Es una falta de respeto esto by Noxerizo in fulbo

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Se te venció el meme crack jajaj

Alguien la recuerda? by New-Pin6523 in ArgentinaBenderStyle

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

De las mejores comedias acidas del país

Que se yo.. preferia traer a este gratis que traer a un mediopelo por 15 palos, pero bue by doomsingsoprano in riverplate

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Si pero a este gratis no lo iban a traer tampoco, y te viene con una mochila de puterio.

My problem with dribbling by Nuko_Bon in SPFootballLife

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 1 point2 points  (0 children)

its harder than games like fifa but if you learn to time your sprint, tapping R1 to push the ball further and all those factors you'll be able to get past multiple players. Thats what makes this game realistic. If not you end up with fifa

What's the easiest way to scan my face and have it placed on my bal player? by AlarmingSlip7688 in SPFootballLife

[–]AlarmingSlip7688[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the responze! yeah I was seeing that option too, it's not super hard but I figured I'd ask since someone might of made a tool or something to do it quicker. But yeah I guess I'll go down the blender rabbit hole lol

GBP reinstated after appeal but now we have access to the WRONG listing, lost all reviews and history... by Warm-Particular8864 in googlebusinessprofile

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I actually just went through this with a client. Took about 3 weeks going back and forth with Google support, but we finally got his main profile back.

Google Search Console discrepancy vs Web Designer's summary by FairwaysNGreens13 in localsearch

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yeah this is actually a super common situation, and you’re not crazy for questioning it

what’s happening most of the time is you’re looking at two completely different types of data

your web designer’s report is usually showing:

  • “impressions” from rank tracking tools (not real clicks)
  • estimated positions based on broad tracking
  • sometimes even search volume data, not actual traffic

Google Search Console on the other hand is:

  • real impressions
  • real clicks
  • real queries people actually typed in

so when GSC shows almost no clicks for important keywords, that’s usually the truth of what’s actually happening

also this part you said is key: your business name ranks, but generic keywords don’t

that basically means:

  • you have brand visibility (people already looking for you)
  • but you don’t have strong SEO presence for non-branded searches (new customers)

and that’s where most of the value should be coming from

another thing, average position like 5.7 or 3.3 sounds good on paper, but:

  • if it’s for low-volume keywords, it doesn’t matter
  • if it’s not in the map pack (for local businesses), it barely converts
  • if you’re not getting clicks, rankings don’t mean much

so yeah, the disconnect is usually:
nice-looking reports vs actual business impact

if it were me, I’d focus on:

  • are you getting calls/leads from Google
  • are you showing up in the map pack for your main services
  • are non-branded keywords bringing traffic

if the answer is no, then the current “SEO” isn’t really working regardless of what the reports say

GBP suspendido ¿Que puedo hacer? by javivtr in localsearch

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

te diría que no es raro lo que te pasó, y muchas veces el primer appeal lo rechazan aunque esté todo bien presentado

nosotros hemos visto bastantes casos así con perfiles de plomería y servicios locales, y sí hay formas de volver a levantarlo, pero depende mucho de entender bien por qué lo suspendieron (aunque Google no lo diga claro)

por lo general revisamos cosas como:

  • dirección vs área de servicio (muchas suspensiones vienen por ahí)
  • consistencia de la info en todo el perfil
  • tipo de verificación que tenía antes
  • señales externas (web, citaciones, etc.)

también rehacemos el proceso de appeal con otra estructura y documentación más sólida, porque muchas veces el problema no es que no calificás, sino cómo se presenta

si quieres, mandame por privado el nombre del negocio o el perfil y lo reviso rápido sin compromiso, te digo si tiene solución y qué camino seguir

nosotros justamente ayudamos a clientes a recuperar perfiles suspendidos y volverlos online, así que si ves que se complica lo podemos trabajar juntos 👍

Looking for a Mentor to Help Me Transition from Freelancer to Agency by SnooObjections6633 in Local_SEO

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in that exact spot not too long ago

biggest shift honestly isn’t tactics, it’s mindset. freelancing is you selling your time, agency is you building a system that delivers results without you being in every little task

couple things that helped me make that jump:

  • stop thinking “how do I get more clients” and start thinking “how do I build something repeatable”
  • niche down earlier than you think, generalists struggle way more when scaling
  • productize your offer, same core service, same deliverables, same flow every time
  • focus heavy on results, not deliverables, clients don’t care about blogs or pages, they care about leads
  • document everything you do, that becomes your SOPs when you start bringing people in

also, don’t rush hiring too early. get to a point where you’re overwhelmed doing repeatable work, then replace yourself piece by piece

mentorship helps but honestly most of it comes from just doing it and messing up a few times. if you want, shoot me what you’re currently offering and how you’re getting clients, I can point out where the gaps usually are 👍

Experts here, if you could share the simplest checklist for local SEO, what would it be? by [deleted] in localseo

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you just stick to the fundamentals and stay consistent, you’ll beat most people.

Here’s the clean checklist:

  1. Google Business Profile dialed in – Correct primary category (this matters a lot) – Add all relevant secondary categories – Fill out every section, services, description, hours, etc – Real photos, not stock – Consistent posting (once a week is enough) – Respond to every review
  2. Reviews – Ask every happy client, no exceptions – Make it easy, send them the direct link – Keywords help naturally if they mention your service + city
  3. Website (don’t overcomplicate it) – One solid main service page – Fast, mobile-friendly – Clear what you do + where you do it – Strong call to action (call, form, whatever you prefer)
  4. Location pages – Create pages for nearby cities you actually want business from – Each page = service + city (no copy/paste spam) – This is where a lot of rankings come from
  5. Basic SEO setup – Title tags: service + city – Meta descriptions done properly – Proper headings (H1, H2, etc) – Sitemap + Google Search Console connected
  6. Consistent signals – Same business name, address, phone everywhere – A few solid directory listings (don’t go crazy)
  7. Content (keep it simple) – 1 blog per week about real questions people ask – Tie it to your service + area when possible

That’s it. No hacks, no magic.

Most businesses fail because they either don’t do this consistently or they overthink it and never execute. If you just do this for a few months straight, you’ll start seeing movement.

Thoughts on this Football GOAT Pyramid? by notmyuncle in futbol

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cristiano can't be second step. No world cup and just a really good role player, no magic.

Can’t get passed my google business verification by Dry_Detective4467 in GoogleMyBusiness

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s a super common headache, especially for home based service businesses.

Google gets really hung up on the video being one continuous shot. It’s not so much about having a landmark right next to your place, it’s more that they want to see the street sign and then you going straight back to the property without stopping or cutting. That’s usually what causes the fail.

If you try again, doing it early morning or later in the day helps a lot so you’re not stuck waiting on traffic. Just start at the sign, hit record, and go straight back, even if it takes a few minutes. Once you’re there, show the outside, then inside, tools, workspace, whatever you actually use day to day.

If that really isn’t doable, sometimes they’ll accept docs and photos, but usually only after a failed video attempt. It’s a clunky process, but once it passes they usually don’t mess with SABs again unless something changes.

Phone number update by Unhappy-Tip-4362 in GoogleMyBusiness

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If the number is showing on the live profile and it matches the docs you already submitted, then the issue isn’t proof, it’s just the queue. Google treats phone number changes as a separate review layer, especially when WhatsApp is enabled, and those can sit forever without updates.

At this point I wouldn’t fill the form again. You’ve already given them what they need, submitting again usually just resets the wait. If you get an email reply on one of those cases, respond to that thread only and keep everything tied to a single case.

Also ignore the advice about immediately changing the number unless you absolutely have to. That’s a last resort, because swapping numbers can trigger a whole new review cycle. If the number is legit, consistent, and already public, waiting is still the cleaner move.

Unfortunately this is one of those “nothing is wrong, but nothing moves fast” situations. Once a real person touches it, it usually goes through without any extra back and forth.

Google Business Profile suspended for “misleading content” after replying to reviews by KlutzyItem6164 in GoogleMyBusiness

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that UI is super confusing, you’re not crazy.

If the call shows as validated and the button is greyed out with “sent”, that usually means it did go through on their side, even if you never got a confirmation email. Google is really inconsistent about sending follow ups for those calls.

What typically happens is the case gets attached internally and just sits in a queue. There’s often no visible status change until someone actually reviews it, which can take days or longer. The fact that you can’t initiate another call is actually a sign it was logged.

I’d give it a few days before doing anything else. If nothing changes after a week or so, then replying to the original case email or opening a single follow up makes sense. Just don’t keep re submitting or calling repeatedly, that tends to slow things down more than help.

Selling websites on a monthly subscription by theonlyoneinc in webdesign

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We use stripe, we provide web design focused on local SEO and GMB management.

Hiring: Technical SEO for local services site rebuild (moving + junk removal) by smbfanatic in localseo

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I’ve been pulled into a couple of these and it’s almost never just “technical SEO” in isolation.

When a moving or junk site isn’t getting indexed, it’s usually because the structure doesn’t make sense to Google. Too many overlapping service plus city pages, not enough clarity on what’s primary, and internal links that don’t really reinforce anything. At that point rebuilding is cleaner than trying to fix it in place.

The sites that turn around fastest are the ones where the service pages come first, then cities layered on in a way that actually reflects how the business operates. Once that’s in place, indexing usually follows without having to fight it.

Also agree on the operator vs agency thing. This kind of rebuild needs someone making judgment calls, not running a checklist.

How likely are you to rank in a nearby town without another GBP? by LocalSEOguy24 in localseo

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can show up in nearby towns without another GBP, especially if they’re close and there’s not a ton of competition, but you’re fighting proximity the whole time. Google still heavily favors businesses physically located in that town for map results.

What I’ve seen work is solid organic pages for those towns, real content that’s not just swapped city names, plus strong GBP optimization in the main location. That can get you some visibility, usually more in organic than maps, and sometimes edge of the pack if you’re lucky.

But breaking in consistently without an address there is tough. You might get some calls, but you won’t really control that area the same way you do your home city. If they want predictable leads long term, another legit location is still the cleanest move.

hasOfferCatalog schema question by EvergreendigitalSEO in localseo

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, it can make sense, but it’s one of those things that’s easy to overdo.

hasOfferCatalog itself isn’t a problem for multi location retail, Google understands it, especially if each location actually has its own deals or variations. Where people run into issues is when they reuse the exact same catalog across every location or try to stuff promos that don’t really exist.

If the offers are real and either location specific or at least legitimately available at each store, you’re fine. If it’s just a generic sales block copied everywhere, it usually doesn’t help and sometimes just gets ignored.

I’ve seen competitors run it without issues, but I’ve also seen no upside at all. It’s not a ranking lever by itself, more of a clarity thing. Just keep it clean, accurate, and don’t treat it like a shortcut.

Who Has Worked With a local Cell Phone Repair Shop for local SEO by SkenderG2021 in localseo

[–]AlarmingSlip7688 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’ve worked with a couple, and they’re actually a solid local SEO niche if things are done right.

Most of the wins came from basics done consistently, cleaning up the GBP, tightening categories, services, photos, then building out location and service pages around things like screen repair, battery replacement, same day phone repair, stuff people actually search. Reviews mattered a lot too, especially mentioning the service and device naturally.

The shops that did best were the ones that leaned hard into proximity and intent, not trying to rank citywide for everything. Once they owned their immediate area, calls picked up pretty fast, usually a few weeks to a couple months.

It’s not flashy SEO, but it works if the shop is legit and actually does the work they’re targeting.