When someone types 'financial advisor near me' or 'retirement planner in [city]' into Google, they are not browsing — they are actively looking to hire. That search intent is fundamentally different from someone reading a general article about retirement planning. The person searching locally has already decided they want an advisor; they are now choosing which firm to contact first.
That distinction matters because local search converts at a higher rate than almost any other inbound channel. In our experience working with advisory firms, the prospects who arrive through local search tend to move faster toward an initial meeting than those who find a firm through referral content or social media.
Google surfaces local advisory results in two distinct formats you need to understand:
- The Map Pack — three business listings shown with a map, appearing above organic results for most local queries. This is prime real estate.
- Organic local results — standard blue-link results below the Map Pack, where city-specific service pages on your website compete.
A firm that appears in both the Map Pack and organic results for a given search effectively owns two positions on the first page. That kind of visibility compounds — more impressions, more clicks, more calls.
Advisory practices are inherently geographic businesses. Even firms that work with clients nationally almost always draw their core client base from within a reasonable driving distance of their office. Local SEO formalizes what word-of-mouth referrals have always done: connect your firm to the right people in the right place at the right moment.