Search
5 min read
How Search Works
Turn a natural-language prompt into a precise local business search, then refine the results.
Search
5 min read
Turn a natural-language prompt into a precise local business search, then refine the results.
You do not have to learn filters or operators. Type what you want the way you would say it, for example: dental practices in Florida with 4 stars or higher that have a website.
Fullpilot reads your prompt and turns it into a structured query: a category (dental practice), a location (Florida), an optional business-name filter, and a set of filters such as minimum rating, minimum reviews, website status, and whether the business has reachable contact data.
If part of your prompt cannot be expressed as a filter, Fullpilot tells you what it could not apply so nothing is silently dropped.
Category, for example med spa, chiropractor, HVAC contractor, gym, or restaurant.
Location, from a country or state down to a single city.
Minimum rating and minimum review count, to focus on established businesses.
Website status, to include only businesses with a site or only those without one.
Whether the listing has contact data, so you focus on reachable businesses.
If the results are too broad or too narrow, adjust the prompt and search again, or tighten the structured filters directly, for example by raising the minimum review count or narrowing the city.
Searches are paginated, so you can page through a large market rather than loading everything at once.
Each result shows the business name, category, location, rating, reviews, and website. The email and phone stay locked behind a reveal so you only spend credits on the businesses you actually want.
When a business looks like a fit, reveal its contact. See Revealing Contacts And How Credits Work for exactly what a reveal costs.