Most businesses track their Google rankings by checking how they show up when they search from their office. The problem: Google shows you highly personalized results. The search from your office looks nothing like the search from a homeowner across town.
This is why geo grids exist — and why they reveal something most business owners find genuinely surprising the first time they see one.
What a Geo Grid Actually Shows
A geo grid is a visual heat map of where your business ranks in Google Maps across a geographic grid of points. Instead of showing your ranking from one location, it shows your ranking from 25, 49, or 100 different points spread across your service area.
Each point on the grid shows your position number — #1 means you appear first in the map pack for that location, #10+ means you’re off the visible results, greyed out entirely means you don’t appear at all.
The typical pattern for most home service businesses: strong rankings within 5 miles of their primary location, declining rankings as you move further out, and blind spots in competitor-heavy areas.
Why Your Rankings Vary by Location
Google’s local algorithm uses proximity as a significant ranking factor — businesses closer to the searcher get a boost. But proximity isn’t the only factor. Reviews, website authority, GBP completeness, and local content all influence how far your “ranking radius” extends.
Businesses with strong local signals — consistent reviews, geo-tagged content, active GBP posting — tend to have larger ranking radiuses than businesses that rank only near their address. The Local Content Engine is specifically designed to extend this radius by generating city-specific proof of service across your entire coverage area.
How to Read Your Geo Grid
When you’re looking at a geo grid for the first time, look for:
- Your strong center: Where you rank #1–3. This is your current defensible territory.
- The fade zone: Points where you drop from top 3 to top 10. These are improvement opportunities with focused effort.
- The dead zones: Points where you rank #10+ or don’t appear at all. These are cities and neighborhoods where competitors are winning work you should be getting.
- Competitor clusters: If there’s a consistent dead zone in a specific area, there’s likely a well-established competitor there. Understanding their strategy helps you plan your counterattack.
What to Do About Your Weak Zones
Once you can see exactly where you’re losing, the actions become clear:
- Generate local content for weak cities. If you’re ranking poorly in a specific city, start publishing completed job content, GBP posts, and website content that references that city explicitly. The Local Content Engine automates this for every completed job.
- Build citations in underperforming areas. Local business listings (Yelp, Angi, Yellow Pages, BBB) with consistent NAP (name, address, phone) data signal to Google that you operate in a specific area.
- Encourage reviews that mention specific cities. “Great service in [city]” reviews carry more local weight than generic praise.
- Complete your GBP service area settings. Make sure your Google Business Profile explicitly lists every city you serve — not just your primary location.
LaunchSMS includes geo grid tracking and monitoring as part of every account. You can run a grid for any keyword in any service area and track how it changes over time. Learn more about geo grids or see your rankings on a demo call.
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