AI search visibility · ChatGPT · Claude · Gemini · Perplexity

Boily measures how AI search
recommends your clinic

Boily is a Korea-focused AI-search (GEO/AEO) visibility measurement service for hospitals and clinics. We measure — every two weeks — how often ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Perplexity recommend your clinic, and how you compare with competitors.

What we measure

Patients increasingly ask AI instead of a search box — “best implant clinic in Gangnam,” “pediatric clinic near Dongtan.” Boily measures, every two weeks, whether four generative engines name your clinic in their answers and how often competitors appear.

Why measurement-only

There is no reliable technique to artificially “guarantee” AI exposure, and promising one invites underdelivery, disputes and medical-advertising-law risk. Boily works strictly as a measurement and diagnostic tool; any improvement guidance is offered only as data-based clues. Neutral, multi-engine measurement — that is the principle.

FAQ

What is Boily?

Boily is a subscription service for Korean hospitals and clinics that measures whether your clinic shows up when patients ask generative AI (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity) questions like “best dental clinic in Gangnam.” We report your exposure rate, competitor comparison and trend every two weeks.

Do you guarantee or boost rankings?

No. Boily is a measurement and diagnostic tool. There is no reliable way to “guarantee” AI exposure, and guarantees carry real risk under Korean medical-advertising law. We measure the current state accurately and offer data-observed differences only as informational clues — not promises.

Which AI engines do you measure?

All four: ChatGPT (OpenAI), Claude (Anthropic), Gemini (Google) and Perplexity. You get a neutral, multi-engine report rather than a single-engine view.

How is this different from SEO?

Traditional SEO optimizes for a ranked list of blue links. GEO/AEO is about whether a generative engine names and recommends you in its synthesized answer — often citing only 2–5 sources. Boily measures that answer-level visibility across engines.

Why every two weeks instead of weekly?

AI answers vary run to run, so week-to-week change is mostly noise. A two-week cadence raises the signal-to-noise ratio, so you read a trend instead of a single snapshot.