1. Make every core page satisfying.
Service pages should answer who it is for, what is included, what it costs or what drives cost, what happens next, where you serve, and what proof supports your claim.
2. Keep crawlers unblocked.
Use canonical URLs, XML sitemaps, robots rules that allow public pages, server-rendered or plainly visible content, descriptive links, mobile-friendly layout, and snippet-friendly robot directives.
3. Add local business truth.
Keep Google Business Profile, address, phone, hours, service area, reviews, departments, and booking/contact paths consistent across the site and major profiles.
4. Use schema as support.
Add Organization, LocalBusiness, Service, FAQPage, BreadcrumbList, Product, or SoftwareApplication schema only where it matches visible page content. Schema supports; it does not replace substance.
5. Design for browser agents.
Agents may inspect the DOM, accessibility tree, forms, and screenshots. Labels, buttons, navigation, skip links, form names, and clear CTAs help both users and agents complete tasks.
6. Convert the post-click question.
AI-search visitors often arrive with specific intent. A grounded chat assistant can answer follow-up questions from your approved content, qualify the lead, and capture context before they bounce.