The new front door is a sentence.
The search bar is dissolving into conversation. The customer no longer scans ten links. They read one paragraph the machine wrote. Your job is to be named in that paragraph.
The Stacks is not a failing business. It's a business that is simply not seen. Not by the model. Not by the customer asking the model. Not by the economy rearranging itself around what the machines return.
It is the condition of being absent without being closed. Unranked. Unpunished. Unmentioned. The customer hears three names. Yours is none of them. Nothing failed. You were never in the room.
I asked ChatGPT for the best accountant in Claremont. It gave me three. None of them were the practice my friend had been using for ten years. It had a website. It had a phone number. It had customers. It just wasn't structured in the way AI reads the world.
The Oasis is not a ranking. It is not a dashboard. It is the literal text the model gives back when somebody in your suburb, or your sector, asks a natural-language question. Your name inside that sentence, or your name absent from it. There is no middle ground.
The search bar is dissolving into conversation. The customer no longer scans ten links. They read one paragraph the machine wrote. Your job is to be named in that paragraph.
Models re-read the web constantly. Reviews decay. Profiles drift. A single heroic push in January is worth almost nothing by April. What matters is cadence.
Every profile, every review, every post sits on platforms you own. Leave OasisKeep tomorrow, the work stays. We don't hold your presence hostage. We just keep it tidy.
We could have called this OasisFind. OasisRank. OasisBoost. We didn't, because finding is the easy part. The hard part is what happens in week six, week twelve, week thirty-six. When the business is in the Oasis and the question becomes whether anyone is still doing the work that keeps it there. Every competing tool is a monitor. It tells you when something has changed. OasisKeep does the changing. That's the difference. That's the whole name.
The weekly rhythm of work that holds a business inside the sentence the models return. Monday scan. Tuesday post. Wednesday reviews. And so on.
The paragraph of text a model returns when a customer asks a question. The single most valuable surface in the new web. You are named in it or you are not.
The difference between this week's scan and last week's. Did your name enter a sentence it wasn't in? Did a competitor fall out? The only honest metric.
Morgan Solus is our first live client — a Cape Town business continuity advisory firm. As of this Sunday's scan, ChatGPT returns three other names when somebody asks for business continuity consultancy in South Africa. None of them are Morgan Solus. Their Keep Score is 39/100. This is the work. We'll show what changes here as it changes.
I'm a final-year student in Cape Town. I built OasisKeep because I watched the businesses around me, family restaurants, accountants, salons, small practices, get quietly erased from the way people find local services. Not badly ranked. Not poorly reviewed. Simply absent from the answer.
The shift from Google to AI isn't coming. It's already here. And the South African business economy, from the corner café to the mid-sized firm, was being locked out of it without even knowing.
OasisKeep isn't a dashboard you check. It's the weekly work that keeps your business inside the Oasis once you've arrived. Your phone rings more. That's the whole product.
Sixty seconds. No signup. We ask ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude what they say about your business and send the report to your WhatsApp.