A woman sits in her car in a grocery store parking lot. She's been crying. Her husband told her last night he wants a divorce. They have two kids, a mortgage, and a small business in his name. She picks up her phone. She doesn't open Google. She doesn't call her cousin's friend who "knows a guy." She doesn't drive to the nearest law office.
She opens ChatGPT. She gets three names back. Now here's the question I've spent six months trying to answer: how were those three names chosen and whose names weren't?
The Research
What we Found
336
Texas Women Attorneys Analyzed, across Houston, DFW, Austin and San Antonio
3
AI Platforms Audited - ChatGPT, Gemini and Perplexity with identical methodology
28%
Correctly Recognized as Attorneys. The other 72% are structurally invisible to AI Search
What You'll Learn
(in 90 minutes)
What Every Woman Attorney Needs to know about AI Visibility
Three takeaways:
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01 — The full empirical findings from 336 Texas women attorneys across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity. Metro-by-metro breakdown. Practice-area patterns. Platform-specific behaviors.
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02 — Why "trained bias" is harder to fix than algorithmic bias and what that means for your practice over the next 24 months.
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03 — A self-audit framework you can apply to your own digital presence this week. What to check, what to fix, and what to ignore.
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Who This Is For
Women Attorneys
Practicing in Texas, Colorado, or any state where you've felt invisible in your own market. Solo, small firm, AmLaw 200. The architecture of the problem doesn't care about firm size.
Bar Association Leaders
Programming chairs, CLE coordinators, and DEI committee members who want to understand the structural challenge facing the women in their membership — and bring back specific data to their organizations.
Marketing & Operations Leaders
The CMOs, marketing directors, and operations leads at women-led firms who want to understand what their attorneys are actually facing in AI search and what's actionable from here.
About Joy, Your Host

Joy Morales, M.A.
Joy founded the Women's AI Visibility Institute (WAVI) after spending two years researching how AI platforms surface professionals. WAVI conducts state-by-state empirical research on women attorneys' representation across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity using a proprietary 20-point framework.
The Colorado Women Attorneys AI Visibility Report launched in January 2026; the Texas study is the foundation of this briefing. Florida is next. Joy holds an M.A. in Educational Research and is based in Colorado Springs.
FAQ's
Q: Does this count for CLE credit?
A: No. This is a research briefing, not a CLE. It's structured to deliver findings, methodology, and an actionable framework — not to satisfy bar credit requirements. If you're looking for CLE credit specifically, WAVI's Texas MCLE-accredited course (Course No. 174316794) is a separate offering.
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Q: Is the recording included?
A: Yes. Every registrant receives access to the full recording within 48 hours of the live session, regardless of whether you attended live. The recording includes the Q&A.
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Q: I can't attend live — should I still register?
A: Yes. The recording captures everything, and the framework for self-audit is in the materials we send to all registrants.
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Q: What if I need to cancel?
A: Refunds are available up to 7 days before the event (June 17). After that, you'll receive the recording and materials but no monetary refund.
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Q: Will this be relevant if I don't practice in Texas?
A: Yes. The methodology and the structural patterns apply to women attorneys in any state. Texas is the dataset; the architecture is national.
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Q: How do I get the Zoom link?
A: Once payment is confirmed, you'll receive a confirmation email with the Zoom registration link. Click through, complete a brief Zoom registration, and you'll get your unique join URL. Keep that email — the Zoom link is in there.
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