Voice Search Is Growing.Local Businesses Ignore It.
I started tracking voice search queries in my analytics six months ago. The numbers were small at first, but they're growing faster than text searches for local intent. When someone says "plumbers near me" or "coffee shops in Titusville," they're not typing. They're asking their phone.
The difference matters because voice search rewards different content. Google's voice search research shows that voice queries tend to be longer, more conversational, and heavily location-based. A text search might be "plumber." A voice search is "who's the best plumber near me that's open now." If your website doesn't answer that exact question, you won't show up.
Most local businesses I talk to have optimized for text. Their homepage says "We serve Brevard County" but doesn't answer "Are you open right now?" or "How far are you from me?" Our local business visibility approach focuses on this gap, but the real move is making your FAQ and service pages sound like conversation, not a brochure.
Worth trying: Add a FAQ section to your website with questions written as someone would actually ask them aloud ("Are you open on Sundays?" not "Hours of Operation"). Include your location and service area naturally in the answers.
