Key Takeaways Most AI brand visibility tracking today simply copies keyword-tracking logic, swapping in prompts for search terms. The core assumption stays the same—and that’s exactly where things go wrong. Traditional search engines are deterministic: run the same query and you’ll usually see the same results. LLMs are probabilistic: the same prompt can yield many different, equally valid responses. When you try to measure a probabilistic system with deterministic-style tools, you get tidy-looking data that fails to represent how the system truly behaves. The prompts most brands monitor (‘Best CRM in 2026,’ ‘Top accounting software’) assume a user who doesn’t really exist—someone with no prior context, no history, and no concrete intent. This is a well-known flaw in current AI SEO measurement methods. Solving it demands a new measurement mindset, not just more refined prompts. Have you started tracking your brand in ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI Overviews? Good—you’re focused on the right challenge. The tougher question is: what are you actually measuring? Most teams doing AI brand visibility tracking have taken an old mental model and forced it onto a new kind of system. Prompts have become the stand-in for keywords. Visibility scores are treated like rankings. New tracking tools now show how frequently your brand appears in AI-generated answers over time. At first glance, it feels like a straightforward extension of your existing SEO work. It’s not. The legacy tools for search were built for a deterministic environment, where the same query predictably returns the same set of results. Large language models (LLMs) don’t…