Key Takeaways
- 98% of consumers now search online for local businesses, up from 90% in 2019
- 76% of “near me” mobile searches lead to a store visit within 24 hours
- ChatGPT reached 800 million weekly active users as of October 2025, and AI search referral traffic jumped 527% between January and May 2025
- 58% of local businesses still do not optimize for local search, creating a significant competitive gap
- Businesses with complete Google Business Profiles convert 3.2 times more often than incomplete listings
- Content with proper schema markup shows 30 to 40% higher visibility in AI generated answers
What Is Local SEO, and Why Does Every Local Business Need It?
Local SEO is the practice of optimizing your business’s online presence so you appear prominently when nearby customers search for your products or services. For local businesses, this is not optional. It is survival. Here is why: 98% of consumers search online for local businesses, 76% of “near me” searches lead to a store visit within a day, and 28% of those searches result in a purchase. If your business is not visible in local search results, you are invisible to the vast majority of potential customers already looking for what you sell.
Most local business owners understand they need “some kind of marketing.” But the specific mechanics of local SEO often get lumped in with general digital marketing advice that does not apply to a business serving a specific geographic area. A national ecommerce brand and a family-owned restaurant in Winter Park have fundamentally different search challenges. The restaurant does not need to rank nationally for “Italian food.” It needs to show up when someone within five miles searches “Italian restaurant near me” at 6:30 on a Friday evening.
That distinction matters because local search operates on different rules. Google uses three primary factors to rank local results: proximity (how close you are to the searcher), relevance (how well your listing matches the search query), and prominence (how well-known and trusted your business is online). Understanding and optimizing for all three is the foundation of local SEO for local businesses.
How Has Local Search Changed in the Last Two Years?
Local search behavior has transformed dramatically between 2024 and 2026. The two most significant shifts are the explosion of AI-powered search and the continued dominance of mobile, which together have rewritten the rules for how local businesses get discovered.
The Numbers Tell the Story
The scale of local search today is staggering. Google processes an estimated 16 billion searches daily, and 46% of all those queries carry local intent. That translates to more than 7 billion searches every day from people looking for businesses, products, and services in their area. “Near me” searches alone account for 1.5 billion queries every month, which works out to roughly 50 million local searches per day.
And these are not casual browsers. This is high-intent traffic. 88% of consumers who conduct a local search on their smartphone visit or call a store within 24 hours. 28% of local searches lead directly to a purchase. 90% of consumers searching for local business information complete a purchase within one week. For context, conversion rates for local intent keywords run 15 to 30% higher than general search terms. No other marketing channel consistently delivers that kind of purchase-ready audience.
Mobile Dominance Is Now Complete
In 2025, 84% of local searches happen on mobile devices, and local mobile searches are growing 50% faster than overall searches. This is not a trend to “keep an eye on.” It happened. If your website is not mobile-optimized, if your Google Business Profile is incomplete, if your hours and address are not immediately visible on a phone screen, you are losing customers every single day.
Here is a detail that does not get enough attention: 71% of all Google Business Profile interactions now originate from mobile devices. Mobile users are 2.4 times more likely to tap the call button directly from a listing. They are not browsing. They are deciding. And the decision happens fast, often in seconds.
What Is Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) and Why Should Local Businesses Care?
Generative Engine Optimization, or GEO, is the practice of optimizing your content so that AI-powered search platforms like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, Claude, and Gemini can find, understand, and cite your business when users ask questions. While traditional SEO gets you ranked in search results, GEO gets you mentioned in AI-generated answers. For local businesses, this represents the next frontier of customer discovery.
The AI Search Shift Is Not Coming. It Happened.
ChatGPT reached 800 million weekly active users as of October 2025, doubling from 400 million in just eight months. AI adoption for search jumped from 14% to 29.2% in six months. AI-referred sessions to websites increased 527% between January and May 2025. And during Amazon Prime Day in July 2025, traffic to retailer websites from AI platforms like ChatGPT and Perplexity surged 4,700% year over year.
Perhaps most telling: 58% of users have already replaced traditional search engines with AI tools for product and service discovery, according to Capgemini’s 2025 consumer research. And 60% of U.S. consumers used an AI chatbot to research or decide on a product in the last 30 days, per Andreessen Horowitz.
For local businesses, this matters because people are increasingly asking AI assistants questions like “What is the best dentist in Orlando?” or “Where can I find a reliable auto mechanic near downtown?” If your business is not structured to be cited in those AI-generated answers, you are missing a growing segment of potential customers who will never see a traditional search results page.
GEO Is Not Replacing SEO. It Is Adding a New Layer.
Here is an important nuance that gets lost in the hype: Google still sends 345 times more traffic than ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity combined. Traditional search still drives 48.5% of all internet traffic, while AI platforms account for roughly 0.1 to 0.15%. SEO is not dead. It is not even declining.
But the growth trajectory of AI search cannot be ignored. Gartner predicts that by 2028, up to 25% of searches will move to generative engines. And critically, 76.1% of AI Overview citations also rank in Google’s top 10 organic results. This means strong SEO fundamentals directly feed your GEO visibility. The two strategies are complementary, not competing.
The smart approach for local businesses is approximately 50% effort on traditional local SEO and 50% effort on GEO optimization. The good news is that the technical foundations, including site speed, schema markup, and quality content, benefit both.
How Do I Optimize My Google Business Profile for Maximum Visibility?
Your Google Business Profile (GBP) is the single most important asset for local search visibility. GBP signals account for 32% of local pack ranking factors, making them the most influential element in whether your business appears in the coveted three-pack of local results that sits above organic listings.
Optimizing your Google Business Profile is the highest-impact action any local business can take for local SEO. Complete profiles receive 7 times more clicks than incomplete ones. Verified profiles are 80% more likely to appear in search results. Each additional Google review generates approximately 80 additional website visits, 63 direction requests, and 16 phone calls. And profiles with complete information convert 3.2 times more often than those missing key details.
The Complete GBP Optimization Checklist
Claim and verify your listing. This sounds basic, but 36% of businesses have not verified their Google Business Profile as of 2025. Verification gives you control over your listing and dramatically improves visibility. Without it, you are essentially invisible in local search.
Choose the right primary category. According to Whitespark’s local ranking factor survey, choosing the wrong primary category is the single most damaging mistake a local business can make for local SEO. Google offers more than 4,000 business categories. Select the one that most precisely describes your primary service, then add relevant secondary categories.
Complete every single field. Business name, address, phone number, website, hours (including special hours for holidays), service area, business description, products and services, attributes, and appointment links. 75% of businesses ranking in Google’s top three positions have completed their description section. Businesses in positions 11 through 20 have completion rates below 40%.
Add high-quality photos and videos. Businesses that regularly upload photos experience 34% more engagement actions per month. Those ranking in the top three positions average 250 or more images. Adding photos increases direction requests by 45% and website clicks by 31%.
Generate and respond to reviews consistently. Businesses ranking in the top three local positions average more than 240 Google reviews. Response matters enormously: businesses that respond to reviews within 6 hours receive 38% more profile engagement. Detailed review responses (averaging 140 words) correlate with higher rankings. And 73% of consumers only trust reviews from the last 30 days, making consistent review generation essential.
Post regular updates. Listings with recent posts receive 21% more user interactions than inactive profiles. Google Business posts signal freshness and activity, both of which influence ranking.
What Local SEO Ranking Factors Actually Matter in 2026?
Google uses approximately 149 different ranking factors for local searches. Nobody has time to optimize for all 149. Here are the factors that local SEO experts consistently rank as most impactful, based on Whitespark’s annual local search ranking factors survey.
For the Local Pack (Map Results)
The local pack, sometimes called the map pack or three-pack, is the group of three business listings that appears alongside Google Maps results for local searches. These listings get 126% more traffic and 93% more actions (calls, website clicks, direction requests) compared to businesses ranked in positions 4 through 10.
The ranking factors that matter most for the local pack, in order of impact:
- Google Business Profile signals (32%): Primary category, keywords in business title, completeness, photos, posts, and review management
- On-page signals (19%): NAP (name, address, phone) consistency, localized content on your website, title tags with location modifiers
- Review signals (16%): Review quantity, velocity, diversity, and response patterns
- Link signals (11%): Backlinks from local and relevant websites, local chamber of commerce listings, community partnerships
- Behavioral signals (8%): Click-through rate, mobile clicks-to-call, driving direction requests
- Citation signals (7%): Consistent business information across directories like Yelp, Yellow Pages, and industry-specific platforms
- Personalization (6%): Proximity to searcher, search history, location settings
For Local Organic Results
Local organic results appear below the map pack and follow slightly different rules. On-page signals carry the most weight (36%), followed by link signals (26%), then behavioral signals (9%) and Google Business Profile signals (9%).
This means your website content is critical for organic local rankings. Pages need localized keyword optimization, location-specific service pages, and content that demonstrates expertise in your specific market area.
How Do I Make My Business Visible in ChatGPT and AI Search?
Here is the contrarian truth about GEO that most articles will not tell you: for local businesses, the best GEO strategy is not some exotic new tactic. It is doing traditional local SEO exceptionally well while adding a few structural optimizations that make your content easy for AI models to parse, trust, and cite.
Why? Because AI search platforms pull their local information from three primary sources. ChatGPT Search shows business websites for 58% of its local search citations, followed by business mentions on third-party sites (27%) and online directories (15%). If you have a well-optimized website, strong directory presence, and good reviews, you are already building the foundation AI needs to recommend your business.
Structural Optimization for AI Visibility
Add FAQ schema to your website. AI platforms love structured Q&A content because it directly mirrors how users query these systems. When someone asks ChatGPT “What should I look for in a good plumber in Orlando?” and your plumbing website has a well-structured FAQ section addressing exactly that question, you dramatically increase your chances of being cited.
Use the “answer capsule” technique. For every key topic or service page, include a 50 to 60 word direct answer near the top that concisely explains what you do, where you do it, and why it matters. Research from Backlinko shows that pages with answer capsules achieve 40% higher citation rates in AI responses.
Implement proper schema markup. Content with schema markup shows 30 to 40% higher visibility in AI-generated answers. For local businesses, implement LocalBusiness schema, FAQ schema, and Service schema at minimum. Use Google’s Rich Results Test to validate your implementation.
Build entity density, not just keyword density. Instead of repeating “best plumber Orlando” twenty times, mention related entities: licensed and insured contractors, water heater installation, drain cleaning, emergency pipe repair, residential re-piping, Orlando metro area, Central Florida, specific neighborhood names. AI models understand topics through entity relationships, not keyword repetition.
Keep content fresh. AI platforms prefer content that is 25.7% fresher than content cited in traditional search results. Update your service pages and blog content regularly with current information, seasonal details, and recent project examples.
What Role Do Online Reviews Play in Local SEO and AI Search?
Reviews are simultaneously the most powerful and most overlooked element of local search marketing. They directly influence where you rank, whether customers choose you, and increasingly, whether AI platforms recommend your business.
Reviews as a Ranking Factor
Review signals account for approximately 16% of local pack ranking factors. But the influence extends further: high numerical Google ratings are ranked as the single most important local ranking factor for conversions, according to Whitespark’s survey of local SEO experts. Positive sentiment in review text, quantity of reviews with written content, and review response quality all contribute to ranking performance.
The numbers paint a clear picture. Businesses ranking in the top three local positions average more than 240 Google reviews. Reviews can lift conversion rates 15 to 20% and drive revenue increases up to 18%. Google reviews alone have approximately a 20% impact on local visibility. And customers are willing to spend 31% more with businesses that have excellent reviews.
The Trust Threshold
83% of consumers use Google to find local business reviews. 88% trust online reviews as much as personal recommendations. 89% prefer to read reviews before making purchase decisions. And 73% only consider reviews written in the last 30 days trustworthy.
This creates what we call the “trust threshold,” the minimum review profile a business needs to convert searchers into customers. Our consumer research consistently shows that businesses need a steady flow of recent, positive, responded-to reviews to clear this threshold. A business with 200 five-star reviews from 2023 will lose to a competitor with 50 reviews from the last two months.
Building a Review Engine
The most effective approach to reviews is systematic, not sporadic. Ask every satisfied customer for a review. Make it easy with a direct link to your Google review page. Respond to every review, positive and negative, with detailed, thoughtful replies. Businesses that respond to all reviews see conversion rates exceeding 5.1%. Those responding within 6 hours see 38% more engagement.
How Does Local SEO Compare to Paid Advertising for Local Businesses?
This is a question we hear constantly from local business owners, and the data points strongly toward local SEO as the higher-ROI channel for sustained growth. 75% of local companies say that local SEO efforts generate more leads than paid advertising. Organic results receive significantly more clicks than local service ads, and the traffic is free once earned.
That said, paid and organic are not mutually exclusive. Local paid ads (Google Maps ads, local service ads) complement organic local SEO by capturing immediate, high-intent traffic while your organic visibility builds. The ideal approach layers both.
Where local SEO has a distinct advantage is in long-term cost efficiency. A paid ad stops generating leads the moment you stop paying. A well-optimized Google Business Profile and website continue driving calls, visits, and sales indefinitely. Local SEO commonly delivers 250% or greater ROI, and those returns compound over time as your authority, review profile, and content footprint grow.
Why Do Local Businesses Have a Structural Advantage in AI Search?
Here is something that rarely gets discussed: local businesses actually have structural advantages over national brands when it comes to both local SEO and GEO. We have seen this pattern repeatedly across client engagements, and it stems from three inherent characteristics of local operations.
Hyper-specific expertise. A national HVAC brand has generic content about air conditioning. A local HVAC company in Phoenix can create content about managing dual-stage cooling in desert climates with monsoon humidity spikes. That specificity is exactly what AI models value when answering location-specific questions. The more granular and authentic your content, the more likely an AI platform is to cite it.
Community authority signals. Local businesses naturally generate the exact kind of trust signals that both Google and AI platforms weigh heavily: local news mentions, chamber of commerce memberships, community event sponsorships, relationships with other local businesses. A national brand cannot replicate these organic community connections at scale.
Review authenticity. Local reviews mention specific employees by name, reference particular neighborhoods, and describe real experiences in granular detail. This contextual richness signals authenticity to both Google’s review algorithms and AI models evaluating source credibility. Generic five-star reviews that say “great service” carry far less weight than a review that mentions “Sarah helped us pick out the perfect tile for our kitchen renovation at their Thornton Park showroom.”
Agility. When Google updates its local algorithm or a new AI search behavior emerges, a local business can adapt its strategy in days. A national brand with 500 locations and corporate approval workflows might take months to implement the same changes.
What Specific Local SEO and GEO Steps Should I Take Right Now?
For local business owners who want to take immediate action, here is a prioritized roadmap that addresses both traditional local SEO and AI search optimization simultaneously.
Phase 1: Foundation (Week 1 to 2)
Claim and fully complete your Google Business Profile. If you have not done this, nothing else matters. Add your primary and secondary categories. Write a detailed 70-word description incorporating your main services and location. Upload at least 25 high-quality photos. Set accurate hours including holiday schedules. Add all services and products. Enable messaging and appointment booking if applicable.
Audit your NAP consistency. Your business name, address, and phone number must be identical across every directory, your website, your social profiles, and your GBP. Even small discrepancies (like “Street” versus “St.” or using a tracking phone number on one listing) can hurt rankings. Use a tool like Moz Local or BrightLocal to identify and fix inconsistencies.
Ensure your website is mobile-optimized. Run Google’s PageSpeed Insights on every key page. Your site should load in under 3 seconds on mobile. Navigation should work with one thumb. Your phone number should be tap-to-call. Your address should link to Google Maps directions.
Phase 2: Content and Structure (Week 3 to 4)
Create location-specific service pages. Do not rely on one generic “Services” page. Build individual pages for each service you offer, optimized with local keywords. “Emergency plumbing repair in Orlando” is a different page from “Water heater installation in Winter Park.” Each page should include an answer capsule (50 to 60 words), a detailed service description, FAQs, and a clear call to action.
Implement schema markup. At minimum, add LocalBusiness schema, FAQ schema, and Service schema to your website. This tells both Google and AI models exactly what your business does, where you operate, and what questions you answer.
Build an FAQ section on every key page. Use questions that real customers ask, phrased in natural language the way someone would speak to an AI assistant. “How much does a roof replacement cost in Central Florida?” is better than “Roof replacement pricing.” Include concise, factual answers with specific details.
Phase 3: Reviews and Authority (Ongoing)
Launch a systematic review generation process. Ask every customer. Send a follow-up email or text with a direct link to your Google review page within 24 hours of service completion. Respond to every review within 6 hours when possible, always within 24 hours.
Build local backlinks. Partner with other local businesses for cross-referrals. Sponsor community events and ensure you get linked from event pages. Join your local chamber of commerce. Contribute expert quotes to local news outlets and industry publications.
Create content that demonstrates genuine local expertise. Write about local market conditions, neighborhood guides, seasonal considerations specific to your area, and community events. This is the “extra 10%” that AI models cannot fabricate and national competitors cannot replicate. If you are an Orlando roofer, write about hurricane season preparation specific to Central Florida building codes, the differences between tile and shingle performance in subtropical humidity, and which neighborhoods were most affected by recent storms. That is the kind of specificity that earns both Google rankings and AI citations.
Phase 4: Monitor and Optimize (Monthly)
Track your local rankings. Monitor your position in the local pack for key search terms. Track calls, direction requests, and website clicks from your Google Business Profile.
Test your AI visibility. Manually search 10 to 15 relevant queries across ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews each month. Document when and how your business appears. Note which competitors get mentioned and what content they have that you do not.
Update content regularly. Refresh service pages with current pricing, new project photos, and seasonal information. Add new FAQ entries based on questions customers actually ask. Post updates to your Google Business Profile at least weekly.
What Are Common Local SEO Mistakes That Hurt Rankings?
Based on what we see working with businesses across industries, these are the most frequent and costly local SEO mistakes.
Inconsistent NAP information. If your address says “Suite 200” on your website but “Ste 200” on Yelp and your GBP lists a different phone number entirely, Google cannot confidently verify your business information. This inconsistency alone can prevent you from appearing in the local pack.
Ignoring reviews or responding generically. A copy-paste “Thanks for your review!” response does not help rankings or build trust. Detailed, personalized responses that reference the specific experience and use relevant keywords naturally signal engagement and authority to Google.
Wrong primary category in GBP. This is the single most impactful negative ranking factor according to local SEO experts. If you are a “family practice physician” but your primary category is set to “medical clinic,” you are fighting an unnecessary uphill battle for every relevant search.
No localized website content. A generic service page that could apply to any city in America will not rank for local searches. Every page needs location context: the cities and neighborhoods you serve, local regulations or conditions that affect your work, and references to the specific community you operate in.
Neglecting mobile experience. With 84% of local searches on mobile and 71% of GBP interactions from phones, a slow or clunky mobile experience is a conversion killer. Test your site on an actual phone, not just a desktop browser resized to a smaller window.
Treating GBP as set-and-forget. Your Google Business Profile needs ongoing maintenance. Post updates. Add new photos. Respond to reviews. Update seasonal hours. Businesses that update monthly see 32% better performance in both engagement and conversions.
How Long Does It Take for Local SEO and GEO to Show Results?
For local SEO, most businesses begin seeing measurable improvements in local search visibility within 3 to 6 months, with significant results typically appearing between 6 and 12 months. Factors that accelerate results include the competitiveness of your market, the current state of your online presence, and how aggressively you pursue optimization.
Some quick wins can happen faster. Completing and optimizing your Google Business Profile can produce noticeable improvements within weeks. Generating a burst of new reviews can improve your local pack position within 30 to 60 days. Fixing critical website issues like mobile speed and NAP consistency can produce ranking improvements within a few weeks of Google’s next crawl.
For GEO, initial visibility in AI platforms can appear within 2 to 4 weeks, which is faster than traditional SEO’s typical timeline. AI models update their knowledge more frequently than search engines recrawl the web. However, building sustained authority that leads to consistent AI citations takes 3 to 6 months of steady content creation and optimization.
The key principle for both: consistency beats intensity. A business that makes steady, incremental improvements every month will outperform one that does a massive one-time optimization and then neglects ongoing maintenance.
How Bigeye Approaches Local SEO and GEO for Local Businesses
At Bigeye, we treat local SEO and GEO as interconnected disciplines that share a common foundation: understanding what your customers actually want and how they look for it.
Consumer Research Comes First
Our EyeQ consumer research methodology gives local businesses something most SEO agencies cannot provide: actual data on how your target customers search for and evaluate businesses like yours. We do not guess which keywords matter or which messages resonate. We research it. This research-first approach ensures that every optimization decision is grounded in real consumer behavior, not industry assumptions.
Integrated Local Strategy
Local SEO does not exist in a vacuum. It connects to your brand positioning, your website experience, your social media presence, your content strategy, and increasingly, your AI search visibility. We build local strategies that integrate all of these elements so they reinforce each other rather than operating as disconnected tactics.
Transparent Measurement
We believe local businesses deserve clear, honest reporting on what is working and what is not. Our clients see exactly how their local rankings are changing, which searches are driving calls and visits, how their review profiles are evolving, and where they appear (or do not appear) in AI-generated search results.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is local SEO worth it for a small business with a limited budget?
Absolutely. Local SEO is one of the highest-ROI marketing investments available. 75% of local companies report that local SEO generates more leads than paid advertising. Many foundational optimizations, like completing your Google Business Profile, generating reviews, and creating localized website content, require time investment more than monetary investment. For businesses with limited budgets, local SEO often delivers better returns than any paid channel because the traffic compounds over time rather than stopping when you stop paying.
Do I need to worry about GEO if I am a small local business?
Yes, but not in the way you might think. You do not need a separate “AI optimization” strategy. The most impactful GEO actions for local businesses are extensions of good local SEO: structured content with clear Q&A formats, schema markup on your website, consistent information across directories, and genuine local authority signals. By doing local SEO well and adding schema markup plus answer-focused content structure, you are simultaneously optimizing for AI search platforms.
How many Google reviews do I need to rank in the local pack?
Businesses ranking in the top three local positions average more than 240 Google reviews. However, the number needed varies significantly by industry and market. More important than raw quantity is consistency (new reviews every month), recency (73% of consumers only trust reviews from the last 30 days), and response quality (detailed responses averaging 140 words correlate with higher rankings). Focus on a steady flow of authentic reviews rather than a one-time push.
Should I hire an SEO agency or do local SEO myself?
It depends on your capacity and the competitiveness of your market. 56% of local business owners manage SEO themselves, and foundational optimizations are absolutely doable without an agency. However, 40% of small businesses outsource some or all of their local SEO work because it requires ongoing attention, technical knowledge (especially for schema markup and site optimization), and strategic expertise. If you are in a competitive market or serving multiple locations, professional help typically pays for itself through faster results and fewer costly mistakes.
What is the difference between local SEO and regular SEO?
Traditional SEO focuses on ranking for search terms regardless of location, targeting broad audiences across the country or world. Local SEO specifically targets customers in a geographic area, using techniques like Google Business Profile optimization, local citation building, review management, and location-specific content. The ranking factors also differ: local pack rankings weight GBP signals at 32% while traditional organic rankings weight on-page and link signals much more heavily. Most local businesses need local SEO as their primary strategy, with traditional SEO tactics supporting their broader content efforts.
How do AI search platforms decide which local businesses to recommend?
AI platforms primarily rely on two information sources. First, they draw from their training data, which includes how businesses are discussed, reviewed, and mentioned across the web. Second, platforms like ChatGPT Search and Perplexity blend in live search results from Google and Bing. This means the businesses most likely to be cited in AI answers are those with strong organic search presence, consistent third-party mentions, positive review profiles, and well-structured website content. ChatGPT Search specifically pulls from business websites (58% of citations), business mentions on other sites (27%), and online directories (15%).
The Bottom Line for Local Businesses
The local search landscape in 2026 operates on two parallel tracks, and successful local businesses need to be visible on both. Traditional local SEO, anchored by Google Business Profile optimization, review management, and localized website content, remains the foundation. Generative Engine Optimization adds a new layer that captures the growing audience discovering businesses through AI-powered search.
The data points in one clear direction:
- 98% of consumers search online for local businesses
- 76% of “near me” searches result in a visit within 24 hours
- 28% of local searches lead directly to a purchase
- 58% of businesses still do not optimize for local search
- AI search referral traffic is growing 527% annually
- Content with schema markup shows 30 to 40% higher AI visibility
That last statistic, 58% of businesses still not optimizing for local search, represents an enormous competitive gap. While your competitors debate whether local SEO is worth the investment, every day that passes is a day they are not capturing the customers actively searching for what they offer.
Local businesses that invest in both local SEO and GEO today are not just capturing current demand. They are building the digital foundation that will determine visibility for the next decade of search evolution.
Ready to make your local business visible where your customers are actually searching? Bigeye combines consumer research, SEO and GEO expertise, and full-service marketing execution to help local businesses dominate their markets. Whether you need a comprehensive local SEO strategy, GEO optimization, or an integrated approach that covers both, our team delivers results grounded in real consumer data.
Contact us today and discover what a research-driven local SEO and GEO strategy can do for your business.