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You are here: Home / Blog

Lions And People Are The Same

Last Updated: August 19, 2025

Brothers are brothers, no matter the species. Apparently Africa isn’t big enough for these three.

https://www.prospectgenius.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/lions-and-people-are-the-same.mp4

Backlinks Are Old News. If You Want to Rank, Focus on Local Gossip

Last Updated: August 19, 2025

Leer en español

You have surely noticed that local search rankings aren’t behaving like they used to. That’s no accident. In 2025, following Google’s June core update and continued algorithm refinements, local SEO has taken a substantial turn toward trust and engagement (basically gossip). Reviews, sentiment, and local mentions now carry more weight than many traditional ranking factors. So what changed? The short answer: AI finally made it possible.

Let’s break down what’s happening, and how you can keep your business ahead.

Why Google Is Prioritizing Reviews and Community Signals Now

For years, Google leaned on straightforward indicators like backlinks, keywords, and citations to assess local business credibility. These were relatively easy to crawl, count, and compare. But reviews? Forum threads? Neighborhood Facebook groups? That kind of unstructured, subjective content was difficult (if not impossible) to evaluate at scale.

Now, thanks to AI and advanced natural language processing, Google can analyze sentiment, context, and authenticity in real-time. It can tell the difference between a glowing review and a lukewarm one, or a genuine customer complaint versus spammy noise. It can even detect patterns of engagement across local platforms like Nextdoor, Reddit, or community blogs.

This breakthrough means that Google’s algorithm can finally prioritize what really matters to users: reputation, reliability, and real-world relationships.

What’s Evolving in Local Pack Rankings?

The “local pack” (those top results in Google Maps and “near me” searches) is still influenced by some traditional factors. Backlinks, keywords, and citations haven’t gone away. But their role is changing.

According to industry data, review signals now account for roughly 17% of local pack ranking factors, a noticeable jump compared to recent years. Google now evaluates:

  • Review volume and recency
  • Tone and sentiment
  • Response rates and engagement
  • Consistency of mentions across platforms

Backlinks are still important, especially from locally relevant or niche sources, but they now work alongside a broader picture of your business’s trustworthiness and community presence.

Why This Matters for Service Businesses

In most service-based industries, trust and reliability are the deciding factors for most customers. Google’s algorithm reflects this shift by lifting businesses that earn praise, respond to reviews, and stay involved in their local scene.

Here’s what current trends show:

  • Companies with 4+ star ratings and fresh reviews often see conversion rate boosts of 15–20%.
  • A handful of unresolved negative reviews can hurt visibility in competitive local searches.
  • Mentions in local forums, social posts, and neighborhood apps can now act like modern backlinks—signaling relevance and real-world authority.

Your Local SEO Playbook for 2025

Here’s how home-service businesses can adapt to this AI-driven, trust-first SEO environment:

1. Automate & Personalize Review Requests

  • Use tools like Podium, Birdeye, or your CRM to send timely, personal review requests.
  • Include your Google Business Profile link to reduce friction.
  • Aim for 5–10 new reviews per month, and prompt your customers to mention the specific service and city.

2. Respond to Every Review (Good or Bad)

  • Reply within 48 hours, use the customer’s name, and reference the job.
  • For negative feedback, stay calm and offer resolution.
  • Google’s AI picks up on tone, empathy, and responsiveness, so avoid canned responses.

3. Engage in Your Local Community (Online and Off)

  • Sponsor events, contribute to fundraisers, and get your business name on local social posts or websites.
  • Join Nextdoor or relevant Facebook groups. Provide helpful input, not just promotion.
  • Google sees these local signals as trust builders and relevance indicators.

4. Make Your Reviews Keyword-Friendly

  • When asking for reviews, encourage customers to describe the service and location:
    • “Quick faucet repair in [City]. Highly recommend!”
  • Reflect those same terms in your Google Business Profile and service pages.

5. Monitor for Trends and Red Flags

  • Tools like BrightLocal or ReviewTrackers can help you catch review sentiment trends early.
  • Proactively address repeat issues. Report fake reviews through Google Business Profile tools.

6. Showcase Community Engagement on Your Website

  • Add a “Community Involvement” page featuring local partnerships and events.
  • Embed social feeds showing real customer projects, ideally with neighborhood or city tags.

Metrics That Matter

Want to track progress? Focus on these:

  • Review Growth: Look for consistent increases and maintain a 4.5+ star average.
  • Response Rate: Reply to 100% of reviews within 48 hours.
  • Community Mentions: Aim for 2–3 new citations or local references each month.
  • Local Pack Visibility: Use tools like Moz Local or BrightLocal to watch your rankings.

Final Thoughts

This shift in local SEO isn’t just another trend, it’s a reflection of a deeper change in how search engines understand trust, thanks to the rise of AI.

In 2025, your online reputation is your competitive edge. And now, for the first time, Google has the tools to truly evaluate it.

If you’re a home-service business owner, that means prioritizing reviews, engaging with your community, and responding thoughtfully are no longer optional, they’re essential.

Start by taking stock of where you stand today. Because odds are, your next customer already has.

 
 
 

AI & Local SEO FAQs (2025)


In 2025, Google’s algorithm now uses AI to assess review tone, sentiment, volume, and recency as key local SEO signals. This means that high-quality, recent reviews play a larger role in determining a business’s local pack visibility and ranking.


AI allows Google to analyze unstructured content like reviews, social posts, and forum mentions. It now understands sentiment, relevance, and authenticity, enabling it to prioritize trustworthy and community-engaged businesses in local search results.


Home-service businesses should prioritize earning keyword-rich Google reviews, respond to all reviews promptly, engage in local online communities, and feature their community involvement on their websites. These actions build trust and improve local rankings.


Yes. Google evaluates your responsiveness and tone when replying to reviews. Personal, empathetic replies—especially within 48 hours—signal active business engagement and can improve your Quality Score and local SEO performance.


Mentions on platforms like Nextdoor, Reddit, and neighborhood blogs now act like modern backlinks. Google’s AI recognizes these local mentions as trust signals, which can improve your visibility in Google Maps and ‘near me’ searches.


Encourage customers to mention the service and city in their review. For example, ask them to write something like, ‘Quick water heater repair in Albany—highly recommend.’ This boosts local keyword relevance and enhances SEO performance.

Sympathetic Vomiting Prank

Last Updated: August 6, 2025

Volume Up! 😂

 

https://www.prospectgenius.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Funny-prank.mp4

Sheep Stuck In Tire Swing

Last Updated: August 5, 2025

https://www.prospectgenius.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Sheep-gets-stuck-in-tire-swing.mp4

How Much Should Things Cost?

Last Updated: August 19, 2025

Leer en español

If you’ve ever felt like you’re paying way too much for services or products (whether it’s a phone line, email, or website) you’re not alone. We hear this all the time from small business owners. It’s hard to know if you’re getting fleeced when it’s difficult to establish what an average price even looks like. So, let’s break down what you should expect to pay for some essential business tools, so you don’t get stuck paying more than you need to.

Disclaimer: We have no affiliation with any of these companies so we’re not getting paid to plug anyone here. This is just our own experiences and opinions formed over the last 20 years of operating in this industry. 

Second Phone Lines: Keep It Simple (and Affordable)

Many business owners are hesitant to use second phone lines or tracking numbers provided by marketing companies, and for good reason. Too often, companies have held these numbers hostage after service cancellation, refusing to release them. This leaves business owners stuck without access to a number they relied on for customers, causing frustration and lost calls.

You have a few options to avoid this problem:

  1. Get your own second line and tell the marketer to use that number. This way, you (and only you) have control of it. Just be aware this means the marketer’s reporting won’t work since they won’t have access to the number’s data. It also means your marketer cannot make proactive decisions because they won’t have the data to work with. This is a big downside to this option…

  2. Get your own second line, then port that number into your marketing company’s system. This makes it clear the number is your property, but still allows their reporting and other systems to function properly. You can get the new number from dozens of different places, including your cell carrier.

  3. Simply recognize (and call out if needed) that having control of your phone number is the law, not an option. The FCC has ruled that if the number rings directly to you, it’s yours to port away whenever you want. Any company disallowing this is likely breaking the law, and you can easily get them in hot water with the federal government. The mere threat of this almost always results in the number going exactly where you want it to go.

At Prospect Genius, we include clear terms of service to protect your right to take your number with you. This isn’t just good business, it’s federal law.

So, where do you turn for this second line, and how much does it cost? Here are a few options to consider:

  • Sideline: This app lets you add a second phone number to your existing smartphone. It even supports team access for calls and texts. Expect to pay about $10 a month.
  • Google Voice: Free and easy for basic calls and texts on a second line, but not packed with features. Good if you want a budget-friendly option without fancy extras.
  • CallTrax: This is what we recommend for clients. It integrates with reporting and has strong spam call blocking. Price? Around $25 a month.
  • RingCentral: A big name in VoIP with a slick app and lots of enterprise features, also about $25 a month.

A quick note about second lines included with marketing services:
Many businesses are hesitant to use metered phone numbers provided as part of their marketing packages. They’ve been burned before by companies refusing to release the number after canceling the service. Even though tracking your marketing with a dedicated number is super helpful, losing control of that line can cause real headaches.

At Prospect Genius, we include clear language in our terms of service giving you the right to take your number with you when you leave. This isn’t just good business practice, it’s the law.

Phone Number Portability in the U.S.
We’re not lawyers, and this is not legal advice, but, thanks to FCC regulations, you generally have the right to port (take) your phone number to a new provider if:

  • The number is active and rings directly to you.
  • The new provider serves the same geographic area (for landlines).
  • You initiate the port before terminating your current service.

Exceptions:
Numbers tied to shared systems like business PBX setups or some VoIP services may not be portable. Always check with your provider to be sure.

A company trying to hold onto a number, against your will, isn’t just bad customer service, it’s likely breaking FCC rules and the law. So, always demand control over your phone numbers. Remember, you are legally allowed to port that number away, and you can often port number IN for use with your new marketing project so keep that in mind as well.

Email: Don’t Use companyName@gmail.com Anymore

Still rocking a companyname@gmail.com email? That looks outdated and unprofessional. You can get an email address with your own domain (like bob@bobsplumbing.com) using services like ForwardEmail.net. Plans run from $0 up to $10/mo, but $3/mo is enough for most businesses.

Bonus: You can still use Gmail’s interface, so no need to change your daily routine. Setting it all up takes a small amount of effort, but if it feels beyond your comfort zone, we do offer the EmailMask service to do exactly this.

Google Business Profiles: It’s Yours and It’s Free, But Getting Help Isn’t

First and foremost, your Google Business Profile (GBP) is yours to claim and manage, and setting it up is completely free. Google doesn’t charge anything to create or own your profile on their platform.

That said, it’s totally reasonable for someone to charge you a fee to do the work for you. Think of it like hiring an accountant to do your taxes: filing taxes yourself is free, but if you want expert help, you pay for their time and know-how.

Services like our Google Business Profile Optimization are exactly that. We don’t charge for the GBP itself, but we do charge for our expertise and the time it takes to optimize your profile for better visibility and customer engagement.

If you’re signing up for a service like this, just be clear on what you’re paying for. Unfortunately, there are plenty of scams that try to make you think Google is charging fees directly, but it’s really about paying for the service and expertise, not the profile itself.

Google Ads Management: Transparency Is Key

The prices and structures of Google Ads management services vary widely, and it’s easy to get scammed if you’re not careful. The best practice? Your management company should bill you separately from Google’s ad spend. This way, you know exactly how much goes toward ads and how much goes toward the management fee.

How much should you pay? Usually, 15% to 25% of your ad budget. If you’re spending $500 a month, expect to pay around 25% for management. If your budget looks more like $10,000/mo you should expect to get a rater closer to about 15%-20%.

Website Design: Invest Wisely

Website prices depend on size and features. Small business sites usually cost between $500 and $5,000. Cheaper sites often lack important SEO and content optimization, so if you go cheap, you might pay more later in lost leads.

Think of your website as the foundation of your home. If you build it well, you’ll never have to worry. If you cheap out, you’re going to regret it every time you try to renovate the house above it. Things that should be cheap and easy, suddenly become expensive and difficult, all because you kicked your technical debt down the road.

Domain Registration: Don’t Cheap Out

Domains cost about $10 per year. That’s less than a dollar a month. Some try to save a buck by using cheap registrars but end up paying hundreds later to fix problems.

We like PorkBun for domains, but we avoid companies like GoDaddy, Turbify, 1&1, Tucows, and BlueHost because they either lack critical features, or we’ve had too many issues with them over the years.

Similar to the phone line issue, domain names are something you NEED to make sure you control. You can register them for multiple years at a time, making this a near-zero maintenance issue. On the other hand, when you lose control of it, you are in a world of hurt because getting it back an be time-consuming, expensive, and sometimes even impossible. Don’t let all your years of built-up equity suddenly get flushed down the drain when you need to completely start over with a new domain.

Hosting: Don’t Let Your Website Crawl

There are many hosting options, but opting for cheap, shared hosting can slow your site to a crawl. Slow sites frustrate visitors and hurt your Google rankings.

Especially if you use WordPress, spend a little more on faster hosting. It’ll save you money in the long run because your web designer won’t waste hours waiting on slow load times, and you’ll keep both your site visitors and Google happy.

Bottom Line: Knowing what you should pay can save you serious headaches and money. If you’re unsure or want a hand setting things up, we’re here to help with advice, tools, and services tailored for small businesses.

 
 
 

Cost‑of‑Business Tools FAQs


Second phone lines typically cost:

  • Sideline: around $10/month
  • Google Voice: free for basic usage
  • CallTrax: around $25/month
  • RingCentral: around $25/month


Yes, Google Voice provides a free second business phone line, though its features are basic (calling and texting only).


Custom‑domain email (e.g., bob@yourdomain.com) costs between $0 and $10 per month with services like ForwardEmail.net—typically around $3/month works well for most small businesses.


Google Ads management typically costs 15 %–25 % of your ad spend. For example:

  • ~25 % if your budget is around $500/month
  • ~15 %–20 % for budgets around $10,000/month


Designing a small business website tends to cost between $500 and $5,000 depending on the size and features needed.


Domain registration typically costs around $10 per year—under $1 per month—which is a small price for maintaining full control of your online identity.

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