Can your agency prove AI visibility for clients?

Use this quick scorecard to see whether your agency can launch a sellable AI visibility and brand-governance offer without rebuilding the process manually every month.

Agency scorecard

AI visibility readiness

Current score

25

High-risk: clients will ask for AI visibility before you can prove it

Can you show clients their Perception, presence, and GEO gaps in one report?

Do you know which prompts and follow-up questions AI systems use around your client category?

Can you compare a client against named competitors inside AI answers?

Do client websites have crawlable public truth pages that AI can cite?

Can you turn findings into client-ready proof, actions, and before/after tracking?

Can you repeat this monthly without custom manual research for every client?

Recommended audit path

Use 5 flexible credits on the target with the strongest gap, or spend the full pack on one complete audit. The scorecard is the entry point; the audit is the proof.

Get audit + 5 client credits

Diagnose

Find visibility, accuracy, sentiment, recommendation, and competitor gaps before clients ask.

Prove

Show prompts, outputs, sources, and white-label remediation instead of vague AI SEO advice.

Repeat

Run recurring checks for many clients without turning every audit into bespoke research.

Use the scorecard to decide what evidence your agency must sell next

Buyer question
What the scorecard can expose
Agency next step
Can this agency sell AI visibility without hand-waving?
The scorecard exposes whether the agency can diagnose Perception, GEO signals, competitor gaps, workflow maturity, and reporting readiness.
Use the 5-credit audit to turn that gap into provider evidence, source context, remediation sprint scope, same-target retest proof, and a white-label action plan.
What should the first client offer become?
The scorecard separates weak diagnosis, weak proof, weak workflow, and weak reporting so the agency can pick the first paid conversation.
Package the Presence, Perception, Preference, and AI Readiness workflow first, then sell the remediation sprint against the highest-risk source, citation, or answer gap.
How does the agency prove progress later?
A scorecard result is directional; it does not prove provider variance, market-language-persona context, or competitor preference movement by itself.
Rerun the same target after fixes and export a client-ready report that shows what changed, what remains, and what to fund next.

Turn a readiness score into a monetizable client conversation.

The scorecard gives prospects a simple reason to act: their agency can prove AI visibility gaps with client-specific evidence instead of selling GEO from opinion.

Find the sales gap

Use the scorecard to show exactly where the agency is weak: diagnosis, proof, reporting, workflow, or recurring delivery.

Create client proof

Run the 5-credit audit on your own agency website so the next conversation has prompts, competitor context, citations, and first fixes.

Move from sample to system

Escalate from the first audit into Perception, Preference, Presence, and GEO evidence when the client needs repeatable proof.

Package the retainer

Turn the remediation plan into a recurring agency service: public source improvements, citation fixes, same-target retests, and monthly client reporting.

Agency scorecard questions

Is the agency AI visibility scorecard a full audit?

No. It is a free readiness signal. The VectorGap 5-credit audit supplies prompt answers, source evidence, competitor context, remediation priorities, same-target retest history, and white-label reporting.

What should an agency sell after using the scorecard?

Lead with a complete Presence, Perception, Preference, and AI Readiness workflow when the target justifies the full 5-credit pack, then convert confirmed gaps into a remediation sprint and a same-target retest/reporting cycle.

Can this support recurring client work?

Yes, when the agency uses the scorecard only as qualification and relies on audits, documented missions, retests, and reports as the paid evidence layer.