gptmelo
New member
Hi everyone,
I have been looking into how online radio stations are discovered outside traditional search engines.
Most station owners already pay attention to Google rankings, radio directories, stream URLs and track metadata. However, more listeners are now asking AI assistants questions such as:
This creates a slightly different visibility problem. A station may rank reasonably well on Google but still be missing from AI-generated recommendations, or the AI may describe its genre, location or programming incorrectly.
From what I have seen, several elements seem especially important:
The station name, genre, location, language and website URL should be consistent across the official website, streaming directories and social profiles.
Schedules, presenter profiles, programme descriptions and genre pages should be available as normal website content rather than only appearing inside images or audio players.
AI systems need a simple explanation of what the station is, who it serves and what makes its programming different.
Broken pages, blocked crawlers, outdated metadata and inconsistent canonical URLs can make it more difficult for both search engines and AI systems to understand the website.
Directory listings, interviews, community discussions and references from relevant music websites can provide additional context and trust signals.
I help operate a small AI visibility platform called gptmelo , and this question came up while we were reviewing how different websites are interpreted by AI platforms. Radio station websites are particularly interesting because important information is often divided between the main website, streaming server, directories and social pages.
Has anyone here checked how ChatGPT, Gemini or Perplexity describes their station?
I would also be interested to know whether anyone has noticed referral traffic from AI assistants, and which website pages or RadioBOSS metadata have been the most useful for improving discovery.
Thanks for any experiences you can share.
I have been looking into how online radio stations are discovered outside traditional search engines.
Most station owners already pay attention to Google rankings, radio directories, stream URLs and track metadata. However, more listeners are now asking AI assistants questions such as:
- What are some good independent jazz radio stations?
- Where can I listen to local electronic music online?
- Which online stations play unsigned artists?
- What is the best internet radio station for background music?
This creates a slightly different visibility problem. A station may rank reasonably well on Google but still be missing from AI-generated recommendations, or the AI may describe its genre, location or programming incorrectly.
From what I have seen, several elements seem especially important:
- A consistent station identity
The station name, genre, location, language and website URL should be consistent across the official website, streaming directories and social profiles.
- Crawlable programme information
Schedules, presenter profiles, programme descriptions and genre pages should be available as normal website content rather than only appearing inside images or audio players.
- A clear About page
AI systems need a simple explanation of what the station is, who it serves and what makes its programming different.
- Accurate technical signals
Broken pages, blocked crawlers, outdated metadata and inconsistent canonical URLs can make it more difficult for both search engines and AI systems to understand the website.
- Mentions outside the station’s own website
Directory listings, interviews, community discussions and references from relevant music websites can provide additional context and trust signals.
I help operate a small AI visibility platform called gptmelo , and this question came up while we were reviewing how different websites are interpreted by AI platforms. Radio station websites are particularly interesting because important information is often divided between the main website, streaming server, directories and social pages.
Has anyone here checked how ChatGPT, Gemini or Perplexity describes their station?
I would also be interested to know whether anyone has noticed referral traffic from AI assistants, and which website pages or RadioBOSS metadata have been the most useful for improving discovery.
Thanks for any experiences you can share.