Waseit

AI visibility by sector

AI visibility for hairdressers and barbers: get into the answers

Switching hairdresser is a perceived-risk decision — exactly the kind of choice people delegate to an AI assistant. “A good barber for a skin fade?”, “a stylist who knows curly hair?”: the AI answers with two or three named salons, their speciality and sometimes their price range.

What the AI needs to answer: a legible speciality, recent reviews confirming it, and consistent information. Salons ticking those three boxes monopolise their neighbourhood's recommendations.

Test my AI visibility — free

The questions AIs get about your trade

Real examples our audit tests (here for Leeds):

  • « What are the best hairdressers in Leeds? Give me a list with your recommendations. »
  • « Top 5 hairdressers in Leeds in 2026. »
  • « Which hairdressers in Leeds have the best customer reviews? »

ChatGPT, Gemini and Perplexity answer these with names. The only question that matters: is yours one of them?

What AIs weigh before recommending

  • A stated speciality: colourist, curl specialist, traditional barber — AI queries are overwhelmingly “specialised”.
  • Online booking (Treatwell, Booksy): AIs readily mention “bookable online” as a practical criterion.
  • Recent, regular reviews — a salon with nothing new in 6 months looks closed to an answer engine.
  • Work photos on your Google profile (before/after) with text descriptions.
  • A published price range: “from £25” helps the AI place you on “good value” queries.

Do this month

  • Add your speciality to your Google profile name (“— colourist”).
  • Enable online booking and link it everywhere.
  • Aim for 2-3 new Google reviews a month that name the service.
  • Publish your base prices as text on your site.

The directories that count

Sources answer engines consult for your sector:

FAQ

Do customers really find hairdressers via ChatGPT?

Yes — especially for specific needs: curly hair, complex colour work, a barber for a precise style. These are decisions where people want an argued recommendation rather than a list — exactly what AI assistants produce.

Why is my competitor cited and not me?

Usually: their speciality is written down in black and white (site, Google profile, reviews that mention it), yours isn't. AIs don't guess — they repeat what's documented. The Waseit audit shows you exactly which competitors get cited and on which questions.

Can a small salon compete with big chains?

On specialised queries, yes — and those are the most common. Chains win on “cheap haircut”, but “best colourist in …” is decided on documented reputation, where a precise independent often wins.