Before you invest in your own site, it's worth understanding what your local competition looks like online. In most business markets, the bar is low. Here's a 20-minute audit using three free tools that tells you exactly what's happening.
Tool 1: Google Search Console's Rich Results + your own search
Open an incognito window in Chrome (Ctrl+Shift+N / Cmd+Shift+N) — this removes your browsing history from the results. Search "[your business] [your city]." What you're looking for:
- Who is in the local map pack (the 3-result block with stars and a map)? These are your GBP competitors.
- Who is in the organic results below the map pack? These are your website SEO competitors.
- What are their titles and meta descriptions? Does their snippet tell you specifically what they do and where? Or is it generic?
- How many Google reviews do they have? A competitor with 200 reviews at 4.8 stars is a different challenge than one with 12 reviews.
This gives you the field layout. Write down the top 2-3 competitors who appear consistently.
Tool 2: PageSpeed Insights (pagespeed.web.dev)
Take each competitor's URL and run it through Google PageSpeed Insights. Select the mobile tab. You're looking for:
- Their mobile performance score. If it's under 50, their site is slow — a performance win you can capture with a fast-loading site.
- First Contentful Paint and Largest Contentful Paint. Numbers over 3 seconds mean they're losing mobile visitors constantly.
- Whether they have Core Web Vitals issues (marked in the report). These directly affect their Google ranking.
In most business markets, you'll find at least 1-2 of your top competitors have mobile scores under 40. That's a massive gap you can exploit by simply having a faster site.
Tool 3: Chrome DevTools for mobile simulation
Right-click on a competitor's site, click "Inspect," click the mobile device icon at the top of the panel. This shows you their site as it appears on a phone. What to look for:
- Is there a tappable phone number visible without scrolling?
- Is the text readable at 16px+ without zooming?
- Is there a call-to-action visible in the first screenful?
- Does the layout break at mobile widths, or does it adapt cleanly?
Most contractor sites fail 2-3 of these tests when viewed in mobile simulation. Every failure is a lead they're losing — and a lead your better-built site will capture instead.
What to do with what you find
If your competitors have weak mobile performance, slow load times, and no visible call-to-action on mobile: the bar to outrank them is low. A properly built mobile-first site with real local SEO will rank above them in 3-6 months. The competition isn't doing anything you can't out-execute with the basics done right.
If one competitor has a genuinely strong site — fast, mobile-first, 150+ reviews, well-written content — that's a harder target. You can still compete, but expect a longer timeline and focus on the things they might have missed (neighborhood-specific pages, schema markup, GBP completeness).
In either case, the audit tells you where to aim first. Start where the gap is biggest.
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