Start with business goals
The review should connect visibility to calls, form submissions, and the quality of leads coming in.
A useful review should tell you what is holding back calls and form submissions, not just hand you a long technical checklist.
A useful audit should show what is holding back calls and form submissions, not just hand you a long technical checklist.
You should leave with a clear first step, a priority order, and an understanding of what will matter most.
The review should connect visibility to calls, form submissions, and the quality of leads coming in.
We look at the Google listing, important pages, broken links, page speed, reviews, service areas, and contact paths.
The best audit ends with what to fix first, what to publish next, and what to measure.
The review should connect website problems to the pages that can create leads: local visibility pages, Google Business Profile help, Google Maps visibility, and website health fixes.
For companies planning a rebuild, the review should also look at lead-focused web design, current pages, contact forms, and content gaps that future website content should fill.
If you are comparing scopes, the SEO cost guide explains which findings usually belong in a monthly campaign.
Call (937) 838-1287 or request an audit. The first step is a plain-English review of what is working, what is missing, and what should be fixed first.
It can be, if it names specific problems and next steps instead of only showing generic scores.
Yes. Local search is competitive, so it helps to understand what stronger businesses are doing well.