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67 contributions to Local Service Growth Hub
Before you spend a dollar on marketing, do this to your website.
Most business owners have no idea what's actually wrong with their website. They know it's not generating calls but they don't know why. And getting an agency to tell them usually costs money they haven't budgeted for. Here's how to do it yourself for free. Step 1: Open Claude and set the context Start with this prompt: "You are a local SEO expert who specializes in auditing websites for small local service businesses. I'm going to share information about my website and I need you to tell me exactly what's hurting my rankings and what to fix first. Ask me any questions you need before you start." Let Claude ask its clarifying questions. Answer them honestly. The more context you give, the better the audit. Step 2: Give Claude your homepage content Copy the text from your homepage and paste it in. Then ask: "Based on this homepage content, what is my H1 heading doing for my SEO? Is it optimized for my primary service and city? What should it say instead?" This alone will surface one of the most common and most damaging SEO mistakes on local business websites. Step 3: Check your page titles Open your website in Chrome. Right click anywhere on the page and select "View Page Source." Press Ctrl+F and search for "title". Copy the title tags you find and paste them into Claude with this prompt: "Here are the page titles from my website. Are they optimized for local SEO? Which ones need to be rewritten and what should they say?" Step 4: List your pages and services Tell Claude every service you offer and every city you serve. Then ask: "Based on these services and locations, what pages should my website have that it currently doesn't? What am I missing that's costing me organic traffic?" The answer will almost always reveal gaps you didn't know existed. Step 5: Ask for a priority list Finish with this: "Based on everything we've covered, give me a prioritized list of the top 5 things to fix on my website. Start with what will have the biggest impact on my local search rankings."
Before you spend a dollar on marketing, do this to your website.
0 likes • 2d
Love that. Put it to work and report back.
1 like • 2d
@Esteban Rico That's exactly what this community is here for.
Truth or Myth: If your website looks good, it will rank on Google.
Myth. Completely. This is one of the most expensive misconceptions in local business marketing. A beautiful website that nobody finds is just an expensive business card. Here's the truth: Google cannot see your website the way you see it. It doesn't look at your colors, your fonts, or your layout. It reads text, structure, and signals. A stunning design with no SEO foundation is invisible to search engines no matter how much it cost to build. Here's what Google actually looks at: Your H1 heading. This is the single most important on-page signal. If your H1 says your business name instead of your primary service and city, you're telling Google nothing useful. "Crown Point Assisted Living Facility" does infinitely more work than "Welcome to Two Hearts Homes." Your page titles and meta descriptions. These are what show up in search results. A page titled "Home" ranks for nothing. A page titled "Junk Removal in Phoenix, AZ" ranks for exactly that. Your site structure. One page trying to cover everything ranks for nothing. Individual pages for each service and each city you serve give Google specific targets to index and rank. Your load speed on mobile. Most local searches happen on phones. A slow mobile site gets penalized in rankings regardless of how it looks on desktop. Your internal links. If Google can't easily crawl from one page to another on your site, those pages might as well not exist. Design matters for conversion, meaning once someone lands on your site, a good design builds trust and keeps them there. But design has nothing to do with whether they find you in the first place. The businesses ranking above you in your market aren't always the ones with the best-looking websites. They're the ones whose sites are built the right way underneath the surface. When did you last look at your H1 headings? Drop your site below and let's take a quick look.
Truth or Myth: If your website looks good, it will rank on Google.
1 like • 2d
@Yan Golo Exactly Yan. And the crazy part is it's one of the fastest fixes on any website. Five minutes to update an H1 and it can start moving the needle within weeks. Most people overlook it because it's not visible to customers, only to Google.
What came out of this week's live call. Key takeaways for everyone.
We audited two real businesses live this week. An assisted living facility in Indiana and a shutter and blinds company in Kent, UK. Different industries, different markets, same patterns showing up. Here's what every local service business in this community needs to hear: 1. Your homepage needs to say what you do and where in the first 5 seconds. If someone lands on your site and can't immediately tell what you do and what city you serve, you're losing them. Not someday, right now. Your H1 heading is the single most important on-page SEO element and most small business websites are wasting it on their business name instead of their primary keyword and location. 2. One page for multiple locations doesn't work. If you serve Crown Point, Lowell, and Hebron, each city needs its own dedicated page. Cramming them all together splits your ranking potential and ranks for nothing. One city, one page, optimized specifically for that market. 3. CTAs need to be everywhere, not just at the top. We found sites with great content but almost no buttons or calls to action in the body of the page. People don't always scroll back up. Put your phone number, your booking link, or your contact form wherever they might stop reading. 4. Most of your traffic is probably branded, and that's a problem. If people are only finding you by typing your business name directly, that means strangers can't find you. Ranking for "shutters in Kent" or "assisted living Crown Point" is where new customers come from. Check your Google Search Console and see where your traffic is actually coming from. 5. Low domain authority means low visibility. Both sites had backlink profiles that needed work. Local citations, Chamber of Commerce listings, industry-specific directories, and local news mentions all build the authority Google needs to trust your site enough to rank it. 6. If your competitors aren't running Google Ads, that's your opportunity. Most small local service businesses aren't running ads. If you're in a market where nobody is bidding on your keywords, you can get to the top of search results for a fraction of what it would cost in a competitive market.
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What came out of this week's live call. Key takeaways for everyone.
New York just passed a law that affects how you can use AI in your marketing. Here's what you need to know.
New York's Senate Bill S8420A went into effect on June 9th. It requires businesses to disclose when an ad features an AI-generated human, what the law calls a "synthetic performer." Here's the breakdown: It applies specifically to AI-generated people. Not products, backgrounds, or scenarios. Just synthetic humans. The fine is $1,000 for the first violation and $5,000 for every repeat. The advertiser pays it, not the platform. If you're not advertising in New York, you might think this doesn't apply to you. It does, just not yet directly. The EU has similar regulation under the AI Act. Brazil, Peru, Chile, and Colombia all have bills in progress. Meta, Google, and TikTok are already auto-labeling AI-generated images and video. The direction is clear: customers are going to know when content is AI-generated, whether by law or by platform policy. Here's what this means for your business: If you're using AI-generated spokespeople or fake customer testimonials in your marketing, that's exactly the kind of thing regulators are targeting. And honestly, even where it's not illegal yet, it erodes trust the moment customers figure it out. The good news is this doesn't mean avoiding AI. It means being smart about where you use it. AI is incredibly useful for researching your market, writing copy, drafting scripts, editing video, designing graphics, and analyzing data. None of that is the problem. The problem is using AI to fake a real person recommending your business. A fake customer testimonial. A synthetic technician explaining your services. That's where trust breaks and where the legal risk lives. For a local service business, this is actually good news. Real reviews from real customers, real photos of real jobs, and a real face behind your business have always mattered more than polished AI content. Now there's regulatory pressure reinforcing exactly what already worked. Use AI to work faster. Use real humans to build trust. What's your take, should AI-generated content always be disclosed?
New York just passed a law that affects how you can use AI in your marketing. Here's what you need to know.
The next live Q&A call is coming this Wednesday. But first, help me pick the best time.
Same format as last time, bring your website, your GBP, or any question about SEO, AI search, Google Ads, or growing your local service business. We'll work through it live together. No slides, no pitch, just real answers on real businesses. Before I lock in the time, I want to make sure it works for as many of you as possible. Vote on the poll above, and I'll go with whatever gets the most votes by tomorrow. Once we have the time locked in, drop your info below: 1. Your business name and city 2. Your website URL 3. Your biggest question or challenge right now Google Meet link dropping soon.
Poll
3 members have voted
The next live Q&A call is coming this Wednesday. But first, help me pick the best time.
1 like • 16d
@Michelle OBrien Michelle, love that you're already doing SEO and want to level up, that's the best starting point. Shutup Shutters is going on the list. We're moving the call to next week, Monday or Tuesday, and you'll be one of the first businesses we cover. Confirmed time coming soon.
1 like • 8d
@Michelle OBrien and @Eddy McCracken we made sure to cover both of your businesses on the live as promised. If you want to watch the replay, click here https://www.skool.com/home-service-growth-hub-3676/classroom/5607f95b?md=a01ada70b4ba4e5cba20e1fb40892874
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Jason Davis
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66points to level up
@jason-davis-8321
I run a six-figure SEO agency and help business owners understand SEO is an easy way. Seven years of experience with SEO and website building.

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Joined Mar 4, 2026