We built a free AI Visibility Auditor for hotels and resorts: paste your website URL and get a quick score showing how well your property appears when travellers ask ChatGPT, Perplexity or Google AI for recommendations. Takes 30 seconds, no sign-up needed.
Just tried this with a hotel in my local area... these insights are helpful!
1. Here's a few of the recommendations from the tool that I enjoyed learning:
Create Location-Specific Landing Content Write 500-word guide pages for 'Things to Do Near Triabunna', 'East Coast Tasmania Road Trip Guide', 'Dining in Triabunna' with internal links to your room pages.
Pursue Editorial Mentions in Travel Blogs & Tourism Guides "Outreach to Visit Tasmania, Australian travel bloggers, and regional tourism boards to earn backlinks and mentions. Editorial links carry 10x more weight with AI engines than OTA links."
Monitor & Respond to Reviews Across All Platforms "Your TripAdvisor rating (3/5) is dragged down by older mixed reviews. Actively solicit 5-star reviews from recent guests on Booking.com and TripAdvisor. Recent positive reviews carry more weight in AI recommendation algorithms."
These recommendations are really helpful because they can be implemented by the hotel staff / manager without technical assistance. This makes the tool have immediate actionable value.
2. The technical recommendations (e.g. about Javascript, SPA) were less relevant for my hotel as their landing page is hosted on Wix — they wouldn't have the skills to address that. Perhaps you could detect if the landing page is hosted on GoDaddy, Wix, etc and adjust the technical recommendations based on what kind of hosting they have.
3. One last bit of feedback. In regards to "Migrate From SPA to Server-Side Rendering" I don't think crawlers have a problem with SPA (single page apps) so long as each page uses a canonical URL that can be rendered via direct request. For example, Travel Massive is entirely SPA and we have no problem being indexed. Just my imo!
What are your plans for the tool and what kinds of responses have you got from the industry?
HOP GEO Auditor is a free AI visibility audit tool to check if your hotel can show up in ChatGPT
HOP GEO Auditor is a free AI visibility audit tool to check if your hotel can show up in ChatGPT
was posted by Shaun Huy
in
Resource,AI,Accommodation,Hotel,Resort.
Featured on Apr 20, 2026 (24 days ago).
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We built a free AI Visibility Auditor for hotels and resorts: paste your website URL and get a quick score showing how well your property appears when travellers ask ChatGPT, Perplexity or Google AI for recommendations. Takes 30 seconds, no sign-up needed.
👉 Try it out at geo-auditor.headsonpillows.com
Just tried this with a hotel in my local area... these insights are helpful!
1. Here's a few of the recommendations from the tool that I enjoyed learning:
Create Location-Specific Landing Content
Write 500-word guide pages for 'Things to Do Near Triabunna', 'East Coast Tasmania Road Trip Guide', 'Dining in Triabunna' with internal links to your room pages.
Pursue Editorial Mentions in Travel Blogs & Tourism Guides
"Outreach to Visit Tasmania, Australian travel bloggers, and regional tourism boards to earn backlinks and mentions. Editorial links carry 10x more weight with AI engines than OTA links."
Monitor & Respond to Reviews Across All Platforms
"Your TripAdvisor rating (3/5) is dragged down by older mixed reviews. Actively solicit 5-star reviews from recent guests on Booking.com and TripAdvisor. Recent positive reviews carry more weight in AI recommendation algorithms."
These recommendations are really helpful because they can be implemented by the hotel staff / manager without technical assistance. This makes the tool have immediate actionable value.
2. The technical recommendations (e.g. about Javascript, SPA) were less relevant for my hotel as their landing page is hosted on Wix — they wouldn't have the skills to address that. Perhaps you could detect if the landing page is hosted on GoDaddy, Wix, etc and adjust the technical recommendations based on what kind of hosting they have.
3. One last bit of feedback. In regards to "Migrate From SPA to Server-Side Rendering" I don't think crawlers have a problem with SPA (single page apps) so long as each page uses a canonical URL that can be rendered via direct request. For example, Travel Massive is entirely SPA and we have no problem being indexed. Just my imo!
What are your plans for the tool and what kinds of responses have you got from the industry?