If you run a service business and don't show up when someone searches for what you do in your area, you're invisible to the most motivated buyers in your market. These are people who already decided they need help and are actively looking for someone to hire.
Local SEO is how you get in front of them. And unlike ads, it doesn't cost you money every time someone clicks. Here's what to do first.
Your Google Business Profile (GBP) is the single most important thing for local search visibility. It powers the map results, those 3 listings with stars and photos that show up when someone searches "plumber near me" or "roof repair in [city]."
If you don't have one, claim it now at business.google.com. If you have one but haven't touched it in a while, treat it like a half-finished job and go finish it.
A complete GBP profile means:
The review gap is usually the main issue. If a competitor has 80 reviews and you have 12, Google is going to rank them higher, even if your website is better. Getting reviews is not optional. Text your last 20 customers a direct Google review link and see how fast that changes.
Google needs to understand your location and service area. If your website never mentions your city, you won't rank for local searches, no matter how good the design is.
Your city should appear in:
"Welcome to Johnson Plumbing" vs. "Plumbing Services in Omaha, NE | Johnson Plumbing", the second one tells Google (and the searcher) exactly what to expect. The first one might as well not have a title tag.
If you offer 6 services and they're all listed on one page, you're trying to rank one page for 6 different searches. It doesn't work well. Each service needs its own page.
"Furnace installation" and "furnace repair" attract different people searching different things. Someone searching "furnace installation" is probably building or renovating. Someone searching "furnace repair" has a cold house right now and needs someone fast. One page for both doesn't serve either person well.
Your business name, address, and phone number (called NAP) needs to appear consistently across the web. These listings, called citations, are a major signal for local ranking.
The most important ones for service businesses:
The key word is consistent. If your Google profile says "123 Main St" and Yelp says "123 Main Street", that small difference confuses Google and hurts your ranking. Exact match across every listing.
Asking customers for reviews is the starting point, but there's a system that works much better than just hoping they'll remember:
You can't manage what you don't measure. Set up these two free tools if you haven't already:
We'll pull a free local search snapshot for your business, where you rank in the map, which keywords you're missing, and what your top competitor is doing differently.
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