email.
How do you know AI updated the facts?
You know facts are improving when repeated AI prompts stop showing the old conflict and start citing or echoing the corrected source instead, confirmed through ongoing retesting rather than a single check.
You know facts are improving when repeated AI prompts stop showing the old conflict and begin echoing the corrected source across multiple phrasings, devices, and sessions rather than just once in a lucky test. Systems refresh retrieval at unpredictable intervals, so a written retest schedule matters far more than expecting instant confirmation the day after you submit a correction.
Run a free source map audit to identify which business listings, directories, and third-party pages AI currently pulls from instead of your own site, then treat that first audit as a baseline rather than a final verdict. Repeat the same prompts after corrections go live to confirm the fix actually propagated, and keep a simple log so you can prove improvement over time.
Reader questions
Frequently asked questions
Can I submit my business directly to ChatGPT?
No, there is no direct submission form or claim process. Visibility depends on what your website and third-party sources already say, so improving those existing sources matters more than searching for a nonexistent submission portal or paid listing option.
Is Google Business Profile used by ChatGPT?
Google's guidance says local business details can matter in AI responses and references Google Business Profiles specifically. It is not confirmed as a direct ChatGPT input, but keeping it accurate is still worth prioritizing given its broader visibility.
Which directories matter for AI answers?
It depends on your industry and what actually ranks when you search your own business name and key facts. Check which directory pages surface on page one before spending time correcting obscure listings nobody actually sees or clicks.
Should SaaS companies create local business listings?
Usually not, unless you maintain a physical office serving local customers directly. SaaS companies typically gain more from correcting G2, Capterra, and Product Hunt pages than building local directory profiles that rarely apply to their business model.
How often should I audit business listings for AI visibility?
A quarterly review works as a reasonable baseline for most companies. Add an extra audit after a rebrand, pricing change, or relocation, and sooner if AI answers repeat outdated facts during normal prompt testing sessions.