You Do Great Work. Homeowners in Your Market Are Still Calling Someone Else.
Solar buyers don't find their installer by accident. They research for weeks or months, quietly building a short list. By the time they search "solar installer near me," they're not exploring. They're narrowing to three companies they'll call for quotes.
The map pack decides who makes that list. If you're not in the top three when that search runs, you're not in the conversation.
National Installers Outrank You in Your Own Backyard
You're Not in the Three-Quote Short List
Your Competitors Are Getting More New Reviews Every Month
Your Service Area Pages Look the Same to Google
Your Rankings Aren't Ready When Demand Spikes
Six Moves That Get You Into the Top Three and Keep You There
Local SEO for a solar company isn't generic local search optimization with "solar" in the title. Solar digital marketing has its own mechanics: the platforms, the review dynamics, the buyer research cycle, and the demand window structure are all specific to the industry.
Here's what a solar local SEO engagement — and the broader solar digital marketing system around it — actually includes.
Map Pack Strategy
Your Google Business Profile is the foundation of your map pack visibility. We optimize the profile completely: categories, service area, photos, services listed, Q&A, and post cadence. Then we build the local authority signals that tell Google you belong in the top three for your markets: review velocity, citation consistency, local backlinks, and engagement signals. The profile is the starting point. The signals behind it are what produce and hold the ranking.
Service Area Pages With Real Local Depth
For every market where you want to rank, we build a service area page that earns its spot. Not a template with a city name. A page with real local detail: the utility in that market, how the state's net metering rules work, regional rebate programs layered on top of the federal ITC, photos from installs in that city, and reviews tied to that specific area. That's the kind of page Google ranks. It's also the kind a homeowner trusts when they arrive from a local search.
Review Velocity System
We build review collection into your post-install process so reviews come in steadily across Google, SolarReviews, EnergySage, and the manufacturer directories your buyers check. The system doesn't wait until the install is complete. It starts at financing approval and stays active through the permission-to-operate milestone. That spacing keeps monthly review pace consistent even when install timelines stretch to 10 or 12 weeks.
Solar-Specific Platform Presence
Homeowners don't decide based on Google alone. They cross-check SolarReviews and EnergySage when they search "best solar in \[city\]." They verify you're on the manufacturer's certified installer list for the equipment they've already decided they want. They check whether their utility's incentive program lists you as an approved installer. Absence from those platforms isn't just a missed referral. It's a hole in your search results that a competitor fills.
Content for the Full 60-to-120-Day Buyer Journey
Solar buyers search differently in month two than in month six. Early in the cycle they're asking how net metering works in their state, whether their roof qualifies, and what a realistic payback period looks like. Late in the cycle they're searching for the best installer in their city and looking for reviews from people nearby. We build content for both phases. Early content earns the bookmark and the return visit. Late content earns the call. Together they shorten the gap between first search and signed contract.
Attribution by City and Market
Most local SEO reports tell you how many calls came in. We tell you which cities produced consults, which consults became signed installs, and which markets are generating your highest-margin work. That data tells you where to expand, where to hold, and where the local SEO investment is producing real returns. Rankings without attribution to revenue are just a dashboard.
Find Out Where You Stand in the Markets That Matter Most.
Real Solar Companies. Real Installs.
The difference was immediate. Where other agencies focused on the creative, Valve+Meter focused on the math. The numbers behind the campaigns. The data that tells you whether your marketing dollars are actually building your business — or just generating activity.
Revenue across the business increased substantially. And for the first time, Flow Tech could see why — which channels were producing, which efforts were driving growth, and where the opportunities were to scale further.
We monitored the website through December 2023. By year’s end, traffic-to-lead conversion had climbed to 32% — an impressive improvement given the unusually mild weather that year, which typically depresses HVAC demand and makes every conversion harder to earn.
Evergreen’s owner was upfront about this expectation from day one: “I want to feel like you care about helping me get here.” It’s a simple ask, but one that most marketing agencies fail to deliver on. Valve+Meter didn’t.
Solar SEO — What Actually Moves the Needle: Four Things That
Decide Local Rankings
In the Map, If You’re Fourth, You’re Last
Local search returns three positions in the map pack before anything else. Position four appears below the fold in the full local results, after a homeowner has already seen three other companies.
Most homeowners pick their three from the map pack and don't scroll further. The entire goal of solar local SEO is to be one of those three in the markets where you want to work. Not page one of local results. Top three in the map pack.
Review Velocity Beats Total Review Count
Google's local algorithm weights recent reviews more heavily than accumulated total. An installer with 300 reviews and a handful of new ones this quarter ranks below a competitor with 90 reviews and a steady monthly flow.
Solar's long install timeline makes velocity harder to maintain than in faster trades. Installs that take 8 weeks from contract to PTO require a review collection process built around the milestones inside that window, not just a follow-up email after the job closes.
Demand Windows Are Predictable. Your Rankings Have to Be Ready.
ITC extensions, NEM rule changes, utility rate announcements, and state incentive deadlines create predictable surges in solar search volume. Companies in the top three at the start of those windows take the installs. The ranking work takes months, not days.
If you start optimizing when the news drops, you're six months late. We track policy and rate calendars in your markets and front-load the ranking work against the windows where it will produce the most.
Buyers Cross-Check More Platforms Than Just Google
A homeowner who found you on Google will verify you on SolarReviews and EnergySage before they call. They'll look for your name on the manufacturer's certified installer page for the brand they've already researched.
They'll check whether you're on their utility's approved installer list. Gaps in platform presence don't just mean missed traffic. They create doubt at the exact moment a buyer is deciding whether to add you to their short list.
Here's Exactly How We Get You Into the Map Pack
Start With the Markets Where the Margin Is
Audit What's Blocking Your Map Pack Visibility Right Now
Build Service Area Pages With Real Local Depth
Wire Review Collection Into Your Post-Install Process
Get You Listed Where Solar Buyers Actually Cross-Check
Track Installs by City, Not Just Calls by Campaign
Straight Answers to the Questions Every Solar Owner Asks Us
Map pack visibility typically starts improving within 60 to 90 days for markets where the fundamentals are already in place. Signed installs trail that by another 30 to 90 days, because the consideration cycle is long.
Most solar local SEO engagements start producing attributable installs between months four and six. That timeline compresses in markets where you're close to the top three already and extends in markets where you're starting from well outside the map pack.
The signal to watch in months one through three isn't signed contracts. It's whether the right buyers are landing on your service area pages and requesting consults. Installs follow that.
Google isn't enough. SolarReviews and EnergySage appear in their own right when homeowners search "best solar companies in [city]" or "solar installers near me" -- often above organic results and sometimes above the map pack. They're also where buyers go to verify what they saw on Google.
A homeowner who found you on Google and sees you absent from SolarReviews or EnergySage has a reason to hesitate. A homeowner who finds you ranking well on all three has more reason to call. Being present on the platforms your buyers use for cross-checking isn't optional at the point in the research cycle where they're building their three-quote short list.
Specificity. A page that exists to rank for "solar installer in \[city\]" needs to tell Google something real about that city: which utility serves it, how that utility's net metering program works, what state and local rebates are available there on top of the federal ITC, what the typical payback period looks like given that utility's rates, and what your company's install history in that market looks like.
Pages that swap the city name into a template don't rank because Google reads them as duplicate content. Pages with genuine local depth rank because they answer questions specific to homeowners in that market that no other page answers as well.
The number that matters is return on investment, not monthly fee. We start with your average install value and your close rate on consult requests, calculate what a booked consult is worth to your business, and build a local SEO investment that makes sense against that math.
We won't quote a number until that calculation is on the table. A solar company doing $40,000 average installs is working with different economics than one doing $22,000, and the investment has to reflect that.
Local SEO Gets You Found. These Services Close the Homeowner Once They Arrive.
Get the Local Search Fundamentals Right. Everything Else Follows.
Local SEO for Solar Companies (and Local SEO for the Solar Installer): Why It's Different From General Local SEO +
The mechanics of local SEO are the same across industries: Google Business Profile, citations, reviews, service area pages, local backlinks. What changes in solar is everything that sits on top of those mechanics.
Solar Company SEO: How Local Rankings and Organic Search Work Together +
Local SEO and organic search aren't the same thing, but they reinforce each other in ways that matter for solar installers.
The map pack pulls from Google Business Profile signals: reviews, citations, proximity, and profile completeness. Organic rankings pull from website authority signals: content depth, technical SEO, backlinks, and page relevance.
A solar installer with strong map pack rankings but a thin website loses homeowners who click through to a page that doesn't answer their research questions. An installer with strong organic rankings but a weak Google Business Profile is invisible in local search.
The strongest local presence combines both. Service area pages built with real local depth serve double duty: they rank in organic results for city-specific queries and they strengthen the topical signals that support map pack rankings. Review velocity on Google supports map pack position while also building the credibility that converts organic visitors into consult requests. The two reinforce each other when they're built together.
"Solar Installer Near Me": How That Search Works and How to Win It +
"Solar installer near me" is one of the highest-intent searches a homeowner runs. By the time they type it, they've typically been researching for weeks or months and are ready to start making calls. Google returns a map pack of three results calibrated to the homeowner's location, then organic results below.
Winning "near me" searches doesn't require a page optimized for the phrase "near me." Google handles location matching automatically based on where the searcher is standing.
What wins it is the combination of signals that tell Google your business is the most relevant, credible, and active solar installer in the area the homeowner is searching from: a complete and active Google Business Profile, consistent citations with matching name and address across directories, a strong volume of recent reviews, and service area pages that establish genuine authority for the geographic markets you serve.
There is no shortcut to winning this search. It's built on the same signals as every other local ranking, accumulated over months of consistent work.
Google Business Profile for Solar Installers: The Map Pack Foundation +
Your Google Business Profile is the most important single asset in your local SEO strategy. It's what appears in the map pack, what homeowners see when they search your name, and what Google uses as the primary signal for map pack ranking decisions.
A complete and active profile goes well beyond filling in your address and phone number. Categories determine which searches you're eligible to appear for. Photos of real installs, crews, and completed systems build credibility in the map pack before a homeowner ever clicks through.
Services listed in the profile signal to Google which searches are relevant to your business. Posts show Google the profile is active. Q\&A responses show homeowners you're engaged. And the reviews on the profile, in terms of both total count and steady pace of new ones, are the most heavily weighted signal in local ranking decisions.
For solar installers, GBP optimization also means making sure your profile reflects what you actually do: residential installation, commercial, battery storage, or some combination.
Profiles that try to capture everything can end up signaling nothing clearly. A profile built around what you want to sell in your best markets sends clearer signals and ranks better for the searches that produce profitable work.