AI visibility

Get your Telegram group seen by AI.

More and more members arrive after asking ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity where to find a good community. Those assistants recommend what they can open and verify. Limzo gives your group a public stats page and a free machine-readable feed — live, checkable proof that your community is active and worth joining.

A profile AI can actually open

Your group gets a public page and a JSON feed that AI assistants read directly — Limzo already sees ChatGPT open group profiles mid-conversation to answer questions about them. Groups without a verifiable page are invisible to that traffic.

Verifiable numbers, not claims

“Very active community!” is a claim. A public page showing this week’s messages, active members, and mood is proof — anyone, human or AI, can check it at your limzo.com/s/ link before joining or partnering.

Your own AI analyst, no code

The same feed works the other way: paste your stats link into ChatGPT or Claude for an instant health read, wire it into a custom GPT, or have AI build you a live dashboard. Free, no API key.

How AI assistants pick what to recommend

Ask an assistant “find me an active Telegram group about X” and it does something simple: it searches, opens pages, and checks. If it can verify a claim, it can repeat it with confidence; if it can’t, it moves on. This is the new discovery layer — sometimes called generative engine optimization (GEO) — and it rewards communities that are checkable, not just well-described.

Telegram groups are hard to check from the outside. An invite link shows a name, a photo, and a member count — nothing about whether anyone actually talks. That is the gap a public stats page closes: an assistant (or a cautious human) can open your Limzo profile and see this week’s messages, active members, reply culture, and mood before recommending or joining. On Limzo’s own servers, ChatGPT already opens group profiles mid-conversation, and crawlers from OpenAI, Anthropic, and Perplexity regularly read the machine-readable feeds.

What Limzo publishes for AI — and what it never does

Every group with a public profile automatically gets three machine-readable surfaces: the stats page itself, a JSON feed at limzo.com/s/<yourgroup>.json with the same aggregate numbers, and a machine index (llms.txt plus an OpenAPI spec) that tells AI tools exactly how to read everything. There is nothing to configure — if your public page is on, your group is AI-readable. Developers can go deeper in the API docs.

Just as important is what is not there: the feed never contains members’ actual messages, on any plan. Private groups expose aggregate numbers and the leaderboard only, and the feed always follows your public page’s visibility — restrict or hide the page and the machine-readable side goes with it. AI visibility is a different format for what your public page already shows, never a wider window into your chat.

Three things you can try today

1. An instant health read. Paste this into ChatGPT or Claude: “Open https://limzo.com/s/yourgroup.json and tell me how my community is doing — the trend, the mood, and what I should fix first.” The assistant reads a week of daily numbers, the leaderboard, and the mood, and answers in plain language.

2. A custom “community analyst” GPT. In ChatGPT, create a custom GPT and import https://limzo.com/api/public/openapi.json as an Action. That is the whole setup: your GPT can now pull any public group’s live stats on request — yours, or communities you are comparing.

3. A live dashboard with no backend. The feed allows browser requests from anywhere, so one prompt — “build a single-file HTML dashboard that fetches my group’s Limzo JSON and shows the trend, leaderboard, and mood” — gives you a working page you can keep on a second screen.

And the passive one: put your limzo.com/s/ link in your group’s description, on your website, and in your social bios. Every place it appears is a place an AI can find and verify your community.

Common questions

Make it verifiable. Assistants recommend what they can open and check, so a public stats page with live activity data — linked from your website and bios so search can find it — is the foundation. Limzo publishes your page in both human and machine-readable form (JSON, llms.txt, OpenAPI), which is exactly the format AI tools read. Nobody can guarantee a recommendation, but a checkable group beats an invisible one every time.
Yes — today. Limzo’s server logs show ChatGPT opening group profiles live inside conversations, and crawlers from OpenAI, Anthropic (Claude), and Perplexity regularly reading the JSON feeds and machine index. The feed is free, needs no key, and never includes members’ actual messages — only the aggregate stats your public page already shows.
No. Add Limzo to your group and the public profile with its machine-readable feed is on from day one, free plan included. The copy-paste prompts above need zero setup; the OpenAPI spec and the API docs at limzo.com/docs are there if a developer on your team wants to build more.
Free to start

Try it on your own group.

Add Limzo, and this week your group gets its first highlights post, its first badges, and a public stats page worth sharing. Free plan included — Pro is $9/month when you need more.

Limzo the chameleon presenting