Owned and Operated - A Plumbing, Electrical, and HVAC Business Growth Podcast

The 2026 Google Strategy for Home Service Companies

John Wilson Season 1 Episode 313

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0:00 | 30:31

What separates the fastest-growing home service companies from everyone else?

In this episode, John Wilson sits down with Julie from Big Reputation to break down what’s actually working in local SEO, Google Business Profiles (GBP), and online reviews in 2026. From review velocity and AI-driven search to multi-location GBP strategies and ranking in competitive markets, this conversation dives deep into the systems top operators use to dominate local search and generate more booked jobs.

They cover the latest Google algorithm changes, why consistency matters more than total review count, how service-area businesses are gaining traction, and the exact tactics home service companies are using to improve rankings, trust, and lead flow.

In this episode, you’ll learn:
• Why review velocity matters more than total review count
• How Google’s algorithm is changing for home service businesses
• The best way to respond to customer reviews
• How photos, updates, and engagement impact GBP rankings
• When to launch a new Google Business Profile
• Why rural markets can outperform competitive metro areas
• How AI search is changing local SEO and reputation management
• The difference between storefront and service-area GBPs
• How top contractors build trust signals that drive more calls


Host: John Wilson https://www.linkedin.com/in/johnbwilson1/  

Guest: Julie Phan https://www.linkedin.com/in/julie-phan-940aa2380/

💼 Extra Special Thanks to Service Scalers!

We’ve been partnering with Service Scalers to maximize our Local Service Ads (LSAs) and optimize our Google My Business profiles, and the results have been incredible. With hundreds of thousands in sales and 900+ calls in a single week, GMBs are now our top-performing organic lead channel.

Want to learn how Service Scalers can do the same for you?

 🔗Check Them Out Here

💼Shoutout to Avoca AI!

Looking to train your call center and improve technician performance? Avoca AI helps teams identify issues, improve call quality, and drive results from start to finish.

 🔗 Schedule a demo

💼 Big Reputation — Stop chasing reviews and watching competitors outrank you. Big Reputation is the AI-powered review + SEO platform built for home service pros. Automate review generation, respond with AI, track local SEO, and integrate with your CRM. Setup is free, and your first month’s on the house.

👉 Book your demo

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John Wilson, CEO of Wilson Companies
Jack Carr, CEO of Rapid HVAC

📌 Disclaimer: Some links may include UTM parameters or affiliate relationships, meaning we may earn a commission if you make a purchase. Episodes may feature sponsors, but all opinions expressed are our own.

Review Velocity and Responses

SPEAKER_01

The GBP is like the storefront. It's almost like the new website.

SPEAKER_00

It's all about being active on your profile. You don't want a week where you're getting 30-40 reviews and then your G VP is dead for two to three weeks.

SPEAKER_01

Honor responses, make them professional.

SPEAKER_00

With responses, even if you get a one-star review, you still do want to respond to it. You're wrong. Yeah. Do not argue. Definitely not.

SPEAKER_01

What is a good amount of reviews for me to go launch my next G VP?

SPEAKER_00

I would say. Thanks for having me.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, this is going to be fun.

SPEAKER_00

This will be great.

SPEAKER_01

My Bud Jules. You ready to dive deep into Google reviews and how to make local search show up better?

SPEAKER_00

I'm not, but we will fly by the seat of our pants.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah. We're, I think we're gonna, I think we're gonna do great here. So um I think first off, let's start off with like Google reviews. What's the latest haps? You know, you brought up, we're at our breaking five workshop. You talked yesterday a little bit about this like algorithm thing that everybody hates, where like the technician name reviews are starting to get deleted. Like, is that real? Like, what do we think?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, so um I would say about a month ago we started seeing the updates. I think Google's algorithm is still indexing all of the changes. However, we have seen it start to affect home service contractors. It started in the restaurant industry, but I have been seeing and I have talked to a few potential clients.

SPEAKER_01

And so we've read like Google's notes saying like this is real.

SPEAKER_00

Google hasn't officially said like, hey, we're officially doing this, but we noticed the change um across the restaurant industry. And then in terms of like technicians, I did talk to a few people and they're like, wow, our review count has gone down, but the one-star reviews have remained the same. Why would it be getting removed? And after just having conversations with some of our partners, that's what we've noticed. That the reason the common denominator and why reviews are getting hidden is the technician name.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's crazy. I feel like most of our reviews have technicians.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Unfortunately, I don't agree with it, but I don't work at Google.

SPEAKER_01

That's all right.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

All right, cool.

Why Reviews Win Map Pack

SPEAKER_01

So why today, like 2026, why are reviews like more and more important? I I we've noticed it in our business.

SPEAKER_00

So reviews are important just because it signals trust. So for example, when a customer goes to look up your business, what your review says about your company, whether you have a bunch of one stars, Wilson, I know, has a ton of five-star reviews, it just signals trust and to the customer. So why would they choose you over a different company?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And it makes you show up better on Mat Pack.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. Yeah. So with MapPack, I know that again, the algorithm is changing, but it's all about relevancy now. So in terms of reviews, it's all about consistency and how relevant you are. So when the customer is looking up water heater, um, who is the best contractor that will best fit their search? So based off of Google, it goes off of trust and like who has the highest trust signals.

SPEAKER_01

One of the topics that came up, um, I think people get really interested in this because people are talking about on the internet. Uh, but like driving new GBP profiles, like what do you I don't know, what do you think? Like, is there a risk there? Because I think that's what most people are concerned about. Like, hey, if I go open a new profile, get some more leads, like is that bad? Is that good? Am I allowed?

SPEAKER_00

Overall, it's good. Um, you are allowed right now. Google is cracking down. So as long as it matches the business name, um, it has to be the same all across. So you can't, like, for example, Wilson plumbing, heating, cooling, it has to be the same across all of your GBPs. You can't just open a new one and it just be Wilson.

SPEAKER_01

Wilson sewer or something. Correct. I think it's called what keyword stuffing.

SPEAKER_00

It's it's you should put keywords. There's contradicting reports that say that you that you shouldn't stuff your keywords. However, like, for example, if you put Wilson services, it doesn't really signal that much trust. But whereas you put Wilson plumbing, heating, cooling, and electric, when you add those verticals in, you should do a DBA to change your name.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's interesting. I feel like people are doing uh like that is interesting. Because I feel like we tripped and fell into that one where it's Wilson plumbing, heating, cooling, and electric.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

So that was a that was a happy accident.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Most marketing agencies will show you clicks, impressions, and maybe even traffic, but none of that really matters if the phone's not ringing. And that's why we partner with service scalers. They are built specifically for home service companies and they focus on one thing, which is driving real, high-quality calls and book jobs. This is a no-brainer. They're offering a 60-day money-back guarantee on LSA management, Google Business Profile Optimization, and website builds. If you don't get more visibility, more calls, and better leads, then you don't pay. If you want more book jobs without the marketing headache, click the link below and book a free strategy call with Service Scalers. That's interesting. All right. So, like what else, what else are you seeing on reviews that matters? Like what velocity or number, like does number matter as much as we think it does?

SPEAKER_00

It does matter. However, the name of the game is going to be your consistency and your velocity. So quantity does matter, but out of those, for example, a company that has 500 reviews may outrank a company that has thou like 10,000 reviews just because they are very consistent. In the name of Google, it's all about being active on your profile. So how often are you getting reviews? Is that consistent? So you don't want a week where you're getting 30, 40 reviews and then your GBP is dead for two to three weeks.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. I think the thing that makes sense, like G Google My Business Profiles or what Google Business, it's GBPs now, I guess.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

I think it's kind of funny because it like just generally makes sense, except for the technician name thing.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

I think it just like makes sense. Whereas like the review frequency thing, I like there's the contractors with like 20,000 reviews. I think we have five or six or something on our main page. But it makes sense why a smaller contractor could beat them because if it was 20,000 reviews, but it was like five years ago, and it's just been like nothing in the past year, like that totally it logical that it would rank less than someone that got 500 in the last year and a half.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So when you think of it in like a restaurant term, you don't want to if if you're looking for, let's say, Mediterranean restaurant, you don't want to know which restaurant.

SPEAKER_01

It sounds amazing.

SPEAKER_00

You don't want to know which restaurant is relevant eight years ago. You want to know what's the best now. Like where can I have dinner and expect quality service?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Same thing for the home service industry.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, okay. Yeah, that makes sense. That makes sense. Yeah, so uh count a little bit, uh recency is gonna matter a lot, which I think that makes sense because I think um I remember a couple years ago, we were like really beating the hell out of G VPs and we would look and there was like a plumber with like 50 reviews or something, yeah, and they were ranking higher on the map pack than we were with like 4,000. Right. And it's just like, what the fuck's going on? But like they probably got 50 reviews like last week or you know, correct whatever. All their all their friends uh left a review. How much do you think responses actually matter? This one comes up a lot.

SPEAKER_00

Responses are important. So with responses, um, you do want to respond within the first 24 hours.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You it doesn't matter if it's five, ten, five to ten minutes or five and thirty. Okay. As long as it's within that 24 hour window, you definitely want to respond. Definitely don't have any type of copy and paste. Um, it should be unique to the customer.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. Like, hey Betty Sue, thanks for whatever. Okay. Yeah, that makes sense.

SPEAKER_00

With responses too, you always want to mention the service that was provided, the location that it was performed, and any type of context, that will all feed into Google's algorithm. So in your response, it's as important. No, it definitely is important, um, but getting that in the initial review as well in the content is extremely important.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah. Okay, so GBP, number of reviews matters, but velocity and frequency are currently more important, which I think that makes sense. Um, I think that's like a fun thing to highlight because I think people get caught up on hey, the big company down the street has 20,000 Google reviews. How am I supposed to compete with them? And like this is like, hey, there is a way to compete with them.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

It's just like more frequency. Correct. And uh, and like is it increasing or is it decreasing?

SPEAKER_00

Yep.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, that makes total sense. Um, owner responses, make them professional, make them bespoke.

SPEAKER_00

Correct. Okay, yeah, with owner responses, even if you get a one-star review, you still do want to respond to it, but obviously you're wrong. Yeah, definitely do not RDL.

SPEAKER_01

Flame the customer publicly.

SPEAKER_00

Definitely not.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, all right. I'm gonna flame the customer publicly. Got it. Um, you had shit on your floor, you know, really like dive

GBP Optimization and SAB Trends

SPEAKER_01

deep. Um, any other activity on Google Profiles that matters? Photos, posts.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, photos and and updates and posts are very important. So in terms of just the overall profile of your zooming out, you do want to update it regularly. Yeah. Big reputation. We automate one post, one photo per day. If you if you haven't done it, start with a baseline. So a good place to aim is three to five per week. And just so that everyone's aware, because I got this question, GBP is Google business profile, not great British pound.

SPEAKER_01

That's funny. Oh, that is funny. Yeah, Google Business Profile. I don't I don't know when they switched it. It was like last year. You stopped they stopped saying GMB. And yeah. Personally, I still like GMB. Okay. Um, but I don't know what to say. I don't know what to say. I feel my feeling, not a fact. My feeling in 2026 is that the GBP is like the storefront. It's almost like the new website, because I feel like with AI, your website is becoming less relevant. Uh like SEO lets you show up inside AI search, but like customers aren't probably gonna like beep boop their way through your website to like figure out if you do HVAC services, but the service page on Google My Business Profile probably will, or their AI that they're like asking questions to will. Like what's your take on that?

SPEAKER_00

So Google My Business, or I'm sorry, GBP Google Business Profile is very important. However, it what you're saying is a little contradictory mildly, just because your website is on your GBP and the SEO does that SEO does help the SEO of your GBP as well.

SPEAKER_01

So the way so they build on each other.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. So although the signals are not similar, or I'm sorry, although they're not identical, they are similar.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, like how?

SPEAKER_00

Meaning like you you could rank one in G on your Map pack and you could be third on Google, or you could be on the second page of Google and still rank high, vice versa.

SPEAKER_01

Got it. Okay, so like more signals to the gods of Google that like we're real business.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, all right, cool. Aside from like the technician name thing, anything you're seeing like popping up is upcoming changes?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, something that I saw that was interesting. Um after running a few heat maps for clients, yeah. Starting about two and a half months ago, we've been seeing that SABs, which are service area based GPPs, start to close the gap between storefronts. So depending on your market, um, your the heat map tool, if you have a form of that or if you're a big reputation client, we have that built in. When you're running a map pack scan, and let's say you're looking to open up a new GBP, yeah. Um when you look at the map pack, we've been seeing SABs break top 10, top five, and top three recently. So they are really closing the gap. And depending on what market you're in, it's hard to say whether a storefront is more beneficial than a service area based. For a super metro area, a storefront location is probably gonna weigh a lot heavier just because a lot of the companies that rank are going to be the ones that have the storefront locations versus a more rural area, like a service area-based G VP, you could probably get away with.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. I don't understand how to I don't like I understand the difference in what you're saying because like one has an address and like sometimes when I've looked up G VPs, it's like like a a fence. Like an yeah, it's like a fence on uh Google. So I understand what you're saying. I don't understand how to set up a service area business. Like, is it the same process where you go in and like you need a storefront, you have to do the verification?

SPEAKER_00

Um, so it might have changed since I've worked in an office, but for from what I know, you still have to have an address. It could be residential, but it's hidden.

SPEAKER_01

So it doesn't have in the public facing address. Okay. Correct. Okay. So that could be good for like, yeah, if somebody runs out of their house.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. I know I know some people put GBPs like in their on their tech's homes. So like maybe that's the example of when that's useful.

SPEAKER_00

Yes.

SPEAKER_01

Is like we're running out of some dude's home. We don't want a customer to show up to like little Jimmy's house.

SPEAKER_00

Correct.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

Yep.

SPEAKER_01

All right, that makes sense. And previously it was not successful or less successful.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, we you would not see prior, like three months ago, you would not see an SAB break top 20 even.

SPEAKER_01

That's interesting. Does it matter? Like you meant you mentioned uh like like uh metro. Does it matter like if it is it you you're said you're you're you said you're watching it like get better. Is it getting better in metros and rural or only rural or like just getting better, period?

SPEAKER_00

It's it's getting better, period. Like I've run a few, for example, South Florida is a very competitive market for let's say HVAC. Yeah. I've seen SABs break top 10, but not top five. Um, in more rural areas, I've seen them in the top three. So it just depends. That's where that heat map um SEO audit tool comes in handy. Just because you get visibility of if you're deciding to launch in a new market, who your competitors are, what they're doing, and if a storefront location is even more beneficial than having a service area based.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's interesting.

Rural vs Metro Strategy

SPEAKER_01

Do you like what's your take on like heat mapping? I the rural thing's kind of interesting. We've talked about this a bunch on the show, and some people are starting to sort of gravitate to more rural. Like, obviously, there's a lot of um opportunity inside a big city. Like, there's a lot of opportunity inside Dallas or Cleveland or Chicago or Picka, whatever.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Uh, but there's also a lot of competition. And I we've had people on the show who are like smaller contractors and they're rural and they have like 50 reviews or 100 reviews or whatever, and they're like the top freaking dog wherever they are. Yeah. Like any take on rural versus metro?

SPEAKER_00

Um if it's easier to break out, obviously, in a more rural market. Yeah. Right. And then once so the benefit to opening in a rural market versus like launching a flagship in a metro is that you build that brand authority. So as you continue to let's say that your second location is in a metro area, yeah, there will be more branded searches. Google has already had go you've already established that trust signal with Google.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, we um what we're thinking about doing is like launching offices in rural areas because like the main I we have um I mean all in probably like 20 profiles now. I don't actually know. But like uh there's there's areas that are like an hour away that the biggest competitor has like 200 reviews. And it's like, dude, we could take that over in like a week.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. And like with obviously you're in big rep, so you know about the review routing feature. So that's something that will help build that profile.

SPEAKER_01

And

Launching New GBP Locations

SPEAKER_01

in a more that that came up yesterday at the workshop, so like let's just hit that for a second. So if you have multiple GBPs, uh, I think the question was coming up like, how do I launch a new one? So I'll I'll give my context for the listener. You Google has terms of service and you follow them. That's like most of the context. So like you have to launch an office, somebody has to go there, you have to have a sign on the door, you have to have a phone number, you have to have a lease, you have to have maybe a utility bill.

unknown

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And then launch it.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Yeah. And then when you launch it, you can like funnel all of the other GBP reviews to that new one. I talk to a ton of home service owners, and if you're anything like the one to five million dollar shops that I know, you're probably getting hammered with AI pitches right now. Most of them sound great until they hit the real world and just completely fall apart. The one that we keep coming back to is Voka. What stands out is they actually understand how contractor businesses operate. This isn't just another AI answering service. Voka handles inbound calls, outbound follow-ups, text, web leads, even dispatching, all in one system built specifically for service companies. If you're on Service Titan, then this is a big deal. Their integration is deep, so you're not duct taping together five different tools and hoping that nothing breaks during your busy season. I also respect that they're realistic about AI. When a call needs a human, they've got a 24-7 live transfer built in, so nothing slips through the cracks and your customers don't get stuck in a bad experience or like an AI loop. Owners using a voca are seeing hold times basically disappear and booking rates jump, some by 30% or more. If you want an AI partner that actually helps you book more jobs without creating more chaos, this is worth checking out. Book a demo at the link below.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, so what's exclusive to us, and um I believe Service Titans Marketing Pro has this as well, but it's not super automated, it's a little bit more of a manual process. Yeah. But let's say you launch a new GBP. Um, as you well know, on your on your, for example, Wilson, yeah, you guys have four profiles with us. And if you decided to launch a fifth, we could turn off the routing to all of your locations and route it all to that fifth one. That way you build the authority pretty quickly. Because, for example, if you're if you're trying to break out in a rural area, it'll be very easy because you guys get high review volume and flow. And whereas like in a metro area, let's say no, it's okay. If you did want to open up in, let's say, a big city like Chicago where there's a lot of competitors, yeah. You might need more take some work. Right. You might need more review volume to even start to rank. So again, it's helpful either both ways.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. What do you think? Uh, I'm just like going through the questions that people had yesterday, because I'm sure if the people at the workshop had them, like the the public has them. What is a good amount of reviews for me to go launch my next GBP? Like when should I be like, it's time?

SPEAKER_00

I would say in the five 500 and above, truthfully. Um again, it depends on your area. So if you're in a small town, very rural, maybe it would start at like 100. Yeah. But if you're in a very dense city like Dallas or Chicago or Miami, it I would say like 500 to 1,000, anywhere between there before you start to see traction. I would definitely focus on building that and making sure you rank there first before you start to open up a new location because then you start to dilute the signal a little bit.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, totally. Because I think back to your point on um it was like frequency and velocity. Like the more GBPs you have, the more you have to keep up with frequency and velocity on multiple G VPs. Correct. Which I think is kind of hard. Like you have to keep it equal spreading and then maybe focus as you launch a new GP, but then equal spread again. So if you get 10 reviews a week and you have five G VPs, it's only two each, which is not a lot of frequency or velocity.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, correct. So then at that point, that's where it'll start counting against you because then you'll start to drop and you diluted too much. Correct.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, that's interesting. Yeah, that makes sense. I think um, yeah, that comes up a lot. I think people like see it on X or like hear like go launch a billion GPP profiles. And yeah, the logistics are kind of a lot, like you have to pay for rent, like it's we we do it, yeah. So like I'm not gonna tell people not to do it, but what you have to follow Google terms of service, you need a lease, someone needs to visit that office. The lease is probably expensive. Like, yeah, I know some people paying like three grand a month for that lease. Um, and then it also dilutes your active energy for reviews. Yeah. So correct. Yeah, make sure you're ready. 500 feels like a good number to me. I think it like so sort of in tune with that, it you sounds like a hundred is when profiles start to rank.

SPEAKER_00

Correct.

SPEAKER_01

Okay. Like how often are they ranking under a hundred or only if you're rural or it's it's o it it it's hard.

SPEAKER_00

It just depends on the area.

SPEAKER_01

So like for example like LA, you're probably not gonna rank with a 90 or something.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, correct. Yeah, you're gonna You're probably gonna need um 500 or above. That's where you'll be in that bracket. Same thing. Cleveland is a little bit smaller market, but it's still very metro. There's a lot of competitors here. Um South Florida, very competitive market. But let's say that you go to some small city in Kentucky, not hating on them or anything, but if you go to a small city there, it you might be able to rank with 10, 15, 20. So it just depends on the market. So definitely when you're looking to launch a new GBP, make sure you're strategic is what's the population there? How many competitors are there? Is an SAB more beneficial than having a physical location? What do my competitors' reviews look like?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. They uh like what are you seeing as the difference between a like a 5,000 review business, a 500 review business, a 20,000 review business? Like what's the difference?

SPEAKER_00

It's it's hard to say because, like, for example, the 20,000 review business, they might not be keeping up with their reviews or they might not be updating their profile. Um, they they might not be staying relevant. So somebody with a 20,000 review count, although they have a lot and it seems hard to compete, let's just say that they really fall off the wagon in terms of getting reviews. A company with five, six hundred reviews might easily outrank them.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

If they're if they have good trust, Google sees that, like, for example, any type of engagement on your Google business profile, whether it's call, directions, they click on your website, they scroll through your photos, they scroll through your updates, service products, whatever. Um all of that feeds into Google's algorithm. It says, like, hey, a lot of clients like this company. Um, so then we'll start to refer them more. So for example, a 20 a company with 20,000 reviews, they might be ranked top five, they could rank top five, or they could not even show up in the top 10 just because a company that has 600 reviews is getting five, 10 reviews a day, 20 a week, whatever the case is, and they're staying up to they're they're keeping their profile active, is the best way to explain it.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I think what happened, you know, early on, I remember putting a big focus on reviews, and this was like 2016 or something.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And it was just like, what's the automation? How do we post? I like the automated posting of photos thing that somebody said uh yesterday, they're like three to five a week. I do one every six months. And I was like, that's funny. I think that was Ray.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And um, yeah, responding to reviews. Honestly, that takes a lot of energy. Uh, so

Big Reputation and Review Playbook

SPEAKER_01

I don't know. Like, so can you walk through big rep? Like, what's what does big reputation do?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, so we're an AI-based platform. Um, what we do is a lot of we automate a lot of what your technicians are already doing on the field. Yeah. So we take that lift off of your plate. We're not review management by any means because we don't update your services, we don't dispute reviews, although, like I tell all my clients, feel free to lean on me as a resource. I will point you in the right direction. But in terms of big reputation, we manage your reviews, we'll respond to them. We have a follow-up drip campaign, we use all of the photos from your CRM and we will post it as to your photos and updates just because Google's Gemini is smart enough to determine a stock photo from a real photo. So once you upload all of that, all the signals compound together to create an active profile.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, cool. So photos review request, responding.

SPEAKER_00

Updates. We also have a heat map fill uh function built in. We have a location health scanner. So that features just to help you spot very quick gaps of what updates can be made um to your G VP.

SPEAKER_01

Sweet. All right. What what what's coming next? Like what are you guys working on?

SPEAKER_00

So with the tech mention review thing, um, we're working on unfortunately this is this is gonna go back to manual. However, it we still want our contractors to be able to easily spiff out their technicians. So they're gonna be able to assign the reviews manually to their technician now that they're not named. Where ideally the goal is this year, um big focus this year is to start to integrate with other review platforms. So although Google still owns about 86 to 90 percent of the market share, yeah. When you start to diversify your platform, review platforms like Yelp, which is controversial, um, Facebook and Angie, that's when you'll start to show up in AI search. So as the world continues to slowly pivot over to AI, we want to stay ahead of the curb.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I mean, I think that makes sense. I think AI has brought um like all of everything in. Like Indeed reviews start to show up now. That'd be kind of interesting if you could. Yeah. That'd be funny. But yeah, indeed reviews, glad like employment reviews plus customer reviews are all showing up as I look for companies, which I think is kind of interesting. Yeah. We had one where it was like Brandon Nairo is known to be a patient leader or something like that. We also had one where like Brandon Iro was an asshole, you know. So we've we've had it show up on both sides. But it was kind of funny. It was like, oh, okay, interesting. It's like well more than just Google or customers.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Uh, but yeah, it was kind of funny.

SPEAKER_00

And the biggest takeaway about Big Rep2 that I forgot to mention is that what we do is we try to mimic human behavior. So like when we do any type of uploads, it's not just 8 a.m. every single day. We stagger all the post times and the response times so that it's as human-sounding as possible. That way you don't trigger any type of thing.

SPEAKER_01

And it's pulling the photos from like your CRM.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, yeah. That's cool.

SPEAKER_01

That's cool. We we used a service for this um before we started using you guys. And I don't well, I remember the name now, but I don't want to bash them on the internet. And um, yeah, it wasn't great. But yeah, yeah. Automates are great. Cool. All right. Any any like closing thoughts on big reputation or like Google reviews in general, how to drive this part of your business? Your Google business profiles are either printing money or they're losing it. And that's where big reputation comes in. Big reputation turns your GBP into a true lead machine without adding more work to your plate. It runs in the background with automated posting, review generation, and fast responses so that your reputation compounds over time. And this is huge if you're multi-location. They make it dead simple to manage and scale your reputation across every branch. So every location shows up and wins in the map pack. I'm actually using Big Reputation right now as I grow and scale my newest acquisitions. Plus, you get real insight into what's actually happening. You get to spot gaps with location health monitoring, track reviews and sentiment, and see which zip codes you're winning and which ones you're losing. Better insights, stronger trust, more calls from an asset you already own. Go check it out at bigreputation.ai slash o.

SPEAKER_00

Um, with Google Reviews, when you are prompting the customer, my biggest key takeaway of like I well, I guess what your biggest takeaway should be is when prompting the request from a customer, what you're looking for is photos are going to weigh the heaviest, however it is.

SPEAKER_01

Like a photo review.

SPEAKER_00

Correct.

SPEAKER_01

Okay.

SPEAKER_00

It is difficult. It's we found that it's difficult to prompt the customer to leave a picture on the review.

SPEAKER_01

We we have to talk to the team and train a lot about that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Sometimes we are trying to figure a workaround where possibly we can send the client the picture and they can just upload the one that you already took on site that is some in the roadmap somewhere. And then when you're again with reviews aside from photos, it's going to be the service location and any type of context. So what that looks like.

SPEAKER_01

Like you did a water heater and acronym and it was awesome.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, or any other type of context, whether it's in your basement, your backyard. So that way you start feeding into Google's algorithm in terms of the location. You could get as granular as neighborhoods as you'd like, but just make sure that each response is yeah, it could get as super targeted as you'd like. But make sure each response is catered to that.

SPEAKER_01

Custom.

SPEAKER_00

Yep.

SPEAKER_01

Thanks for coming on. We appreciate you coming on. Uh, if people want to hear more about Big Reputation, how can they get a hold of you?

SPEAKER_00

So my email is Julie at bigreputation.ai, and our website is www.bigreputation.ai. And sometimes I'm on the owned and operated webinar. So you can always catch me there.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. Awesome. All right. Thanks, Julie.

SPEAKER_00

Thank you.

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