Local SEO is not about ranking charts and map grid reports. 

It is about measurable business outcomes: calls, booked appointments, and revenue.

In this episode, we speak with Greg Gifford, who breaks down what truly drives local growth, why ranking reports are often vanity metrics, and how businesses should rethink local SEO in the era of AI.

Many businesses assume local SEO is working because rankings improved or reports look positive. Greg challenges that assumption with a simple principle.

Local SEO success means business growth.
Not better charts. Not better positions. Growth.

If you want more calls, more leads, and more revenue, not just green boxes in reports, this episode is for you.

What this episode makes clear

Local SEO is not traditional SEO with a Google Business Profile added on top.

It is a different discipline with additional signals that all work together:

  • Website authority and content quality
  • Google Business Profile optimisation
  • Review signals and review velocity
  • Local links and citations
  • Conversion experience on the website

Treating local SEO as a checklist instead of a system is one of the biggest reasons campaigns underperform.

The website first local SEO model

One of the strongest insights Greg shared is that the website is still the foundation.

Some businesses assume the website exists to support the Google Business Profile.

In reality, the opposite is true.

Your website:

  • Builds trust
  • Answers buying questions
  • Converts visitors into leads
  • Strengthens GBP rankings through relevance signals

Without a strong site, visibility does not translate into revenue.

Rankings are not the goal

Greg highlighted a common failure pattern across agencies and businesses.

Reports show:

  • Rankings improved
  • Traffic increased
  • Visibility expanded

But revenue stayed the same.

This happens when teams optimise for metrics instead of outcomes.

The metrics that actually matter are:

  • Calls
  • Form submissions
  • Booked consultations
  • Sales growth year over year

Everything else is supporting data.

Review recency can beat review volume

One of the most practical insights from the conversation is how powerful review momentum has become.

A business with fewer total reviews can outrank a competitor with more reviews if:

  • Reviews are coming in consistently
  • Feedback is recent
  • Engagement signals remain active

Local trust is dynamic. Stale credibility weakens rankings over time.

AI is changing clicks, not demand

Greg addressed one of the biggest fears in marketing right now.

AI Overviews and AI search are reducing some traffic, especially informational traffic.
But the number of people looking for services has not changed.

In many cases:

  • Traffic decreases
  • Conversions stay stable or improve

Because higher intent searches still drive action.

The takeaway is not panic.
The takeaway is adaptation.

Businesses need to focus on answering real buying questions across platforms, not protecting old traffic patterns.

Keyword strategy is shifting toward intent

Another major insight is how keyword behaviour is evolving.

Searches are becoming:

  • Longer
  • More conversational
  • More specific

Instead of chasing broad high volume terms, the smarter approach is targeting:

  • Situation based searches
  • Problem specific queries
  • Decision stage intent

These often convert faster and with less competition.

What to do next

If you want to strengthen local performance, the priority sequence is clear.

Step 1. Measure what matters

Track leads, calls, and revenue trends first.
Treat rankings as supporting indicators.

Step 2. Strengthen the website foundation

Ensure the site clearly answers:

  • What you offer
  • Who you help
  • Why you are the right choice
  • What the next step is

Step 3. Build consistent review momentum

Create a repeatable process to generate new reviews continuously, not occasionally.

Step 4. Expand intent focused content

Answer real buyer questions and scenarios instead of only targeting head keywords.

One question to pressure test your local SEO

If rankings improved tomorrow but revenue stayed flat, would your current strategy explain why?

If not, measurement and strategy alignment need attention.

Episode: Why Your Website Is the Foundation of Local SEO Growth with Greg Gifford