Trust is how professional services firms win work. Reputation travels through referrals, credentials, and the quality of work people have heard about. That reputation now also travels through AI, and most firms have not looked at what it says.
The comparison that happens before you know about it
A business owner looking for a commercial litigation lawyer does not call three firms before deciding who to call. They ask ChatGPT: "What are the best commercial litigation lawyers in [city]?" An executive choosing an accounting firm asks Claude to compare the two firms they have heard of. A startup founder asks Perplexity which consultants handle their kind of problem. AI answers these questions with confidence, drawing from whatever it has read, and the shortlist forms before the first enquiry arrives.
If your firm is described inaccurately, listed under outdated practice areas, or absent from the answer entirely, you are not losing a pitch. You are not making the shortlist.
The specific risk for high-trust professions
Professional services firms are particularly exposed because AI flattens complex capability. A litigation practice with a specific record in commercial property disputes gets described in generic terms. A boutique accounting firm with genuine expertise in R&D tax is lumped in with general practitioners. The nuance that makes the firm worth choosing is exactly the nuance AI is most likely to lose.
Worse, AI can confuse you with another firm, cite a past partner who left, or describe a service area you moved away from years ago. In a sector where accuracy and credibility are the whole point, an AI that gets you slightly wrong does real damage quietly.
What managing AI representation looks like
SignalTo monitors the questions your prospective clients actually ask across ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity and Google AI Overviews. It shows you the answer each platform gives, scores how accurately your firm is described, and flags where a competitor is being recommended instead of you. AI Dedicated Pages give AI a clean, structured source of accurate information about the firm, so the answer it assembles is based on what you say, not on whatever it found first.
The firm does not need to understand how the platforms work. The platform produces a prioritised list of what to fix and handles the drafting.
The monthly view
Firms that invest in their profile expect to see progress. SignalTo's Monthly Report, delivered the 1st of every month, shows what AI is saying now, what changed, and what the current AI Alignment Score is. It is the equivalent of a search rankings report, but for the answer your prospects get when they ask AI for a recommendation.
Getting started
If your clients research before they buy and trust is the deciding factor, the AI answer about your firm already matters. Read what AI Visibility Management is to understand the practice, or see whether SignalTo is the right fit for your firm.
Common questions
Do professional services buyers really use AI before choosing a firm?
Increasingly yes. Business owners, executives and individuals researching accountants, lawyers and consultants now use ChatGPT, Claude and Perplexity to shortlist options, compare specialisations, and assess credibility before making contact. The AI answer shapes the shortlist before the firm knows a conversation was happening.
What kinds of mistakes does AI make about professional services firms?
AI can describe outdated practice areas, confuse your firm with another, misstate the scale of the practice, or recommend a competitor when a prospect asks for the best option in your category. It can also simply say it has no information, which is a commercial outcome even though it sounds neutral.
How does SignalTo help a professional services firm manage AI representation?
SignalTo monitors what ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity and Google AI say about your firm across the questions your prospects actually ask, surfaces gaps and inaccuracies, and produces a prioritised action plan for fixing them. AI Dedicated Pages give AI clear, accurate information to read, replacing whatever it was assembling on its own.