{"id":28743,"date":"2026-04-26T22:53:16","date_gmt":"2026-04-27T03:53:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/?p=28743"},"modified":"2026-04-26T22:55:34","modified_gmt":"2026-04-27T03:55:34","slug":"business-directory-trust-signals-what-users-search-engines-and-ai-models-look-for","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/business-directory-trust-signals-what-users-search-engines-and-ai-models-look-for\/","title":{"rendered":"Business Directory Trust Signals: What Users, Search Engines, and AI Models Look For"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>When I ran my services company, I used to spend Sunday evenings updating directory listings the way other people do crosswords \u2014 methodically, slightly obsessively, and with a creeping suspicion that most of it was pointless. Some of it was. But the parts that worked, worked disproportionately well, and it took me years of trial and error (and one embarrassing Yelp listing that had my old phone number for fourteen months) to figure out which signals actually moved the needle.<\/p>\n<p>The problem is that most advice on <a title=\"SEO in 2025: Why Old-School Directories Still Have a Place\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/seo-in-2025-why-old-school-directories-still-have-a-place\/\">directory trust signals<\/a> is either vague cheerleading or a checklist from 2014. Neither tells you what <a  title=\"search engines\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/internet-online-marketing\/search-engines\/\" >search engines<\/a> weigh today, what AI crawlers like Perplexity and ChatGPT&#8217;s browsing layer pull out, or \u2014 more importantly \u2014 what a sceptical human actually notices before picking up the phone. So I&#8217;m going to give you a framework I&#8217;ve been using with consulting clients: <strong>TACTS<\/strong>. Transparency, Authority, Consistency, Timeliness, Specificity. It&#8217;s not magic, but it&#8217;s the first approach I&#8217;ve found that holds up across all three audiences.<\/p>\n<h2>Why Current Trust Audits Miss the Mark<\/h2>\n<p>Most trust audits I&#8217;ve seen from agencies boil down to three things: count your reviews, check your NAP, submit to more <a  title=\"Directories\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/traveling-regions\/directories\/\" >directories<\/a>. That&#8217;s it. That&#8217;s the audit. You&#8217;ll pay \u00a3600 for a PDF that says &#8220;you have 47 citations, your competitor has 82, here are 35 more submission sites.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This misses what&#8217;s actually happening when a customer, a Googlebot, or an LLM evaluates whether your listing is trustworthy.<\/p>\n<h3>The review-count obsession problem<\/h3>\n<p>I fell for this early on. I chased reviews like they were the only thing that mattered, and ended up with a profile that had 180 five-star ratings \u2014 and a conversion rate that got worse as the count went up. Why? Because the reviews were generic. &#8220;Great service!&#8221; &#8220;Friendly!&#8221; &#8220;Would recommend!&#8221; Nothing specific, nothing that suggested a real person with a real job had hired us for a real problem.<\/p>\n<p>Review <em>count<\/em> is a weak signal. Review <em>texture<\/em> \u2014 length, specificity, response quality, temporal distribution \u2014 is a strong one. A business with 40 detailed reviews spread evenly over two years outperforms one with 200 reviews clustered in a three-week burst. Google figured this out years ago. AI models trained on web content pick up on it even more obviously because they&#8217;re parsing language patterns, not just counting stars.<\/p>\n<h3>Blind spots in traditional SEO checklists<\/h3>\n<p>The standard local <a  title=\"SEO\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/internet-online-marketing\/seo\/\" >SEO<\/a> checklist was built for a world where Google was the only crawler that mattered and users scrolled through ten blue links. That world is gone. Today your listing might be evaluated by:<\/p>\n<p>A human skimming a directory page on their phone at a bus stop. Google&#8217;s ranking system, which uses entity-based understanding now, not just keyword matching. Perplexity&#8217;s retrieval layer, which pulls snippets for generative answers. Bing&#8217;s Copilot, which feeds into ChatGPT&#8217;s search results. An AI assistant summarising &#8220;best plumbers in Leeds&#8221; without ever showing the user your listing at all.<\/p>\n<p>Traditional checklists don&#8217;t account for any of this. They ask whether you have a listing; they don&#8217;t ask whether the listing gives a language model enough structured context to confidently cite you.<\/p>\n<h3>What AI crawlers see that humans don&#8217;t<\/h3>\n<p>Here&#8217;s what I learned the hard way: AI models treat absence of information as suspicious, whereas humans treat it as neutral. If your listing has no &#8220;year founded,&#8221; a human shrugs. An LLM, when asked &#8220;how long has this business been operating?&#8221;, will either skip you or hedge (&#8220;the listing does not specify&#8221;). That hedge is invisible to you but it&#8217;s the difference between being cited and being ignored in an AI answer.<\/p>\n<p>AI crawlers also weight <em>consistency across sources<\/em> very heavily. If your Google Business Profile says you opened in 2016, your own website says 2017, and your Companies House record says 2015, a language model will either pick the source it trusts most (usually the <a  title=\"government\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/regional\/oceania\/new-zealand\/government\/\" >government<\/a> record) or flag the discrepancy by declining to mention the year at all. You&#8217;ve essentially been penalised for sloppiness you didn&#8217;t know you had.<\/p>\n<div class=\"fact\">\n<p><strong>Did you know?<\/strong> According to <a href=\"https:\/\/birdeye.com\/blog\/business-directory-list\/\">Birdeye&#8217;s analysis of directory ecosystems<\/a>, &#8220;when you are listed in a more extensive business directory, you can also get more listings in smaller directories&#8221; \u2014 but the secondary listings may contain inaccurate information because they weren&#8217;t submitted by you. This cascading effect is how stale <a title=\"Is Your Old Phone Number Still Haunting Your Online Listings? A Cleanup Guide\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/is-your-old-phone-number-still-haunting-your-online-listings-a-cleanup-guide\/\">phone numbers haunt<\/a> you for years.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Introducing the TACTS Framework<\/h2>\n<p>TACTS stands for Transparency, Authority, Consistency, Timeliness, and Specificity. I didn&#8217;t invent these concepts individually \u2014 each one shows up in various SEO guides. What&#8217;s different is treating them as a single weighted scoring system and acknowledging that the weights shift depending on who&#8217;s evaluating the listing.<\/p>\n<h3>Transparency, Authority, Consistency, Timeliness, Specificity<\/h3>\n<p><strong>Transparency:<\/strong> How clearly does the listing disclose who runs the business, how to contact them, and where they actually operate? Owner names, physical addresses, landline numbers, registered company numbers.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Authority:<\/strong> What external validation exists? Verification badges, <a  title=\"industry\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/business-marketing\/industry\/\" >industry<\/a> memberships, certifications, editorial mentions, government registrations.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Consistency:<\/strong> Does <a title=\"Help! My Directory Listing Has Wrong Information (And How to Correct It)\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/help-my-directory-listing-has-wrong-information-and-how-to-correct-it\/\">information<\/a> match across the entire citation graph \u2014 directories, your website, social profiles, and schema markup?<\/p>\n<p><strong>Timeliness:<\/strong> When was this last updated? Are hours current? Are photos recent? Do reviews still trickle in?<\/p>\n<p><strong>Specificity:<\/strong> How detailed and unique is the listing content? Generic descriptions versus detailed service breakdowns, neighbourhood-level service areas, named team members.<\/p>\n<h3>Why these five signals and not others<\/h3>\n<p>I considered adding &#8220;reviews&#8221; as its own pillar and decided against it. Reviews are evidence that feeds into Authority (verified social proof), Timeliness (recent activity), and Specificity (detailed review language). Treating reviews as a separate category leads to the count-obsession problem \u2014 it makes owners chase volume instead of treating reviews as one contributor to multiple signals.<\/p>\n<p>I also considered &#8220;engagement&#8221; (clicks, calls, direction requests) and rejected it because business owners can&#8217;t directly control it. TACTS is deliberately made of signals you can <em>act on<\/em>.<\/p>\n<h3>How weighting shifts across audiences<\/h3>\n<p>Here&#8217;s where most frameworks fall apart \u2014 they pretend users, <a title=\"The One Thing You Must Do for AI Search\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/the-one-thing-you-must-do-for-ai-search\/\">search engines, and AI<\/a> models want the same things. They don&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<table>\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th>Signal<\/th>\n<th>Human Users<\/th>\n<th>Search Engines<\/th>\n<th>AI Models<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Transparency<\/td>\n<td>Medium<\/td>\n<td>Medium<\/td>\n<td>High<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Authority<\/td>\n<td>High<\/td>\n<td>High<\/td>\n<td>Very High<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Consistency<\/td>\n<td>Low<\/td>\n<td>Very High<\/td>\n<td>Very High<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Timeliness<\/td>\n<td>Very High<\/td>\n<td>High<\/td>\n<td>Medium<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>Notice the pattern. Humans care most about &#8220;is this place open right now and do the photos look recent?&#8221; <a title=\"How Search Engines Use Business Directory Data for Local Rankings\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/how-search-engines-use-business-directory-data-for-local-rankings\/\">Search engines care most about whether your data<\/a> lines up across the web. AI models care most about authority and disambiguation \u2014 they need to be confident they&#8217;re talking about <em>your<\/em> business and not the similarly-named one two towns over.<\/p>\n<p>If you&#8217;re optimising for only one of these audiences, you&#8217;re leaving the other two underserved. The whole point of TACTS is to give each signal enough weight that you don&#8217;t neglect the audiences you can&#8217;t directly see.<\/p>\n<h2>Transparency and Authority Signals Decoded<\/h2>\n<h3>Ownership disclosure and contact depth<\/h3>\n<p>The single cheapest trust signal you can add is a named owner. Not &#8220;the team at Acme <a  title=\"Plumbing\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/home-garden\/home-improvement\/plumbing\/\" >Plumbing<\/a>&#8221; \u2014 an actual human name, ideally with a photo. I resisted this for years because I&#8217;m private by nature, and I watched my competitor (who put his face on everything) outperform me by roughly 40% on lead volume. Eventually I swallowed my pride and added an &#8220;About Dave&#8221; section. Leads went up within a month.<\/p>\n<p>Contact depth matters too. A listing with a mobile number, a landline, an email, and a physical address signals more legitimacy than one with just a web form. AI models in particular weight the presence of multiple contact channels as evidence of a real operating business rather than a lead-generation funnel.<\/p>\n<h3>Verification badges that actually carry weight<\/h3>\n<p>Not all badges are equal. In my experience ranking them roughly by impact:<\/p>\n<p><a  title=\"Government\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/regional\/oceania\/australia\/government\/\" >Government<\/a> registrations (Companies House, state business registration) carry the most weight because they&#8217;re hard to fake. Industry-body certifications (Gas Safe, NICEIC, trade associations with real barriers to entry) come second. Platform-native verification (<a title=\"What is Google Business Directory?\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/what-is-google-business-directory\/\">Google Business Profile<\/a> verified, Meta verified) comes third \u2014 useful but expected. Generic &#8220;verified business&#8221; stickers from smaller directories come last, and some carry negative weight because they&#8217;re associated with low-quality listing farms.<\/p>\n<div class=\"myth\">\n<p><strong>Myth:<\/strong> More <a title=\"Surviving SGE: Why Directory Verification is Now Vital\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/surviving-sge-why-directory-verification-is-now-vital\/\">directory badges and verification<\/a> ticks always help your credibility. <strong>Reality:<\/strong> <a title=\"How to Use Directory Badges on Your Website for Social Proof\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/how-to-use-directory-badges-on-your-website-for-social-proof\/\">Badges from low-quality directories<\/a> can actively hurt you. Association with link-farm-style sites signals to both search engines and AI models that you&#8217;re buying <a title=\"How to Build Trust in Google\u2019s Eyes\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/how-to-build-trust-in-googles-eyes\/\">trust<\/a> rather than earning it. I&#8217;ve seen listings improve their visibility by <em>removing<\/em> themselves from junk directories.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h3>Citation patterns AI models reward<\/h3>\n<p>Here&#8217;s something I&#8217;ve tested repeatedly with clients: AI models disproportionately favour <a title=\"Select Perfect Categories in Business Directories\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/select-perfect-categories-in-business-directories\/\">businesses that appear in <em>curated<\/em> directories<\/a> over those that only appear in auto-generated ones. A <a title=\"The Truth About Paid Directory Listings\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/the-truth-about-paid-directory-listings\/\">listing in an editorially reviewed directory<\/a> carries more citation weight than ten listings in automated scrapers.<\/p>\n<p>This is because LLMs during <a  title=\"training\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/business-marketing\/training\/\" >training<\/a> (and during retrieval) pattern-match on source quality. Curated directories with human editorial oversight \u2014 including platforms like the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\">Web Directory<\/a>, trade-specific directories, and chamber-of-commerce listings \u2014 signal human vouching. Scraped aggregators don&#8217;t. If I had to choose between 50 automated listings and 5 curated ones, I&#8217;d take the 5 <a title=\"Austin Injury Attorneys on Every Directory\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/austin-injury-attorneys-on-every-directory\/\">every<\/a> time, and I have the client data to back that up.<\/p>\n<h2>Consistency Across the Citation Graph<\/h2>\n<h3>NAP uniformity beyond the basics<\/h3>\n<p>Everyone says &#8220;keep your Name, Address, and Phone consistent.&#8221; Fine. But the subtleties kill you.<\/p>\n<p>Is it &#8220;Ltd&#8221; or &#8220;Limited&#8221;? &#8220;St&#8221; or &#8220;Street&#8221;? &#8220;0113-xxx-xxxx&#8221; or &#8220;+44 113 xxx xxxx&#8221;? Most businesses have three or four accidental variants floating around the web from listings they created years ago. Search engines are forgiving about this <em>now<\/em> \u2014 Google&#8217;s entity resolution has gotten good enough to merge minor variants \u2014 but AI models during retrieval are less forgiving. If Perplexity pulls two conflicting phone numbers, it&#8217;ll often display neither.<\/p>\n<div class=\"quick-tip\">\n<p><strong>Quick tip:<\/strong> Pick one canonical format for every data point and write it down in a document. Name, address (with exact punctuation), phone format, website URL (with or without www), opening hours format. Use that document every time you <a title=\"US Businesses: Update Listings This Often\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/us-businesses-update-listings-this-often\/\">update a listing<\/a>. I use a single Google Doc pinned to my clients&#8217; shared drive \u2014 boring but it&#8217;s saved them thousands in wasted consulting hours.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h3>Schema match with on-page claims<\/h3>\n<p>If your website&#8217;s schema markup says you&#8217;re a &#8220;Plumber&#8221; but your directory listings say &#8220;Heating Engineer&#8221; and your Google <a title=\"Select Perfect Categories in Business Directories\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/select-perfect-categories-in-business-directories\/\">Business<\/a> Profile category is &#8220;HVAC Contractor,&#8221; you have a disambiguation problem. Each of these is technically true for a heating-and-plumbing business, but the inconsistency confuses ranking systems.<\/p>\n<p>Pick a primary category and use it everywhere. Add secondary categories where the platform allows, but keep the primary one locked down. This is one of those &#8220;boring fixes that outperform flashy tactics&#8221; moves.<\/p>\n<h3>Cross-platform narrative coherence<\/h3>\n<p>Your business description should tell roughly the same story across platforms. Not word-for-word identical (that triggers duplicate-content flags on some directories), but thematically consistent. If your <a title=\"Managing Your Google Business Profile Like a Pro: New Features to Use\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/blog\/managing-your-google-business-profile-like-a-pro-new-features-to-use\/\">Google Business Profile<\/a> emphasises emergency callouts and your Yelp listing emphasises boiler installations, a human reading both gets confused, and an AI model summarising your business can&#8217;t form a confident primary identity.<\/p>\n<div class=\"fact\">\n<p><strong>Did you know?<\/strong> As <a href=\"https:\/\/trustedbusiness.partners\/blog\/unlocking-your-local-businesss-potential-the-benefits-of-a-local-business-directory-listing\/\">Trusted Business Partners notes<\/a>, &#8220;high-quality listings often integrate customer reviews and star ratings, becoming a beacon of trust and reliability.&#8221; But coherence across those listings matters more than the ratings themselves \u2014 conflicting narratives undermine trust faster than low ratings do.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Timeliness and Specificity in Practice<\/h2>\n<h3>Freshness thresholds by vertical<\/h3>\n<p>How fresh does a listing need to be? It depends on the vertical. Here&#8217;s roughly what I&#8217;ve observed:<\/p>\n<p>Restaurants and retail: anything older than 30 days feels stale to users. Hours, menu changes, and seasonal photos matter. Home services: 90 days is the outer limit before users start wondering if you&#8217;re still in business. Professional services (lawyers, accountants): 6 months is tolerable because people don&#8217;t expect daily activity. <a  title=\"B2B\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/business-marketing\/b2b\/\" >B2B<\/a> services: similar to professional services, though recent case studies help.<\/p>\n<p>Google&#8217;s local algorithm uses freshness as a tiebreaker between similarly-ranked businesses. AI models use it to decide whether to cite you at all \u2014 an LLM asked about &#8220;current pricing for X service&#8221; will often skip listings with no recent updates.<\/p>\n<h3>Detailed information as a trust multiplier<\/h3>\n<p>Specificity is where most listings fail. Compare these two descriptions:<\/p>\n<p><em>Generic:<\/em> &#8220;We provide quality plumbing services to homes and businesses across the city. Call us today for a free quote.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p><em>Specific:<\/em> &#8220;We install and service Worcester Bosch and Vaillant boilers across Leeds LS1-LS18, Headingley, and Chapel Allerton. Same-day emergency callouts until 8pm weekdays. Landlord gas safety certificates \u00a365 fixed price.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The specific version contains brand names, geographic detail, service names, time windows, and prices. Every one of those is a citable fact for an AI model. The generic version contains nothing an LLM can quote back with confidence. When someone asks Perplexity &#8220;who does emergency boiler repair in Headingley,&#8221; guess which business gets cited.<\/p>\n<h3>Avoiding the &#8220;templated listing&#8221; penalty<\/h3>\n<p>I keep calling it a penalty but it&#8217;s really more of an invisible discount. Directories that use the same template for every business, with the same generic phrases filled in, get progressively less trust weight from AI models over time. The models learn that template patterns predict low-information content.<\/p>\n<p>If you&#8217;re filling out a directory listing and you find yourself copy-pasting from your last one without changing anything, stop. Rewrite at least the description for each platform. It&#8217;s a twenty-minute job per listing and it&#8217;s one of the highest-ROI tasks in local SEO.<\/p>\n<div class=\"myth\">\n<p><strong>Myth:<\/strong> You should use the exact same description everywhere for consistency. <strong>Reality:<\/strong> Consistency applies to <em>facts<\/em> (name, address, phone, hours, services offered), not <em>prose<\/em>. Varying your description across platforms while keeping facts identical is the sweet spot. Duplicate prose reduces the unique content value of each listing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Walking Through a TACTS Audit: Local HVAC Listing<\/h2>\n<p>Let me walk through an actual client case \u2014 details anonymised. Call the business &#8220;Northfield Heating,&#8221; a small HVAC company in a UK city of about 300,000 people. Owner operates with three engineers. They came to me with the complaint that their directory listings &#8220;weren&#8217;t converting.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Baseline scoring across all five signals<\/h3>\n<p>I scored their primary listings (Google Business Profile, Yell, Checkatrade, and two smaller directories) on a 1-5 scale across TACTS:<\/p>\n<table>\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th>Signal<\/th>\n<th>Google Business Profile<\/th>\n<th>Yell<\/th>\n<th>Checkatrade<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Transparency<\/td>\n<td>3 \u2014 owner photo missing, Companies House number not shown<\/td>\n<td>2 \u2014 generic company page, no owner details<\/td>\n<td>4 \u2014 vetted trader badge, owner named<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Authority<\/td>\n<td>3 \u2014 Gas Safe mentioned but not linked<\/td>\n<td>2 \u2014 no certifications shown<\/td>\n<td>4 \u2014 verified ratings, ID checks displayed<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Consistency<\/td>\n<td>4 \u2014 matched website mostly<\/td>\n<td>2 \u2014 old phone number still live<\/td>\n<td>4 \u2014 matched website<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Timeliness<\/td>\n<td>2 \u2014 no posts in 8 months, photos from 2021<\/td>\n<td>1 \u2014 no updates in over 2 years<\/td>\n<td>3 \u2014 reviews recent, description old<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Specificity<\/td>\n<td>2 \u2014 generic &#8220;heating services&#8221; description<\/td>\n<td>1 \u2014 template description<\/td>\n<td>3 \u2014 service list detailed<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>Total scores: GBP 14\/25, Yell 8\/25, Checkatrade 18\/25. The Yell listing was actively harming them because the old phone number was being cascaded to smaller directories, creating a consistency problem they didn&#8217;t know existed.<\/p>\n<h3>Identifying the two highest-impact gaps<\/h3>\n<p>I don&#8217;t recommend fixing everything at once. Pick the two signals with the biggest gap between current state and what&#8217;s achievable with moderate effort. For Northfield, those were <strong>Timeliness<\/strong> (across the board) and <strong>Specificity<\/strong> (on GBP and Yell).<\/p>\n<p>The fixes were unglamorous. Weekly GBP posts with real photos from recent jobs \u2014 boilers mid-installation, before-and-after shots of radiator swaps. Rewritten descriptions that named the specific boiler brands they serviced, the postcodes they covered, and the fixed-price services they offered. Updating the Yell phone number and forcing a refresh through the secondary directories that had cascaded the old one.<\/p>\n<div class=\"what-if\">\n<p><strong>What if&#8230;<\/strong> you could only fix one thing? In Northfield&#8217;s case, I&#8217;d have chosen specificity over everything else. Adding detailed service details and postcode coverage to the GBP description alone produced a measurable ranking shift within six weeks \u2014 before we&#8217;d even touched the other directories. Specific content gives AI models something to quote; generic content doesn&#8217;t.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h3>Before\/after visibility in Google and Perplexity<\/h3>\n<p>Twelve weeks after the changes, tracked results:<\/p>\n<p>Google Business Profile views were up 62%. Direction requests up 41%. Calls up 28% (lower than views because the fixes helped them rank for more informational queries, not just high-intent ones). More interesting \u2014 when I queried Perplexity with prompts like &#8220;who installs Worcester boilers in [city name],&#8221; Northfield started being cited. Before the changes, Perplexity returned two national chains and declined to name local specialists. After the changes, Northfield was named in roughly 4 out of 10 query variations I tested.<\/p>\n<p>This is the part traditional SEO audits miss entirely. AI citation is a new trust signal, and it feeds back into direct traffic because users increasingly act on AI recommendations without clicking through.<\/p>\n<div class=\"fact\">\n<p><strong>Did you know?<\/strong> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.bludot.io\/post\/the-benefits-of-an-interactive-business-directory\">Bludot&#8217;s analysis of interactive directories<\/a> highlights that businesses can directly update &#8220;hours of operation, website, social media links, online ordering, promotions, job openings and galleries&#8221; in real time. That level of self-managed freshness is now a minimum bar \u2014 directories that don&#8217;t offer it are losing trust weight with AI crawlers that prefer recent, verified data.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<h2>Where TACTS Breaks Down<\/h2>\n<p>No framework survives contact with every real-world case. Here&#8217;s where TACTS struggles and what I do instead.<\/p>\n<h3>Solo practitioners and privacy tradeoffs<\/h3>\n<p>Transparency rewards named owners, photos, and physical addresses. That&#8217;s fine if you operate from a commercial unit. It&#8217;s a problem if you&#8217;re a solo therapist working from home, a female tradesperson who&#8217;s been stalked before, or anyone with legitimate safety reasons to limit personal disclosure.<\/p>\n<p>For these cases I compensate by over-investing in Authority and Consistency. Professional body memberships, <a  title=\"insurance\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/business-marketing\/insurance\/\" >insurance<\/a> disclosure, regulatory registrations \u2014 all the structural legitimacy markers that don&#8217;t require personal exposure. A solo counsellor with BACP registration, PI insurance details, and a verifiable consulting room address (even a rented one) can score well on TACTS without putting personal details in every listing.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;d also note \u2014 and this is where the framework shows its limits \u2014 that some platforms penalise you for not providing a personal photo. You can either accept the lower score or change platforms. I&#8217;ve advised clients both ways depending on their specific risk profile.<\/p>\n<h3>Emerging directories without signal history<\/h3>\n<p>TACTS assumes the directories you&#8217;re listed in have their own trust signals established. But what about new directories? Should you list in them?<\/p>\n<p>My rule: evaluate the directory itself with a mini-TACTS audit. Does it disclose who runs it (Transparency)? Does it have editorial standards or is it auto-generated (Authority)? Is listing information consistent with external sources (Consistency)? Are listings maintained or abandoned (Timeliness)? Are businesses given room for detailed profiles (Specificity)?<\/p>\n<p>A new directory that scores well on these can be worth joining early \u2014 you get better positioning and you benefit if the directory itself gains authority. A new directory that scores poorly is a trap regardless of how free or easy listing is. The Jasmine Directory&#8217;s own analysis of why directories exist at all is worth reading for perspective on what good curation looks like.<\/p>\n<h3>When over-optimization triggers distrust<\/h3>\n<p>Here&#8217;s the contradiction I alluded to earlier. TACTS pushes you to maximise every signal. But at some point, maxed-out signals start to look suspicious.<\/p>\n<p>A listing with 400 five-star reviews, all posted within two months, detailed to the point of reading like <a  title=\"Marketing\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jasminedirectory.com\/internet-online-marketing\/marketing\/\" >marketing<\/a> copy, with the owner&#8217;s LinkedIn, Companies House number, four certifications, and a photo album of 60 images \u2014 that looks fake. It looks like someone tried too hard. Humans notice. Google&#8217;s spam detection notices. AI models factor in review velocity anomalies.<\/p>\n<p>The goal isn&#8217;t to max out every signal. It&#8217;s to look like a real business that&#8217;s taken reasonable care with its online presence. A listing that scores 4\/5 on every TACTS dimension outperforms one that scores 5\/5 on three and 2\/5 on two \u2014 but it also outperforms one that scores a suspicious 5\/5 across the board.<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;ve seen businesses penalised for review manipulation after following &#8220;aggressive review generation&#8221; advice. I&#8217;ve seen listings flagged for keyword stuffing after cramming every service variant into the description. Moderation works. Specificity doesn&#8217;t mean maximum length; it means useful detail.<\/p>\n<h3>The legal-trust confusion<\/h3>\n<p>Worth flagging: &#8220;trust&#8221; in the directory context means credibility and reputation, not legal trust structures. I&#8217;ve had clients confused by this because they googled &#8220;business trust&#8221; and ended up on pages about asset protection vehicles. Those are real and useful \u2014 <a href=\"https:\/\/www.ardentrust.com\/insights\/what-is-a-business-trust\">Ardent Trust&#8217;s explainer<\/a> covers them well \u2014 but they&#8217;re a separate topic. Directory trust signals are about whether a stranger believes you exist and do what you say; legal business trusts are about asset structure. Don&#8217;t conflate them when auditing.<\/p>\n<h2>Putting TACTS to Work This Quarter<\/h2>\n<p>If you&#8217;re reading this and wondering where to start, here&#8217;s what I&#8217;d do in the next ninety days. Week one: pull up your top five directory listings and score each one on TACTS using the 1-5 scale. Be honest \u2014 your instinct is always to inflate your own scores. Week two: identify the two signals with the weakest average scores across your portfolio. Weeks three through eight: fix those two signals, across all five listings, before touching anything else. Week nine onwards: work on the next two weakest signals.<\/p>\n<p>Don&#8217;t try to fix everything simultaneously. I&#8217;ve watched owners burn out trying to audit 40 directories in a weekend, then abandon the whole project. Five listings, two signals, ninety days. That pace is sustainable and it produces measurable results.<\/p>\n<p>And one last thing \u2014 schedule a TACTS re-audit for six months from now, in your calendar, right now. Trust signals decay. Photos get dated, hours change, certifications expire, team members leave. The businesses that stay visible are the ones that treat their directory presence like a garden, not a statue. Pull the weeds quarterly and the thing grows on its own.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>When I ran my services company, I used to spend Sunday evenings updating directory listings the way other people do crosswords \u2014 methodically, slightly obsessively, and with a creeping suspicion that most of it was pointless. Some of it was. But the parts that worked, worked disproportionately well, and it took me years of trial [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":28836,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[737],"tags":[],"class_list":{"0":"post-28743","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-directories"},"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Business Directory Trust Signals: What Users, Search Engines, and AI Models Look For<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"When I ran my services company, I used to spend Sunday evenings updating directory listings the way other people do crosswords \u2014 methodically, slightly\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, 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