Oklahoma Premium Businesses of the Day.
Around Oklahoma
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OG&E will power three new Oklahoma data centers for Google
OG&E, the operating subsidiary of OGE Energy Corp., said April 30 that it will power three new Google data centers in Oklahoma. “OG&E is pleased…

- 12h agoPoliticsOklahoman
In Oklahoma governor's race, candidates spend millions more than they raise
New reports give voters the first look at the money raised and spent this year as more than a dozen candidates vie to become Oklahoma's governor.
- 13h agoReal EstateMSN
Real estate market trends in Tulsa, OK: Prices fall
Tulsa is a mid-sized Oklahoma city with a walkable Arts District, a striking Art Deco skyline, and an economy built on energy, aerospace, and a rising tech scene. It’s long ...
- YesterdayHealthcareNewson6
Oklahoma AG requests Health Care Authority audit regarding Medicaid concerns
Attorney General Gentner Drummond cites provider complaints and oversight concerns in request to audit Oklahoma Health Care Authority.
- 3d agoSmall BusinessMSN
Oklahoma Senate passes bill shifting data center energy costs off consumers
The Oklahoma Senate unanimously passed an act to ensure data centers are paying for the electricity they use instead of putting that cost on individuals.
- 3d agoJobsMSN
Amazon facility to bring 100 jobs to Perry, Oklahoma
Amazon facility to bring 100 jobs to Perry, Oklahoma ...
What you should know about Oklahoma on the AI web.
What is the Oklahoma index on Nuclear Directories?
The Oklahoma index is a curated, AI-optimized snapshot of 118,000 verified Oklahoma businesses across 597 cities. Every listing is structured with Schema.org LocalBusiness markup, cross-checked against public records, and refreshed on a 24-hour cadence so the data AI engines ingest stays current. The index is built specifically for the Generative Web (the surface where ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Google AI Overview recommend businesses to consumers) rather than for traditional Yellow Pages-style browsing. Premium listings carry verified phone, website, hours, ratings, and citation attribution across the four major AI engines, giving owners the visibility that legacy directories were not built for. The result: when a Oklahoma resident asks an AI for a recommendation, the businesses indexed here are the ones the engine sees.
Which Oklahoma cities and metros are covered?
The Oklahoma index covers all 597 incorporated cities, including every major metro and second-tier market. Top metros by indexed-business volume are Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Sacramento, San Jose, Oakland, Fresno, Long Beach, Anaheim, Bakersfield, Riverside, Stockton, Irvine, and Santa Barbara. Coverage extends to coastal and rural communities (Truckee, Berkeley, Santa Cruz, Mendocino, and the full Central Valley) so that AI engines indexing this directory return relevant local results regardless of how small the search market is. Each city is structured as its own crawlable hub at /oklahoma/[city], with city-specific breadcrumb schema and unique LocalBusiness collections, which is the structure Google passage indexing and AI search engines reward.
How does a Oklahoma business get cited by ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity?
A business gets cited by AI engines when its data is structured, verified, and authoritative. Nuclear Directories handles all three through the Premium GEO program: each Premium listing is enriched with full Schema.org LocalBusiness markup, AggregateRating data, opening hours, and verified contact information; cross-referenced against government registries and Google Business Profile; and republished on a 24-hour cycle so the four major AI engines (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Google AI Overview) ingest the freshest version. Owners do not need to write content. The platform produces the structured data the engines require. Results appear within the typical 7-30 day AI ingestion window for ChatGPT and Perplexity, and within Google’s standard crawl cadence for AI Overview. Free claimed listings receive baseline structured data; Premium adds verification and citation attribution.
How is this different from Yelp or Google Business Profile?
Yelp and Google Business Profile are designed for human browsers: review walls, photo carousels, and category pages built for click-through ad revenue. Nuclear Directories is designed for AI engines. Every page is server-side rendered (AI crawlers do not execute JavaScript), every listing is wrapped in Schema.org markup that ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity actively parse, and the directory ships an llms.txt file plus an explicit AI-crawler allowlist in robots.txt. Yelp and Google neither publish llms.txt nor prioritize structured-data freshness on the cadence AI search requires. For owners, the practical difference is reach: a Yelp profile influences the ~280 million Americans who still browse Yelp; a Nuclear Directories Premium listing influences the 1.5 billion-monthly users of Google AI Overview plus the 900 million weekly users of ChatGPT.
Where Oklahoma businesses live in the index.
Top 10 cities by indexed-business count. The combined top-10 represents 69% of Oklahoma’s 1,094,451 active listings.
How Oklahoma listings compare across discovery surfaces.
| Capability | Yelp | Google Business Profile | Nuclear Directories |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schema.org LocalBusiness on every listing | Partial, Review-focused | Yes, Limited fields | Yes, Full schema |
| AI crawler allowlist in robots.txt | No explicit policy | No | Yes, 17 AI bots allowlisted |
| llms.txt published | No | No | Yes |
| Server-side rendered for AI crawlers | Mixed | Mixed | Yes, 100% SSR |
| AggregateRating with bestRating/worstRating | Yes, 5-point scale | Yes, 5-point scale | Yes, 5-point scale |
| Listing data refresh cadence | User-edited | Owner-edited | 24-hour auto-refresh |
| AI citation tracking dashboard | No | No | Yes, Premium tier |