Home
News
Tech Grid
Interviews
Anecdotes
Think Stack
Press Releases
Articles
  • Home
  • /
  • News
  • /
  • Marketing
  • /
  • AI
  • /
  • Florida Manufacturers Struggle with AI Visibility in Buyer Searches
  • AISEO/SEMSupply Chain Management

Florida Manufacturers Struggle with AI Visibility in Buyer Searches


Florida Manufacturers Struggle with AI Visibility in Buyer Searches
  • by: PRWeb
  • |
  • June 26, 2026

A new report  by Evoke highlights an emerging competitive challenge for Florida manufacturers as artificial intelligence becomes a primary tool for supplier discovery and procurement research. The Florida Manufacturing AI Visibility Report reveals that many established manufacturers are not appearing in AI-generated recommendations across major platforms such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Perplexity. The findings suggest that AI-driven discovery is reshaping how buyers evaluate suppliers, potentially disadvantaging companies that lack strong digital and structured data visibility.

Quick Intel

  • Florida manufacturers missing from AI-driven supplier discovery results
  • Study analyzed ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Perplexity responses
  • 10 companies accounted for nearly 58% of AI mentions
  • Several large manufacturers with billions in revenue were not surfaced
  • AI visibility depends on structured data, not company size alone
  • Report warns procurement is shifting toward AI-first research behavior

AI Is Reshaping Supplier Discovery in Manufacturing

The report finds that procurement teams are increasingly relying on AI platforms to identify potential suppliers, often starting with capability-based queries rather than direct brand searches. This shift means manufacturers must now be discoverable through structured descriptions of their capabilities, certifications, and industry relevance rather than relying solely on traditional search visibility or brand recognition.

As a result, companies that are not clearly mapped to relevant manufacturing categories may be excluded from early-stage buyer consideration entirely.

Key Findings from the AI Visibility Study

The Florida Manufacturing AI Visibility Report analyzed 70 procurement-focused questions across four AI platforms, producing 280 responses and 877 manufacturer mentions. The results showed a highly concentrated visibility pattern:

  • A small group of 10 companies accounted for 57.7% of all AI mentions
  • Twelve manufacturers did not appear in any AI-generated results
  • These omitted companies represented roughly $8 billion in combined revenue
  • Several excluded firms individually exceeded hundreds of millions to multi-billion-dollar scale

The findings indicate that AI systems prioritize publicly available signals such as structured descriptions, third-party references, and category alignment rather than company size or operational scale.

Size Alone Does Not Ensure AI Visibility

One of the report’s key insights is that large-scale manufacturers are not guaranteed visibility in AI-generated results. Instead, AI platforms rely on accessible digital signals that define what a company does, where it operates, and how it is categorized.

Companies with limited structured information or weak external references may therefore be overlooked in AI-driven procurement recommendations, even if they have significant market presence.

Differences Across AI Platforms

The study also found variation in how different AI systems surface supplier recommendations. Perplexity produced the widest range of unique manufacturers, while ChatGPT showed more concentrated recommendation patterns. Gemini and Claude fell between these extremes.

This variation indicates that AI visibility is not uniform and depends heavily on the underlying model and retrieval approach used by each platform.

Shift Toward AI-First Procurement Behavior

According to the report, procurement workflows are increasingly beginning within AI tools rather than traditional search engines. Buyers are using AI to explore suppliers based on technical capabilities, certifications, geographic presence, and production expertise.

This shift is changing how manufacturers must position themselves digitally, as early-stage visibility in AI systems is becoming a key factor in supplier selection.

Implications for Manufacturers

The report suggests that manufacturers should treat AI visibility as a core component of their market strategy. Recommendations include improving structured data, strengthening capability descriptions, and increasing third-party validation to help AI systems accurately interpret relevance.

As AI continues to influence procurement decisions, manufacturers that fail to adapt their digital presence risk reduced discoverability in increasingly AI-driven buying journeys.

 

About Evoke Strategy

Evoke Strategy is a Florida-based marketing firm founded more than a decade ago. Evoke helps manufacturers and B2B organizations improve market visibility, strategic communications, public relations, and buyer research in an increasingly AI-influenced business environment.

  • AIProcurementDigital TransformationIndustrial AIB2B Marketing
News Disclaimer
  • Share