"Does ChatGPT know about my business?"
Our clients kept asking this last year. Six months ago, none of us had a good way to answer it. Today, there are at least four tools that claim to. We tried all of them before deciding to build our own.
Here's what happened.
Why this mattered to us
Webido CTR has been running CTR optimization for local businesses since 2019. What changed in 2024 and accelerated through 2025 was that people started asking ChatGPT and Perplexity for local recommendations the same way they used to ask Google. "Best HVAC company in Phoenix." "Top family dentist near me."
When clients asked if THEIR business showed up in those answers, we needed a way to check. Systematically. Across all the LLMs at once.
So we went shopping.
What each tool got wrong
OtterlyAI — $29/mo. Cheapest option, clean UI. But Gemini and Google AI Mode cost extra. Paying separately for each platform defeats the point of consolidated monitoring. For us, the per-platform math hit four figures per month before we got past 20 clients.
Peec AI — €89/mo. European-built, prettiest dashboard. But the base tier only covers 3 of 6 AI platforms. Same fundamental problem as OtterlyAI — the pricing assumes you only care about a subset of AI search.
AthenaHQ — $295/mo. Full platform coverage, real recommendations engine. But $295/mo per tracked entity adds up fast across a portfolio. Built for in-house brand teams obsessing over one brand, not agencies tracking 50+ businesses.
Profound — $499/mo. Most sophisticated of the four. Excellent data depth. But $499/mo for one platform pushes total coverage into Fortune 500 territory. Not built for agency scale.
What was missing across all four
After three months of testing, we mapped what we actually needed:
None of the four checked all four boxes.
So we built AI Pulse.
What we ended up with
AI Pulse covers all 6 AI platforms at the $67/mo entry tier. Done-for-you onboarding. A single 100-point Visibility Score that a non-technical client can read. Built-in recommendation engine.
The kicker: at $67/mo we're cheaper than any competitor's full-coverage tier, and most agencies that tested us against the alternatives just switched.
Two things we learned
First: the AI visibility tracking category is still early enough that operator-level knowledge of what local businesses actually need can outbuild existing players. The competitors were built for brand teams; the gap was for agencies and SMBs.
Second: pricing complexity is a moat in disguise. "Track more platforms, pay more" is legitimate pricing logic — but the cognitive load of "which combination do I need" is itself friction. Pricing simplicity is product value.
Curious to hear what others have tried. Anyone using a fifth tool I missed, or building their own?
—Mars Lin
Building Webido CTR since 2019
https://webidoctr.com/ai-pulse (use IHPULSE for $20 off the first month)
Most of the existing tools seem built around one brand asking, “How visible are we?” But agencies are asking a different question: “Can I monitor this across many clients without pricing, setup, and reporting becoming a mess?”
That makes the real product less about AI visibility tracking alone and more about agency-scale visibility operations: one score, one setup flow, one pricing model, one recommendation path.
The only thing I’d watch is the AI Pulse name. It is clear, but it also sits close to a lot of generic “AI + metric” naming in this space. If this becomes the agency-grade visibility layer for local businesses, a sharper standalone brand like Beryxa.com could give it more durable SaaS weight than another descriptive AI category name.
Thanks aryan_sinh, "agency-scale visibility operations" is sharper framing than anything in the post itself. Stealing that.
On the AI Pulse name: fair point, and one we sat with for a while. We went descriptive because the buyer at the local-business tier needs to understand "are my AI impressions going up?" in about five seconds. A more abstract brand cost us too much speed-to-comprehension in customer interviews. Real trade-off though, and one I could see going the other way if the buyer mix shifts more toward agency-only over time.
That trade-off makes sense.
For a local business owner, AI Pulse is probably faster to understand in the first five seconds. It says “AI visibility metric” immediately, which helps if the buyer is non-technical and just wants to know whether impressions are moving.
The place I’d still pressure-test it is the agency buyer.
Agencies do not only need quick comprehension. They need something they can confidently resell, report on, and package across many clients. At that point, the brand starts acting less like a simple metric name and more like the operating layer behind their AI visibility service.
That is where AI Pulse may feel clear but also a bit category-generic. If this becomes agency-scale visibility operations, the name probably needs to sound more like durable SaaS infrastructure than another AI dashboard.
Beryxa.com fits that second direction better to me: less instantly descriptive, but stronger if the product becomes the agency-grade system behind many client reports and recommendations.