Voice Search Is Growing.Local Businesses Ignore It.
I started tracking voice-search queries in analytics six months ago. Small numbers at first, but growing faster than text for local intent.
When someone says plumbers near me or coffee shops in Titusville, they're not typing, they're asking their phone, and that rewards different content.
Google's developer guidance on search shows voice queries tend to be longer, conversational, and heavily location-based. A text search is plumber.
A voice search is who's the best plumber near me that's open now. If your site doesn't answer that exact question, you won't surface.
Most local businesses I talk to optimized for text: their homepage says we serve Brevard County but never answers are you open right now or how far are you from me.
Our local visibility work targets this gap, and the real move is making your FAQ and service pages sound like conversation, not a brochure. Our analysis of 90+ Florida cities in the Local Search Index shows near me behavior is extremely strong for home services, yet most businesses still optimize for broad terms.
The winners answer the spoken question directly.
Add a short FAQ to your site that answers the spoken questions people actually ask: Are you open now? How far are you? Do you service my area? Write them in plain conversational language, the way someone would say them to their phone, not the way you'd write a brochure.
