Free tool

Does AI know your product exists?

AfterLaunch checks whether your brand is a recognised entity in the public knowledge sources AI assistants draw on, and what to do if it is not.

Free, no signup to run itShareable result linkBuilt on the AfterLaunch engine
Entity checkQuerying
YourSaaSYour product
Wikidataquerying
Google Knowledge Graphquerying

Looking up YourSaaS in the knowledge sources AI reads from.

Entity checkRecognised
YourSaaSYour product
WikidataEntry found
Google Knowledge GraphMatch found
Recognised

YourSaaS resolves to one confident entity. Models can name it without hedging.

Entity checkNot recognised
FreshlaunchJust launched
WikidataNo entry
Google Knowledge GraphNo match
Not recognised

Freshlaunch only exists on its own site. Directory listings and consistent naming build the entry.

AI names the products it can verify.

What this tool checks

AfterLaunch looks your brand up in the public knowledge sources machine systems read from: Wikidata, the structured knowledge base behind much of the machine-readable web, and the Google Knowledge Graph, which powers how Google understands entities. The verdict is simple: recognised, partially recognised, or not recognised.

The full result, unlocked with an email, shows what each source actually holds about you and the concrete steps that build recognition, grounded in what the check found rather than generic advice.

Why entity recognition matters

When an AI assistant decides whether to name your product, it leans on whether you exist as a coherent entity in the sources it trusts. A product that appears in the knowledge graphs, described consistently, is something a model can talk about with confidence. A product that only exists on its own website is a single unverified claim, and models hedge on claims they cannot corroborate.

Entity recognition is slow to build and durable once built. Consistent naming across your site, your directory listings and your company profiles is what lets scattered mentions collapse into one confident entity.

Common questions

What counts as recognised?

Recognised means your brand has a matching entry in the sources the check reads, with Wikidata as the backbone. Partially recognised means it appears in some sources but not others, or the match is weak. Not recognised means the check found no matching entity.

My product is new. Should I expect to be recognised?

Probably not yet, and that is useful to know. Entity recognition follows presence: directory listings, company profiles, third-party mentions and consistent naming. The full result lists the steps in a sensible order.

Why does the Google Knowledge Graph result sometimes say not checked?

The Google lookup depends on an upstream service being available at run time. When it is not, the check reports it honestly as not checked rather than guessing.

What does it cost?

Nothing. The verdict and per-source summary are free with no signup. The detail and the fix guidance unlock with an email address. No card, no trial starts.

For writers

Writing about AI search? Embed this checker.

Drop the AI entity check into your article or newsletter and your readers can run the check without leaving the page. One iframe, no script, no account. It stays free and it links each result back to the full breakdown.

<iframe src="https://afterlaunch.io/tools/embed/ai-entity-check"
  width="100%" height="420" style="border:1px solid #26262b;border-radius:14px;"
  loading="lazy" title="Free checker by AfterLaunch"></iframe>
Coming soon

Recognition starts with being findable everywhere.

AfterLaunch is an always-on agentic growth platform for post-launch SaaS founders, launching soon. It starts with a free Growth Snapshot that scores how findable your product is across seven dimensions, measured against real competitors, then keeps working on what it finds.

Diagnoses everything these tools check, and more, continuously.
Drafts the moves in your voice, for LinkedIn, X, Reddit and Hacker News.
Tracks AI search, traditional search and competitors, and shows what moved.