What mention prompts measure

Mentions are measured against buyer questions

Mention prompts measure whether AI systems name your brand when a buyer asks a real question. They measure visibility inside a decision.

That difference matters. A prompt should create an answer where it is natural for AI to recommend options, compare vendors, or explain which source it trusts.

Recommendation prompts

Recommendation prompts ask for the best options in a category or use case.

These prompts are useful because they show whether your brand is part of the shortlist. They also show how the answer frames each option.

prompt.txtCopy prompt
What are the best AI visibility tools for a B2B SaaS team?

Comparison prompts

Comparison prompts ask AI to compare tools, vendors, or approaches.

They are strong prompts when buyers already know a few names and need help choosing between them.

prompt.txtCopy prompt
Compare [brand] and [competitor] for AI visibility tracking.

Problem-aware prompts

Problem-aware prompts start from a pain or task instead of a vendor name.

They help CLEA discover whether your company appears before the buyer already knows what category to search for.

Mention prompt

A mention prompt measures whether AI answers name your brand, competitors, and sources for a buyer question.

Every run creates answer evidence

Every prompt run creates evidence. The answer, the mentioned brands, the competitors, and the source context all matter.

Do not reduce a run to only "mentioned" or "not mentioned". The wording around the mention can be just as important as the mention itself.

Whether your brand appears

Start with the simple outcome. Was your brand named, ignored, or mentioned only in passing?

If the brand appears, read the description. A weak mention can still show a positioning problem.

Which competitors appear instead

When competitors appear instead of you, the run becomes useful competitor evidence.

Look for repeated names. One strange answer is noise. A repeated competitor is a signal.

Competitor signal

A repeated competitor across buyer prompts is stronger evidence than one strange answer.

Answer framing around each option

Answer framing explains why the model recommended or skipped an option.

Check the adjectives, risks, use cases, and source-backed claims in the answer. These details often reveal the next content or authority gap.

Sources explain why answers happen

Sources help explain why AI systems answer the way they do. A source can support a competitor, reinforce an old claim, or show a page type your site is missing.

Pages the model reads

Pages that get read are important even when your brand is not named.

Being read is not the same as being recommended, but it is often the first step toward being recommended.

Pages competitors benefit from

When a competitor is named from a trusted source, inspect that source. It can show which claims, categories, comparisons, or proof points matter in the answer.

Source advantage

A competitor source can show which proof points the answer trusts.

EvidenceWhat it tells youWhat to do next
MentionYour brand appears in the answerCheck wording and accuracy
CompetitorAnother company wins attentionInspect why they were named
SourceA URL shapes the answerReview trust and page type
FramingThe answer explains fit or riskTurn the gap into a card

The prompt set is how CLEA measures

Your prompt set is how CLEA measures AI visibility. If the questions are too broad, too branded, or too random, the dashboard will still collect data. The data will be weaker.

Treat prompt design as part of the product setup. Good prompts make the results easier to trust.

1

Choose buyer questions

Measure decisions buyers actually ask about.

2

Run and save answers

Keep the answer, competitors, and sources.

3

Compare patterns

Look for repeated outcomes, not one-off noise.

4

Improve the set

Edit, group, or archive prompts when evidence supports it.

Bad prompts create bad visibility data

Bad prompts create confusing visibility data. They can overcount the same question, miss the real buyer journey, or make competitors look more important than they are.

Review prompt quality before adding more volume. A smaller set of strong prompts is better than a large set nobody trusts.

Next step

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