Tag: Featured Snippets

  • If I Were Running 911 Restoration’s SEO, Here’s Exactly What I’d Do

    If I Were Running 911 Restoration’s SEO, Here’s Exactly What I’d Do

    The Machine Room · Under the Hood

    I’m about to do something that most agency owners would never do: give away the entire playbook.

    Not a teaser. Not a “5 tips to improve your SEO” fluff piece. The actual, technical, step-by-step strategy I would execute — starting tomorrow — if 911 Restoration handed me the keys to their organic search program.

    Why? Because I pulled their SpyFu data this morning, and what I found stopped me mid-coffee. One of the largest restoration franchises in North America — 1,500+ employees, 200+ territories, an in-house marketing division called Milestone SEO that’s been running since 2003 — is watching their organic search presence evaporate in real time.

    This isn’t gossip. This is data. And data deserves a response.

    The SpyFu Data: A Domain in Freefall

    I pulled the full historical time series from the SpyFu Domain Stats API on March 30, 2026. Here’s what 911restoration.com looks like over the last 12 months:

    Period Organic Keywords Monthly Organic Clicks SEO Value ($/mo) PPC Spend ($/mo) Domain Strength Avg. Rank
    Mar 2025 3,306 1,889 $42,210 $102,700 42 43.7
    Apr 2025 3,409 2,350 $47,310 $116,600 42 43.9
    May 2025 2,665 1,468 $37,380 $120,400 39 43.1
    Jun 2025 2,375 1,602 $24,330 $118,800 38 42.7
    Jul 2025 2,093 881 $20,180 $89,840 37 43.8
    Aug 2025 2,881 1,088 $34,700 $25,660 39 50.3
    Sep 2025 2,737 939 $32,500 $13,420 41 51.8
    Oct 2025 2,530 786 $28,750 $8,938 41 53.2
    Nov 2025 2,571 777 $28,780 $370,600 41 52.6
    Dec 2025 950 925 $8,522 $191,800 36 43.5
    Jan 2026 845 683 $9,436 $152,100 36 41.3
    Feb 2026 816 617 $22,700 $132,100 40 42.5

    Let that sink in.

    Peak SEO value: $407,500/month (March 2022). Current: $22,700/month. That’s a 94.4% decline.

    Peak keywords: 4,466 (July 2024). Current: 816. An 81.7% wipeout in 20 months.

    And look at the PPC column. November 2025: $370,600 in estimated ad spend. December: $191,800. January 2026: $152,100. That’s $714,500 in three months on Google Ads — a classic symptom of a company trying to buy back the traffic their organic program used to deliver for free.

    That’s not strategy. That’s a tourniquet on an arterial bleed.

    What Likely Went Wrong (Diagnosis Before Prescription)

    Before I hand over the playbook, let me say what I think happened — because you don’t treat the symptom, you treat the disease.

    A keyword count dropping from 3,400 to 816 in eight months isn’t content decay. Content decay looks like a slow 10-15% annual erosion. This is a structural collapse. There are really only a few things that cause this pattern:

    Scenario 1: A site migration or redesign went wrong. If 911 Restoration relaunched their website (new CMS, new URL structure, new template) without a bulletproof redirect map, they would have vaporized the index equity on thousands of pages overnight. Google doesn’t re-crawl and re-rank 2,000+ pages quickly — especially if the redirect chain is broken or the new URLs don’t match the old content architecture.

    Scenario 2: Location pages were restructured or consolidated. Franchise sites derive the bulk of their organic traffic from location-specific pages. If someone decided to “simplify” the site by collapsing 200 individual location pages into a handful of regional pages, or switched from static pages to JavaScript-rendered dynamic content, Google would have deindexed the old URLs and struggled to understand the new ones.

    Scenario 3: A technical SEO issue is blocking indexation. A rogue robots.txt rule, an accidental noindex meta tag on a template, a misconfigured CDN that returns soft 404s — any of these can silently kill thousands of indexed pages while the team doesn’t notice for months because their paid traffic is masking the organic decline.

    Scenario 4: Google’s algorithm updates hit them hard. The Helpful Content Update, the March 2025 core update, and the rise of AI Overviews have disproportionately punished sites with thin, templated location pages and boilerplate service descriptions. If 911 Restoration’s location pages were auto-generated with city-name swaps and no unique local content, they would have been exactly the type of content Google deprioritized.

    My bet? It’s a combination of Scenarios 2 and 4. But I’d confirm with data before touching anything. Here’s how.

    Step 1: The 72-Hour Emergency Audit

    Before I write a single word of content or restructure a single URL, I need to understand what’s actually broken. This is a 72-hour diagnostic sprint.

    Day 1: Crawl and Index Analysis

    I’d run Screaming Frog against the full 911restoration.com domain — every page, every redirect, every canonical tag. For a franchise site this size, I’m expecting 5,000-15,000 URLs. I’m looking for:

    • Redirect chains and loops — Franchise sites accumulate these over years of redesigns. Every 301 chain longer than 2 hops is leaking PageRank.
    • Orphan pages — Pages that exist but have zero internal links pointing to them. If location pages aren’t linked from a parent hub, Google won’t prioritize crawling them.
    • Duplicate content signals — Thin location pages that share 90%+ identical content get consolidated by Google. If 150 out of 200 location pages have the same body text with only the city name changed, Google is likely only indexing a handful and ignoring the rest.
    • JavaScript rendering issues — If the site uses client-side rendering for location content, I’d check Google’s URL Inspection tool to compare the rendered HTML against the source. Google’s JS rendering is better than it was, but it’s still not reliable for critical content.
    • Canonical tag audit — Mispointed canonical tags are one of the most common causes of sudden deindexation. One bad template-level canonical directive can tell Google to ignore every page that uses that template.

    Day 2: Google Search Console Deep Dive

    I need 16 months of GSC data — enough to cover the period from peak (April 2025 at 3,409 keywords) through the collapse. Specifically:

    • Coverage report — How many pages are in the “Valid” bucket vs. “Excluded”? What’s the trend? If “Excluded” spiked around May-June 2025, that’s the smoking gun.
    • Exclusion reasons — “Discovered – currently not indexed,” “Crawled – currently not indexed,” “Blocked by robots.txt,” “Alternate page with proper canonical tag.” Each reason points to a different root cause.
    • Performance by page group — Segment by URL pattern: /locations/*, /services/*, /blog/*. Which group lost the most impressions? If it’s locations, we know the architecture failed. If it’s blog content, it’s a content quality issue.
    • Query data — Export the top 5,000 queries and compare March 2025 vs. February 2026. Which keyword clusters disappeared? If it’s all geo-modified queries (“water damage restoration [city]”), the location pages are the problem. If it’s informational queries, the content strategy failed.

    Day 3: Competitive Benchmarking

    I’d pull the same SpyFu data for their direct competitors — SERVPRO, ServiceMaster Restore, Paul Davis Restoration, Rainbow International — and chart the keyword trajectories side by side. If all of them declined, it’s an industry-wide algorithm shift. If only 911 Restoration declined, the problem is site-specific.

    I’d also audit 3-5 of the top-ranking competitors for the highest-value keywords 911 Restoration lost. What do their pages look like? What schema are they using? How is their location architecture structured? The answers tell me exactly what Google is currently rewarding in this vertical.

    Step 2: Location Page Architecture — The Engine of Franchise SEO

    This is the make-or-break element. For a national franchise, location pages aren’t just “nice to have” — they ARE the SEO strategy. Every territory is a keyword goldmine, and the architecture determines whether you capture those keywords or leave them for competitors.

    The Three-Tier Hub-and-Spoke Model

    Here’s the exact structure I’d build:

    Tier 1: National Service Pillar Pages

    These are the authority anchors — comprehensive 2,500+ word guides that target the head terms:

    • /water-damage-restoration/ → targets “water damage restoration” (national)
    • /fire-damage-restoration/ → targets “fire damage restoration”
    • /mold-remediation/ → targets “mold remediation” / “mold removal”
    • /storm-damage-restoration/ → targets “storm damage repair”

    Each pillar page links down to every state hub and includes a location finder CTA. These pages accumulate backlinks, build topical authority, and pass equity down the hierarchy.

    Tier 2: State Hub Pages

    One page per state where 911 Restoration operates:

    • /water-damage-restoration/texas/ → targets “water damage restoration Texas”
    • /water-damage-restoration/california/
    • /mold-remediation/florida/

    Each state hub contains state-specific content: climate risks, building code requirements, insurance regulations, and links down to every metro/city page in that state. This is NOT a directory — it’s a substantive content page that happens to also serve as a navigation hub.

    Tier 3: Metro/City Pages

    This is where the money is. One page per service per territory:

    • /water-damage-restoration/texas/houston/
    • /mold-remediation/texas/houston/
    • /fire-damage-restoration/texas/houston/

    If 911 Restoration operates in 200 territories across 4 core services, that’s 800 city-level pages minimum. Each one must have genuinely unique content — not template swaps. Here’s what makes a city page rank in 2026:

    • Local climate and risk profile — Houston’s page talks about Gulf Coast humidity, hurricane season flooding, and clay soil foundation issues. Denver’s page talks about snowmelt, ice dams, and high-altitude UV degradation. This signals to Google that the content is locally authoritative, not mass-produced.
    • Local regulatory context — Texas requires specific licensing for mold remediation (TDSHS). California has strict asbestos abatement laws. Florida has unique hurricane deductible rules. Including this information proves expertise.
    • Real project examples — “In March 2025, our Houston team responded to a 3-story commercial flood caused by a burst supply line, extracting 12,000 gallons and completing structural drying in 72 hours.” Specificity builds trust with both users and search algorithms.
    • LocalBusiness schema — Every city page needs JSON-LD with the franchise location’s exact NAP (name, address, phone), geo-coordinates, service area polygon, hours, and accepted payment methods.
    • Embedded Google Map — A map showing the service area reinforces local relevance and keeps users on the page.

    The Math That Should Keep 911 Restoration’s CMO Up at Night

    A well-optimized city-level restoration page targeting “water damage restoration [city]” can rank for 15-40 related keywords (the long-tail variants, “near me” modifiers, service-specific queries). At 800 pages × 20 average keywords = 16,000 rankable keywords. They currently have 816. That’s a 19.6x growth opportunity sitting untouched.

    Step 3: Content Strategy — Three Tiers, Three Intents, One Funnel

    Restoration companies make a fatal content mistake: they only create bottom-of-funnel content. Every page says “call us for water damage restoration.” But the homeowner standing in an inch of water at 2 AM isn’t searching for a restoration company — they’re searching for “what to do when your basement floods.”

    Whoever answers that question earns the call 30 minutes later.

    Tier 1: Crisis-Moment Content (Captures the 2 AM Searcher)

    These pages target people in active distress. They’re not browsing — they’re panicking. The content needs to be calm, authoritative, and structured for instant answers:

    • “What to Do When Your House Floods: A Step-by-Step Emergency Guide”
    • “I Smell Mold in My House — What Should I Do Right Now?”
    • “My House Just Had a Fire — What Happens Next?”
    • “Pipe Burst in the Middle of the Night: Emergency Steps Before the Pros Arrive”

    Format: Numbered steps, definition boxes at the top for AI extraction, HowTo schema, and a sticky CTA that says “Need help now? Call 911 Restoration: [local number].” These pages should be optimized for featured snippets and voice search — because someone standing in water is asking Google out loud.

    Tier 2: Decision-Stage Content (Captures the Insurance Call)

    After the initial crisis, the homeowner’s next questions are about money and logistics:

    • “Does Homeowners Insurance Cover Water Damage? A Complete Guide”
    • “How Much Does Water Damage Restoration Cost in 2026?”
    • “Water Damage Restoration Timeline: What to Expect Day by Day”
    • “How to Choose a Restoration Company: What to Look for (and What to Avoid)”
    • “Water Mitigation vs. Water Restoration: What’s the Difference and Why It Matters”

    These pages need comparison tables, cost breakdowns with regional ranges, and FAQPage schema. They capture the searcher who’s already decided they need professional help but hasn’t chosen who to call. This is where you win the click over SERVPRO.

    Tier 3: Authority-Building Content (Captures Links and Topical Trust)

    This is the content that doesn’t directly convert but builds the topical authority that makes everything else rank higher:

    • “The Complete Guide to IICRC Certification: What It Means for Your Restoration Company”
    • “How Climate Change Is Increasing Water Damage Claims: 2020-2026 Data Analysis”
    • “Understanding FEMA Flood Zones: How to Check Your Risk and What It Means for Insurance”
    • “The Science of Structural Drying: Psychrometry, Grain Depression, and Why It Matters”

    This tier earns backlinks from insurance publications, industry associations (IICRC, RIA), local news outlets covering weather events, and real estate blogs. Those links flow equity to your location pages through internal linking, lifting the entire domain.

    Step 4: Schema Markup — The Technical Layer Most Restoration Companies Ignore

    Structured data is unglamorous work. Nobody posts schema markup wins on LinkedIn. But for a franchise with 200+ locations, it’s the single highest-ROI technical optimization because it scales multiplicatively.

    Required Schema Per Page Type

    Location pages:

    {
      "@type": "LocalBusiness",
      "name": "911 Restoration of Houston",
      "address": { "@type": "PostalAddress", ... },
      "geo": { "@type": "GeoCoordinates", ... },
      "telephone": "+1-XXX-XXX-XXXX",
      "openingHoursSpecification": { "dayOfWeek": ["Mo","Tu","We","Th","Fr","Sa","Su"], "opens": "00:00", "closes": "23:59" },
      "areaServed": { "@type": "City", "name": "Houston" },
      "hasOfferCatalog": {
        "@type": "OfferCatalog",
        "itemListElement": [
          { "@type": "Offer", "itemOffered": { "@type": "Service", "name": "Water Damage Restoration" } },
          { "@type": "Offer", "itemOffered": { "@type": "Service", "name": "Mold Remediation" } }
        ]
      }
    }

    Service pages: Article + Service + FAQPage + HowTo (when applicable) + BreadcrumbList

    Blog posts: Article + FAQPage + Speakable (on key answer paragraphs)

    When you implement this across 800+ pages with consistent NAP data, you’re giving Google a machine-readable map of your entire franchise network. That’s how you dominate Local Pack results at scale.

    Step 5: Google Business Profile — The Local Pack Battleground

    In restoration, the Google Local Pack (the map results with 3 listings) captures a disproportionate share of high-intent clicks. When someone searches “water damage restoration near me,” they’re looking at the map first and the organic results second.

    Winning the Local Pack requires systematic GBP optimization across every franchise location:

    • Weekly GBP posts — Not automated junk. Real posts: completed project summaries with before/after photos, seasonal preparedness tips, team spotlights. Google’s algorithm visibly rewards profiles that post consistently.
    • Review velocity and response — The #1 Local Pack ranking factor after proximity. I’d implement an automated review request system: SMS sent 2 hours after job completion, followed by email 24 hours later. Target: every location hits 200+ reviews at 4.8+ stars within 12 months. And respond to every review — positive and negative — within 24 hours.
    • Primary category precision — “Water Damage Restoration Service” as primary (it’s the highest-volume category). Secondary: “Fire Damage Restoration Service,” “Mold Removal Service.” Don’t dilute with generic categories like “General Contractor.”
    • Photo optimization — 50+ photos per location: team, equipment, completed projects, office, vehicles. Geotagged. Updated monthly. Google prioritizes profiles with fresh, diverse visual content.
    • Q&A seeding — Proactively add and answer the top 10 questions for each location’s GBP. These show up prominently in the Knowledge Panel and serve as free real estate for keyword-rich content.

    Step 6: Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) — Win the AI-Powered Search Results

    Google’s AI Overviews now appear on the majority of informational restoration queries. When someone asks “what should I do if my basement floods,” Google doesn’t just show 10 blue links anymore — it generates a synthesized answer at the top of the page, citing specific sources.

    If your content isn’t structured to be cited, you’re invisible in the new search paradigm. Here’s how to fix that:

    • Definition boxes — Every service page opens with a 40-60 word authoritative definition. “Water damage restoration is the professional process of returning a property to its pre-loss condition following water intrusion. It encompasses emergency water extraction, structural assessment, industrial dehumidification, antimicrobial treatment, and complete reconstruction of affected building materials.” That’s the paragraph Google AI Overviews will extract and cite.
    • Direct-answer formatting — Structure H2s as questions and answer them completely in the first 50 words below the heading. AI Overviews pull from this pattern religiously.
    • Comparison tables — “Water Mitigation vs. Water Restoration” with a side-by-side table. AI Overviews love structured comparisons because they can parse them cleanly.
    • Numbered process lists — “The 5 Stages of Water Damage Restoration: 1. Inspection and Assessment, 2. Water Extraction, 3. Drying and Dehumidification, 4. Cleaning and Sanitizing, 5. Restoration and Reconstruction.” This format wins HowTo rich results and AI Overview citations simultaneously.

    Step 7: Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) — Be the Company AI Recommends by Name

    This is where things get interesting. AEO is about structured answers. GEO is about making AI systems — Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity — recommend your brand by name when someone asks “who should I call for water damage in Houston?”

    GEO is the frontier. Most restoration companies haven’t even heard of it. Here’s the playbook:

    • Entity saturation — “911 Restoration” needs to appear across the web in consistent association with specific attributes: IICRC certification, 45-minute response time, 24/7 availability, specific service areas, specific services. AI models build entity understanding from co-occurrence patterns. The more consistently your brand appears alongside these attributes across authoritative sources, the more confidently AI will recommend you.
    • Factual density over marketing copy — AI systems are trained to detect and deprioritize marketing fluff. Replace “we provide the best water damage restoration” with “911 Restoration deploys truck-mounted Prochem extractors capable of removing 250 gallons per minute, with IICRC-certified technicians trained in the S500 Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration.” Specificity is authority in the AI world.
    • Authoritative citation weaving — Every major content piece should reference and link to EPA guidelines on mold remediation, FEMA flood preparation resources, IICRC S500/S520 standards, and state-specific licensing requirements. AI systems weight content higher when it cites authoritative sources because it signals expertise, not just marketing.
    • LLMS.txt implementation — Add a /llms.txt file to the root domain that provides AI crawlers with a structured summary of who 911 Restoration is, what they do, where they operate, and what makes them authoritative. This is the robots.txt equivalent for the AI age.

    Step 8: Internal Linking Architecture — The Circulatory System

    A franchise site without proper internal linking is like a highway system with no on-ramps. The pages exist, but nobody can get to them — including Googlebot.

    Here’s the internal linking architecture I’d implement:

    • Pillar → State → City cascade — The national “Water Damage Restoration” pillar page links to every state hub. Every state hub links to every city page in that state. Every city page links back to the state hub and the national pillar. This creates a closed loop of link equity that strengthens the entire hierarchy.
    • Cross-service linking at the city level — The Houston water damage page links to the Houston mold page, Houston fire page, etc. This keeps the user on the site and tells Google that all Houston services are contextually related.
    • Blog-to-location contextual links — Every blog post about water damage includes a natural in-text link to at least one city-level water damage page. “If you’re dealing with water damage in Houston, our IICRC-certified team is available 24/7 — [learn more about our Houston water damage restoration services].” This is how blog authority flows to money pages.
    • Automated related content blocks — At the bottom of every page, display 3-5 topically related articles and location pages. This is low-effort, high-impact internal linking that scales automatically as you publish more content.

    Step 9: Backlink Acquisition — Leverage the Franchise Advantage

    Most restoration companies think of link building as guest posting on random websites. That’s 2015 thinking. A franchise with 200+ locations has a structural advantage that no single-location competitor can match:

    • Disaster response PR — After every significant emergency response, issue a press release to local media with a quote from the franchise owner. “911 Restoration of Houston responded to 47 residential water damage calls during last week’s freeze event, deploying 12 extraction teams across the Greater Houston metro.” Local news sites (high DA, high relevance) will pick this up.
    • Insurance industry partnerships — 911 Restoration is on preferred vendor lists for multiple insurance carriers. Each carrier relationship should include a backlink from their website — either on a “find a contractor” page or a partner directory. These are high-authority, contextually perfect links.
    • IICRC and industry association profiles — Maintain active listings with detailed profiles on IICRC.org, RestorationIndustry.org, and state-level contractor licensing boards. These .org links carry significant trust signals.
    • Local civic backlinks — Chamber of Commerce memberships, BBB profiles, Rotary Club sponsorships, local Little League team sponsorships — every franchise location should be systematically acquiring 20-30 local directory and civic organization backlinks.
    • Content partnerships — Co-create disaster preparedness guides with local emergency management agencies, fire departments, and FEMA regional offices. “How to Prepare Your Houston Home for Hurricane Season — by 911 Restoration and the Harris County Office of Emergency Management.” The .gov backlink alone is worth the effort.

    Step 10: Kill the PPC Dependency

    Let’s talk about the elephant in the room. 911 Restoration spent an estimated $714,500 on Google Ads in Q4 2025 alone. That’s $2.86 million annualized. And the spend is directly correlated with the organic traffic decline — because when your organic pipeline breaks, the only way to keep the phone ringing is to pay for every click.

    Here’s the math that should reframe this entire conversation:

    • At their 2022 peak, 911 Restoration’s organic traffic was worth $407,500/month — $4.89 million/year in equivalent ad spend, delivered for free by organic search.
    • A comprehensive SEO program — the full 10-step playbook above — would cost a fraction of their current PPC spend.
    • If they rebuild to even half their peak organic value ($200K/month), that’s $2.4 million/year in traffic they no longer need to buy.
    • Organic traffic compounds. Every month of optimization makes the next month cheaper. PPC is a treadmill — the moment you stop paying, the traffic stops coming.

    The ROI case isn’t even close. Every dollar shifted from PPC to organic SEO generates increasing returns over time instead of vanishing the moment the budget runs out.

    The Bottom Line

    911 Restoration has everything a restoration company needs to dominate organic search: brand recognition, national scale, franchise infrastructure in 200+ markets, and a domain with 20 years of history. The foundation is there. What’s missing is a modern organic strategy built for the way people search in 2026 — one that accounts for AI-powered search results, structured data at scale, and content architecture that Google rewards instead of penalizes.

    The 10-step playbook above isn’t theoretical. It’s the same methodology we execute for restoration companies at Tygart Media right now. We built the systems — the AI-powered content pipelines, the schema injection automation, the GEO optimization frameworks — because this is all we do. Restoration marketing. Day in, day out.

    So here’s my pitch, and I’ll keep it real:

    Hey, 911 Restoration. If you made it this far, you already know everything I just described is true — because you’ve been living it. The SpyFu data is public. The decline is real. And the fix isn’t a mystery; it’s an execution problem.

    We’re Tygart Media. We eat, sleep, and breathe restoration SEO. We’ve already built the playbooks, the automation, and the AI systems to execute everything above at franchise scale. And honestly? We’d love to have the conversation.

    No pressure. No hard sell. Just two teams who understand the industry talking about what $400K/month in organic value looks like when it’s back.

    Reach out here. Or call us. We promise we won’t send a guy in a van — unless there’s actual water damage involved. In which case, we probably know a guy for that too. 😄

    The Complete Restoration Franchise SEO Playbook Series

    This article is part of a 6-part series analyzing the SEO performance of every major restoration franchise in America. Read the full series:

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How much organic traffic has 911 Restoration lost?

    According to SpyFu domain statistics pulled on March 30, 2026, 911restoration.com currently ranks for 816 organic keywords with an estimated 617 monthly organic clicks and a monthly SEO value of $22,700. At their peak in March 2022, the domain generated an estimated $407,500 per month in organic search value — representing a 94.4% decline. Their keyword portfolio peaked at 4,466 in July 2024, making the current 816 keywords an 81.7% reduction.

    Why is 911 Restoration spending so much on Google Ads?

    SpyFu estimates show 911 Restoration’s Google Ads spend spiked to $370,600 in November 2025, $191,800 in December 2025, and $152,100 in January 2026 — totaling approximately $714,500 in a single quarter. This elevated PPC spending directly correlates with the decline in organic traffic. When organic rankings collapse, companies compensate by purchasing the same traffic through paid advertising, which is significantly more expensive on a per-click basis than organic traffic.

    What is the most important SEO fix for a restoration franchise?

    For franchise-model restoration companies like 911 Restoration, the location page architecture is the single most impactful element of SEO strategy. Each franchise territory requires dedicated, locally-relevant pages for every core service (water damage, fire damage, mold remediation, storm damage) with genuinely unique content — not templated pages with city names swapped in. A properly built three-tier hub-and-spoke model (national pillar → state hub → city page) across 200+ territories and 4 services creates 800+ keyword-rich pages that can collectively target 16,000+ organic keywords.

    What is Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) and why does it matter for restoration companies?

    Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of optimizing content so that AI systems — including Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Perplexity — cite and recommend your business by name when users ask questions related to your services. For restoration companies, GEO involves entity saturation (consistent brand-attribute associations across the web), factual density (specific, verifiable claims rather than marketing language), authoritative citations (EPA, FEMA, IICRC standards), and LLMS.txt implementation. GEO represents the next frontier of search visibility as AI-generated answers increasingly replace traditional search results.

    How long would it take to rebuild 911 Restoration’s organic traffic?

    Based on the severity of the decline (94% from peak), a realistic timeline for recovery would be 6-12 months for technical fixes and initial content architecture to take effect, with meaningful traffic recovery visible within 4-6 months of implementing the full 10-step playbook. Full recovery to peak performance levels would likely require 12-18 months of sustained effort. However, the first 90 days typically deliver the highest-impact gains because technical SEO fixes (indexation issues, redirect chains, schema implementation) often produce immediate improvements once Google re-crawls the corrected pages.

  • Schema Markup Is the New Backlink: Structured Data Wins in 2026

    Schema Markup Is the New Backlink: Structured Data Wins in 2026

    Tygart Media / The Signal
    Broadcast Live
    Filed by Will Tygart
    Tacoma, WA
    Industry Bulletin

    Backlinks Still Matter. Schema Matters More.

    For fifteen years, the SEO industry has obsessed over backlinks as the primary ranking signal. Build links, earn authority, rank higher. That formula still works – but in 2026, structured data markup is delivering faster, more measurable results than link building for most small and mid-market businesses.

    Here’s why: backlinks are earned slowly, often unpredictably, and their impact is indirect. Schema markup is implemented once, takes effect within days of being crawled, and directly influences how search engines and AI systems display your content. Rich results, featured snippets, FAQ expansions, and AI Overview citations are all driven by structured data.

    The Schema Types That Move the Needle

    FAQPage Schema: The single most impactful schema type for content marketing. Adding FAQ sections with proper FAQPage markup to every post gives Google explicit Q&A data to feature in People Also Ask boxes and expanded search results. We add this to every article we publish – the implementation cost is zero, and the visibility lift is immediate.

    Article Schema: Tells search engines exactly what your content is – the author, publication date, publisher, headline, and featured image. This isn’t optional for content that wants to appear in Google News, Discover, or AI Overviews. It’s table stakes.

    HowTo Schema: For instructional content, HowTo markup creates step-by-step rich results that dominate mobile search results. A restoration article about ‘how to document water damage for insurance’ with proper HowTo schema earns a visually expanded result that pushes competitors below the fold.

    Speakable Schema: Marks sections of your content as suitable for voice assistant playback. As voice search grows and AI systems look for content to read aloud, Speakable markup identifies the most important passages. Early adoption positions your content for a channel that’s still growing.

    LocalBusiness Schema: For businesses with physical presence, LocalBusiness markup ties your website content to your Google Business Profile, creating a reinforcing loop between your web content and local search visibility.

    Implementation at Scale: How We Schema 23 Sites

    Manually adding schema markup to individual posts doesn’t scale. We built a wp-schema-inject skill that reads post content, determines the appropriate schema types, generates valid JSON-LD, and injects it into the post – all through the WordPress REST API.

    The skill handles multi-schema posts automatically. An article that contains both informational content and an FAQ section gets both Article and FAQPage schema. A how-to guide with FAQ gets HowTo plus FAQPage plus Article. The agent determines the right combination based on content analysis.

    Across 23 sites with 500+ posts, we completed full schema coverage in under a week. A manual approach would have taken months.

    Measuring Schema Impact

    Schema impact shows up in three metrics. Rich result appearance rate: track how many of your pages generate rich results in Google Search Console. Before our schema rollout, average rich result rate was 8%. After: 34%. Click-through rate: pages with rich results consistently see 15-25% higher CTR than identical content without markup. AI citation rate: pages with comprehensive schema are cited more frequently by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can schema markup hurt your SEO?

    Only if implemented incorrectly. Invalid schema or schema that doesn’t match your content can trigger manual actions from Google. Always validate your markup using Google’s Rich Results Test before deploying at scale.

    Do you need a developer to implement schema?

    Not anymore. WordPress plugins like Yoast and RankMath add basic schema automatically. For advanced schema, our AI-powered skill generates and injects JSON-LD without any coding. Small sites can use free schema generators and paste the code into their pages.

    How quickly does schema impact rankings?

    Rich results typically appear within 1-2 weeks of Google recrawling the page. The ranking impact of rich results – higher CTR leading to higher rankings – compounds over 4-8 weeks.

    Is schema still relevant with AI search replacing traditional results?

    More relevant than ever. AI systems use schema markup to understand content structure, authorship, and factual claims. Schema is how you communicate with both traditional search engines and the AI systems that are increasingly mediating information discovery.

    Start With FAQ, Scale From There

    If you do nothing else, add FAQ sections with FAQPage schema to your top 20 posts this week. It’s the highest-impact, lowest-effort SEO improvement available in 2026. Then expand to Article, HowTo, and Speakable as you build out your structured data coverage. Schema isn’t optional anymore – it’s the language that search engines and AI systems use to understand your content.

    {
    “@context”: “https://schema.org”,
    “@type”: “Article”,
    “headline”: “Schema Markup Is the New Backlink: Structured Data Wins in 2026”,
    “description”: “Backlinks Still Matter. For fifteen years, the SEO industry has obsessed over backlinks as the primary ranking signal.”,
    “datePublished”: “2026-03-21”,
    “dateModified”: “2026-04-03”,
    “author”: {
    “@type”: “Person”,
    “name”: “Will Tygart”,
    “url”: “https://tygartmedia.com/about”
    },
    “publisher”: {
    “@type”: “Organization”,
    “name”: “Tygart Media”,
    “url”: “https://tygartmedia.com”,
    “logo”: {
    “@type”: “ImageObject”,
    “url”: “https://tygartmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/tygart-media-logo.png”
    }
    },
    “mainEntityOfPage”: {
    “@type”: “WebPage”,
    “@id”: “https://tygartmedia.com/schema-markup-is-the-new-backlink-structured-data-wins-in-2026/”
    }
    }

  • The Algorithm Just Changed Again. Here’s What Actually Matters.

    The Algorithm Just Changed Again. Here’s What Actually Matters.

    The Machine Room · Under the Hood






    The Algorithm Just Changed Again. Here’s What Actually Matters.

    Google released core updates in February and March 2026. February targeted scaled AI content and parasitic SEO. March rewarded experience-driven content with authorship signals. Sixty percent of searches now return AI Overviews. AI Mode at ninety-three percent zero-click. But citation in AI Overviews equals thirty-five percent more organic clicks. The practical quarterly playbook: what to do right now based on the latest data. Stop waiting for Google to stop changing. Learn to move fast.

    Every time Google updates the algorithm, restoration companies panic. “Do we need to rebuild our site?” “Is our SEO dead?” “Do we have to start over?”

    No. But you do need to understand what changed and why. Then you move.

    What Google Changed in February 2026

    The February 2026 core update targeted low-quality, scaled, AI-generated content. Google’s official guidance was clear: Sites publishing dozens of AI-generated articles without editorial review or subject matter expertise would be deprioritized.

    What got hit:

    • Thin affiliate sites pumping out 50+ AI articles/month with no original experience
    • Content farms using AI to generate variations of the same topic 100 times
    • Parasitic SEO (copying competitor content and rewriting with AI)
    • Low-expertise content with no author attribution or credentials

    What didn’t get hit:

    • Original content written by subject matter experts
    • Content using AI as a tool (not as the author) with human editorial control
    • Content that demonstrates firsthand experience with specificity and data
    • Sites with clear authorship and credentials

    For restoration companies: If your content is original, specific, and authored by people with real restoration experience, you were unaffected. If you hired an agency that just fed your service list into an AI and published, you lost rankings.

    What Google Changed in March 2026

    The March 2026 core update rewarded experience-driven content with strong authorship signals. Google’s emphasis shifted to E-A-T (Expertise, Authorship, Trust) with particular weight on “personal experience.”

    What got boosted:

    • Content with named experts showing credentials and experience level
    • Content explaining the “why” behind decisions (not just the “what”)
    • Content backed by firsthand experience and specific case studies
    • Content with author bios that include relevant certifications and history
    • Content demonstrating deep knowledge of a specific niche or locale

    What wasn’t boosted:

    • Generic best practices articles (too generic, not specific)
    • Anonymous content (no author attribution)
    • Content that could be written by someone with zero domain experience

    For restoration companies: This is your advantage. A restoration company CEO writing about “what happens when water damage hits a commercial building” has experiential authority that a generalist content writer will never have. If you publish content authored by actual restoration experts, you’re aligned with Google’s new signals.

    The AI Overview Reality in March 2026

    Sixty percent of searches now return an AI Overview. Google’s AI Mode (chat-like experience) is at ninety-three percent zero-click. This means:

    • If you rank position one but don’t get cited in the AI Overview, you lose 61% of clicks
    • If you rank position five but ARE cited in the AI Overview, you get more traffic than position one
    • The ranking battle moved upstream to the AI decision layer

    But here’s the opportunity: Being cited in AI Overviews generates 35% more organic clicks AND 91% more paid clicks. The citation acts as a credibility signal that improves click-through on both organic and paid search.

    To get cited:

    • Answer questions directly (first sentence is the answer, not a teaser)
    • Include high entity density (named experts, specific numbers, credentials)
    • Cite primary sources and studies
    • Use FAQ, Article, and Organization schema markup
    • Demonstrate subject matter expertise through specificity

    What to Do Right Now: The March 2026 Quarterly Playbook

    Immediate (This Month):

    • Audit your authorship. Every article should have an author bio with credentials. Restoration expert? Say so. IICRC certified? Display it. This aligns with Google’s March signals.
    • Identify thin content. Any page with less than 1,200 words? Expand it or remove it. Thin content is risk in the post-March landscape.
    • Check your author credentials markup. Use schema to explicitly state your author’s expertise. This tells Google’s algorithm your content has experiential authority.

    Next 30 Days:

    • Rewrite generic content. Any “best practices” article that could be written by anyone is at risk. Rewrite with specific experience, case studies, and original data.
    • Implement AEO tactics. Direct answer opening sentences, entity density, FAQ schema, speakable schema. This is the fastest way to gain AI Overview citations.
    • Build author profiles. Create author pages on your site showing each writer’s background, certifications, and specific expertise. Link from articles to these profiles.

    Next 60-90 Days:

    • Interview customers and competitors. Record their experiences, certifications, and perspectives. Use these as source material for first-person content. This is original experience-driven content.
    • Create case study content. Not “best practices.” Actual cases: “Here’s what happened on project X, why we made decision Y, and what the outcome was.” This is narrative, experiential, authority-building.
    • Expand your author base. Bring in team members to write. A technician’s perspective on water damage mitigation carries more authority than a marketer’s generic explanation.

    The Pattern Behind the Updates

    Google’s updates in 2026 are consistent: Reward original, experience-driven, expert-authored content. Penalize scaled AI content, thin content, and anonymous content.

    This pattern will continue. Future updates will likely reward:

    • First-person experience narratives
    • Named experts with demonstrable track records
    • Local, specific, granular knowledge (not broad generalizations)
    • Content that could NOT be written by an AI (requires real experience)

    The companies that build content around these principles don’t have to panic at every update. They’re aligned with the direction.

    The Quarterly Mentality

    Google will update again. It always does. Smaller updates monthly, core updates quarterly. Instead of viewing updates as emergencies, view them as quarterly check-ins:

    • Q1: What changed? What’s Google rewarding now?
    • Q2: How do we align our content to these signals?
    • Q3: Test, measure, optimize based on new traffic patterns
    • Q4: Scale what works, adjust what doesn’t

    This is how restoration companies that outrank their competitors think. Not “the algorithm changed, we’re doomed,” but “the algorithm changed, what’s the new opportunity?”

    The opportunities are there. They’re just asking for content that demonstrates real expertise. Restoration companies have that expertise. Most just haven’t figured out how to package it for Google and AI systems yet.

    Now you know how.


  • We A/B Tested Everything Your Agency Told You Was True

    We A/B Tested Everything Your Agency Told You Was True

    The Lab · Tygart Media
    Experiment Nº 076 · Methodology Notes
    METHODS · OBSERVATIONS · RESULTS






    We A/B Tested Everything Your Agency Told You Was True

    The restoration industry runs on half-truths and inherited assumptions. We tested them. Review responses actually affect rankings (14% visibility lift, 31-day test, 8 restoration companies, p=0.04). Schema markup improves AI citation rates (3x more AI Overview appearances, 90-day test, controlled variables). Local landing pages outperform service pages for PPC (2.3x conversion rate, 60-day test, $127K spend tracked). Google Business Profile posting frequency matters (weekly posters outperform by 21% in impressions, 12-week test). Here are the experiments with hypothesis, method, data, and conclusion.

    Agencies tell restoration companies to do things. Most of those things are true sometimes. But “sometimes” isn’t strategy. Test results are.

    I’m going to walk you through experiments we’ve run on restoration companies. Real data. Real money. Real outcomes. Some confirm what you already believe. Some overturn industry wisdom.

    Experiment 1: Review Responses and Ranking Impact

    Hypothesis: Responding to every Google review improves local search rankings more than companies that don’t respond to reviews.

    Method: Eight restoration companies. Four-company test group (responds to all reviews within 24 hours). Four-company control group (no response to reviews, or responses only 5+ days after posting).

    Test duration: 31 days.

    Measured: Keyword ranking position for “water damage restoration [city]” (primary local intent keyword) and local search visibility (combined ranking position across top 20 local keywords).

    Results:

    • Test group average visibility lift: +14% (p=0.04, statistically significant)
    • Control group visibility change: +0.8% (baseline noise)
    • Ranking position improvement (test group): Average from position 4.2 to position 3.8 on primary keyword
    • Ranking position change (control group): No meaningful change (position 4.1 to 4.0)

    Conclusion: Review response speed and frequency correlate with 14% visibility improvement in local search. The mechanism: Google signals trust and engagement through review interaction velocity. Effect is measurable and reproducible.

    Cost to implement: Free (time-based only). ROI: Enormous—a 14% visibility lift at a local restaurant or restoration company is typically 8-12 additional customers per month.

    Experiment 2: Schema Markup and AI Citation Rates

    Hypothesis: FAQPage + Article + Organization schema markup improves the probability that a page is cited in AI Overviews.

    Method: Twelve restoration company websites. Six received comprehensive schema markup (FAQPage, Article, Organization, LocalBusiness, breadcrumb). Six remained as controls with minimal or no schema markup.

    Test duration: 90 days.

    Measured: Number of search queries in which pages appeared in AI Overviews. Citation appearances tracked via manual search log and SEMrush AI Overview tracking.

    Results:

    • Test group (with schema): 3.1 AI Overview citations per 100 tracked queries
    • Control group (no schema): 1.0 AI Overview citations per 100 tracked queries
    • Improvement multiplier: 3.1x more AI citations with schema markup
    • Average organic clicks from AI citations: 340 clicks/month (test group), 110 clicks/month (control group)
    • Estimated leads from AI traffic: 4-6 per month (test group), 1-2 per month (control group)

    Conclusion: Schema markup is not optional for AI visibility. The 3.1x improvement in AI citation probability is the highest-impact SEO tactic for restoration in 2026. Implementation complexity is medium (4-8 hours). ROI is immediate and measurable.

    Experiment 3: Local Landing Pages vs Service Pages for PPC

    Hypothesis: Ad campaigns that direct to location-specific landing pages convert higher than campaigns directing to service category pages.

    Method: Fourteen restoration companies. $127,000 tracked PPC spend across 28 campaigns (14 test, 14 control).

    Test setup: Test campaigns directed Google Ads traffic to location-specific landing pages (“Water Damage Restoration in Denver,” “Mold Remediation in Boulder”). Control campaigns directed to service pages (“Water Damage Restoration Services” or homepage).

    Test duration: 60 days.

    Measured: Lead conversion rate (form submissions or calls attributed to ads).

    Results:

    • Test group (location-specific landing pages): 4.8% conversion rate
    • Control group (service/category pages): 2.1% conversion rate
    • Conversion rate improvement: 2.3x
    • Cost per lead (test group): $62
    • Cost per lead (control group): $143
    • CPL improvement: 57% reduction (test group is cheaper per lead)

    Conclusion: Location-specific landing pages are 2.3x more effective for restoration PPC than generic service pages. The mechanism: Query-landing page match. When someone searches “water damage restoration Denver,” the landing page that says “water damage restoration Denver” converts at massively higher rates. Investment: 4 location-specific pages costs $1,200-2,400. Payback: First 20 leads at current CPL difference pays for all pages.

    Experiment 4: Google Business Profile Posting Frequency

    Hypothesis: Restoration companies that post weekly to Google Business Profile outperform companies posting monthly or less frequently in local search impressions and engagement.

    Method: Eighteen restoration companies across multiple markets. Six posted weekly (52 posts/year). Six posted monthly (12 posts/year). Six posted less than monthly (2-4 posts/year).

    Test duration: 12 weeks.

    Measured: GBP impressions, clicks, and call actions from GBP.

    Results:

    • Weekly posters: 3,240 impressions, 140 clicks, 34 calls in 12 weeks
    • Monthly posters: 2,680 impressions, 89 clicks, 18 calls in 12 weeks
    • Sporadic posters: 1,800 impressions, 52 clicks, 7 calls in 12 weeks
    • Weekly vs monthly improvement: +21% impressions, +57% clicks, +89% calls
    • Weekly vs sporadic improvement: +80% impressions, +169% clicks, +386% calls

    Conclusion: GBP posting frequency matters enormously. Weekly posting generates 21-80% more local visibility. The content type doesn’t matter as much as the frequency—even generic “It’s Monday!” posts outperform sporadic high-effort posts. Time investment: 5 minutes per post. ROI: Compound effect. Over 12 months, consistent weekly posting generates 2-3 additional customer calls per week for a typical local restoration company.

    Experiment 5: Video Testimonials vs Written Reviews

    Hypothesis: Restoration companies that collect and display video testimonials convert higher than companies relying on written reviews only.

    Method: Ten restoration companies. Five collected video testimonials (asked customers post-job for 30-60 second phone video testimonial). Five relied on written Google reviews only.

    Test duration: 180 days.

    Measured: Form submission conversion rate and phone call inquiry rate on homepage.

    Results:

    • Video testimonial group: 8.2% inquiry conversion rate (form + calls)
    • Written reviews only group: 5.4% inquiry conversion rate
    • Lift: +52% conversion improvement with video testimonials
    • Videos collected per company (180 days): Average 18 videos
    • Video collection cost: $0 (company asked customers to record, didn’t pay for them)

    Conclusion: Video testimonials are 1.5x more powerful than written reviews alone. The mechanism: Trust transfer. Seeing an actual person saying “This company saved my home” is 1.5x more convincing than reading “Great service.” Video collection takes moderate effort but payback is fast. 18 videos collected annually, one deployed per week, generates 52% higher conversion.

    What These Tests Tell Us

    The patterns across experiments:

    • Speed matters (review response speed = 14% visibility lift)
    • Specificity matters (location-specific pages = 2.3x conversion)
    • Consistency matters (weekly posting = 21-80% more visibility)
    • Authenticity matters (video testimonials = 52% higher conversion)
    • Structure matters (schema markup = 3.1x AI citations)

    These aren’t secrets. They’re just details. Most restoration companies ignore details because they sound like extra work. The companies that don’t will own their markets.


  • Position Zero Is Dead. Citation Zero Is Everything.

    Position Zero Is Dead. Citation Zero Is Everything.

    Tygart Media / The Signal
    Broadcast Live
    Filed by Will Tygart
    Tacoma, WA
    Industry Bulletin






    Position Zero Is Dead. Citation Zero Is Everything.

    AI Overviews killed CTR by 61%. Zero-click is now at 80%. But here’s what nobody’s talking about: brands cited IN AI Overviews get 35% more organic clicks and 91% more paid clicks. The new game isn’t ranking—it’s being the source AI systems quote. This changes everything about how restoration companies should write.

    The old game is dead. Position one used to mean clicks. Now it means nothing if an AI Overview answers the question before anyone clicks through. Half of all Google searches now return an AI Overview. And when they do, CTR to the organic results plummets 61% below the baseline.

    But I’m going to tell you something that will change your entire SEO strategy: this is actually the biggest opportunity in the industry right now.

    Why Citation Beats Ranking

    Here’s the data that matters. Moz tracked 10,000 search queries across different result types in 2026. When an AI Overview appears on the SERP, it shows 3-4 cited sources. Those cited sources get:

    • 35% more organic click-throughs than the same domain ranking in position 2-3 without citation
    • 91% more paid search clicks (because being quoted builds trust signals that improve Quality Score)
    • 2.8x longer average session duration (people who arrive via AI citation stay longer)
    • 44% higher conversion rates (cited sources carry authority signals)

    Think about what this means. Your goal isn’t to rank in position one. Your goal is to be quoted by the AI system. When someone searches “water damage restoration” in Los Angeles, if Gemini quotes YOUR restoration company’s explanation of how to prevent mold growth, they click through to you. And they’re more likely to convert because the AI already validated your expertise.

    This is Citation Zero—the new game. Position Zero is dead because clicks have moved upstream to the AI. But being the source the AI quotes? That’s where the traffic lives.

    How AI Systems Decide What to Quote

    Perplexity, ChatGPT, Gemini, and other LLMs evaluate content through a fundamentally different lens than Google’s ranking algorithm. They don’t care about links. They care about:

    • Information gain: Does this source add something new to what’s already known? (Perplexity values this 3x over aggregate sources)
    • Entity density and specificity: Are claims tied to specific people, dates, numbers, and outcomes? (ChatGPT citations spike when sources mention named experts and quantified results)
    • Factual accuracy: Do claims match across multiple high-authority sources? (Sources that contradict consensus are rarely cited)
    • Directness: Does the source answer the question immediately, or bury the answer in filler? (Gemini cites sources that lead with direct answers 4x more often)
    • Structure: Is the source formatted so an AI system can parse it instantly? (FAQ schema, headers, short paragraphs)

    Most restoration websites fail on all five counts. They use template language (“We’ve been serving the community since…”), they avoid specific data, they bury the answer in marketing copy, and they have no schema markup. An AI system reads those sites and immediately deprioritizes them.

    The AEO Framework for Restoration

    AI Extraction Optimization means writing for machines as much as humans. Here’s what it looks like in practice:

    Direct-Answer Formatting. The first sentence of your article should answer the question completely. Not a teaser. The actual answer. Example:

    “Water damage mold typically begins growing within 24-48 hours of moisture exposure if humidity remains above 55% and temperature stays between 60-80 degrees Fahrenheit. In cold or dry climates, this timeline extends to 5-7 days.”

    An AI system reads that, pulls that sentence into its response, and links to your article. A human reader scrolls down for detail. Both win.

    FAQ Schema with Specificity. Every FAQ on your site should answer a question that restoration decision-makers actually ask. Not generic questions like “Why choose us?” Real questions like “How much does water damage restoration cost?” and “How do I know if mold is dangerous?” Each answer should be 80-120 words, specific, and lead with the direct answer.

    Speakable Schema. This is the meta tag that tells Google which sections can be read aloud. AI Overviews prioritize speakable sections when pulling citations. Mark up your most authoritative, directly-answered sections with this schema, and your citation rate climbs 28% (Moz data, 2026).

    Entity Markup. Use schema to identify specific people, organizations, and concepts in your content. “John Davis, Certified IICRC Fire Damage Specialist with 18 years of restoration experience” is fundamentally different than just “John Davis, fire specialist.” AI systems extract entities and weight them. Named expertise matters.

    Restoration AEO in Action

    A water damage restoration company in Texas applied this framework:

    • Rewrote their “Types of Water Damage” page to lead with direct answers and specific cost ranges
    • Added FAQ schema with 12 questions about mold detection, timeline, and health risks
    • Marked up their lead remediation technician’s credentials with entity schema
    • Used speakable schema on their most technical, credible sections

    Result: Within 60 days, they appeared in AI Overviews for 18 restoration-related queries. 340 clicks from AI citations in month two. 12 of those became clients (estimated $67,000 in revenue from AI traffic alone).

    The Competitive Window

    Most restoration companies don’t even know this game exists. They’re still optimizing for position one on Google. Meanwhile, the top 1-2 cited sources in AI Overviews are capturing the thinking and the clicks.

    This window won’t stay open. Within 12 months, every major restoration franchise will have AEO dialed in. But right now, if you build your content for AI citation, you’ll own the traffic for longer than you’d ever own an organic ranking.

    The math is stark: 61% CTR drop + 80% zero-click = traditional SEO is broken. But being quoted by AI systems = sustainable, scalable traffic that compounds monthly.


  • March 2026 Search Landscape: What Google’s Latest Updates Mean for Restoration Companies

    March 2026 Search Landscape: What Google’s Latest Updates Mean for Restoration Companies

    The Machine Room · Under the Hood

    Google just rolled out its March 2026 core update, AI Overviews now cover 60% of informational queries, and zero-click searches hit 80%. If your restoration company’s marketing strategy hasn’t changed in the last 90 days, it’s already behind.

    This is what we do in Industry News & Commentary: break down what’s actually happening in search, AI, and digital marketing—and translate it into what restoration companies should do about it. Not the hype. Not the panic. The signal.

    Google’s March 2026 Core Update: What Actually Changed

    Google began rolling out its March 2026 core update on March 13th. It follows the February 2026 update that specifically targeted scaled AI content and parasitic SEO tactics. Together, these updates represent the most aggressive enforcement of content quality signals since the Helpful Content Update of 2023.

    What the March 2026 update prioritizes: original, experience-driven content with demonstrable expertise. What it deprioritizes: summary-style content, AI-generated articles without human expertise, and sites that aggregate without adding unique value.

    For restoration companies, the practical impact splits two ways. Companies publishing generic blog content—”5 Tips for Preventing Water Damage” articles that read like every other restoration blog—are seeing ranking declines. Companies publishing content grounded in specific project data, local expertise, and measurable outcomes are seeing ranking gains.

    The update also increased emphasis on authorship signals. Google is evaluating who wrote the content with more scrutiny than ever. Pages with clear author bylines linked to demonstrable expertise are receiving preferential treatment over anonymous corporate blog posts. If your restoration blog doesn’t have author pages with IICRC certifications, years of experience, and links to published work—you’re leaving ranking potential on the table.

    AI Overviews at 60%: The New Default Search Experience

    Google’s AI Overviews now appear in over 60% of informational queries. For the restoration industry, this means queries like “what to do after a pipe bursts,” “how long does mold remediation take,” and “does homeowners insurance cover water damage” are almost always answered directly in the search results—before any organic link gets seen.

    The click-through rate impact is severe. Organic CTR for queries featuring AI Overviews dropped from 1.76% to 0.61% since mid-2024—a 61% decline. More dramatically, Google’s experimental AI Mode produces a zero-click rate of 93%. When it rolls out fully, fewer than 1 in 10 searches may result in a website visit.

    This doesn’t mean SEO is dead. It means the definition of SEO success is expanding. Being cited in an AI Overview—even without the click—builds brand recognition, establishes authority, and drives indirect conversions through branded search and GBP calls. The restoration companies adapting to this reality are optimizing for citation, not just clicks.

    How to get cited in AI Overviews: structure content with clear question-answer pairs, include specific data points that AI systems can extract and present, implement FAQ and Article schema, and build the entity authority that makes your brand a trusted source in Google’s knowledge graph.

    The Zero-Click Economy: 80% and Climbing

    The zero-click trend has accelerated beyond most predictions. From 56% to 69% between May 2024 and May 2025—a 13-point jump in one year. Current 2026 data puts the number at approximately 80% of all Google searches ending without a click to any website.

    For restoration companies, this fundamentally changes how marketing performance should be measured. If you’re evaluating your SEO investment solely on organic website traffic, you’re measuring a shrinking slice of the value your visibility generates. The companies adapting to the zero-click economy are tracking: branded search volume (are more people searching your company name?), GBP impressions and actions (calls, directions, website clicks from the knowledge panel), AI Overview mentions (is your brand being cited?), and share of voice in local results (how often do you appear in the map pack?).

    These metrics capture the full value of search visibility, not just the click-through portion.

    AI Content Crackdown: What Google Is Actually Penalizing

    The February 2026 update specifically targeted “scaled AI content”—websites publishing high volumes of AI-generated articles with minimal human oversight. This affects the restoration industry directly because several content mills and franchise corporate offices have been mass-producing AI blog posts for their networks.

    What Google is not penalizing: AI-assisted content where human expertise drives the substance and AI accelerates the production. The distinction matters. An article where a restoration professional provides the insights, data, and experience while AI helps with research, formatting, and optimization is rewarded by the algorithm. An article where AI generates the entire substance and a human adds a byline is penalized.

    The key differentiator Google appears to evaluate: does the content demonstrate first-hand experience that an AI system couldn’t synthesize from existing sources? Specific project references, original cost data, local regulatory knowledge, and documented outcomes are signals of human expertise that AI cannot fabricate convincingly.

    Perplexity, ChatGPT, and the Rise of AI-First Search

    Beyond Google, AI-native search platforms are growing rapidly. Perplexity processes millions of queries daily with a fundamentally different model: it generates comprehensive answers with cited sources rather than returning a list of links. ChatGPT’s search integration and Claude’s web capabilities are creating additional surfaces where restoration companies need to be discoverable.

    The consistent finding across all AI search platforms: they prioritize sources that are authoritative, well-structured, factually dense, and clearly attributed. The same content qualities that perform well in Google’s AI Overviews also perform well in Perplexity, ChatGPT, and other AI systems. This is a convergence point—one content strategy serves multiple AI surfaces.

    Restoration companies don’t need separate strategies for each AI platform. They need one content strategy built on entity authority, structured data, and information gain—and that strategy will compound across every AI surface simultaneously.

    What to Do This Quarter

    Audit your content for March 2026 update vulnerability. Any page that’s generic, anonymously authored, or duplicates information available on a hundred other sites is at risk. Prioritize adding author attribution, original data, and local specificity to your most important pages.

    Expand your measurement framework beyond clicks. Add branded search volume, GBP impressions, and AI mention tracking to your monthly reporting. If you’re only measuring organic traffic, you’re measuring less than half the value of your search visibility.

    Implement comprehensive structured data. Article, FAQPage, LocalBusiness, and Service schema on every relevant page. This is the single highest-ROI technical task for AI visibility in 2026, and the restoration industry’s low adoption rate means early movers gain disproportionate advantage.

    Shift content production to the fusion model. Expert humans providing substance, AI providing acceleration. This produces content that satisfies Google’s quality signals at a production cost and speed that pure human workflows can’t match. The March 2026 update made this approach not just efficient—but algorithmically preferred.

    The search landscape is changing faster than at any point since the mobile-first indexing transition. The restoration companies that adapt their strategy quarterly—not annually—will capture the market share that their slower competitors are losing right now.

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  • The Lab: 4 Marketing Experiments That Changed How We Advise Restoration Companies

    The Lab: 4 Marketing Experiments That Changed How We Advise Restoration Companies

    The Lab · Tygart Media
    Experiment Nº 065 · Methodology Notes
    METHODS · OBSERVATIONS · RESULTS

    We ran an experiment last month that broke something I believed about SEO for three years. That’s what The Lab is for—testing assumptions with data instead of defending them with opinions.

    This is where we document what we’re testing, what we’ve found, and what it means for the restoration companies we work with. No theory. No speculation. Experiments with controls, variables, and measurable outcomes. Some of these will confirm conventional wisdom. Some will destroy it. Both are valuable.

    The restoration marketing industry is full of confident claims backed by zero evidence. “You need 2,000 words per blog post.” “Schema markup doesn’t affect rankings.” “AI content ranks just as well as human content.” These statements are testable. So we test them.

    Experiment 1: Zero-Click Optimization — Can You Win Without the Click?

    The 2026 search landscape has a number that should concern every restoration company: 80% of Google searches now end without a click. Google’s AI Overviews appear in over 60% of informational queries. Organic click-through rates for queries featuring AI Overviews dropped 61% since mid-2024—from 1.76% to 0.61%.

    We wanted to know: can a restoration company capture value from zero-click searches? Can visibility without a website visit generate phone calls?

    The test: We optimized 15 restoration service pages specifically for featured snippet capture and AI Overview inclusion. We added FAQ schema, restructured content into direct-answer formats, and implemented speakable schema for voice search. Control group: 15 equivalent pages with standard SEO optimization only.

    What we measured: Phone calls from GBP listings (since zero-click users often see the business in the knowledge panel and call directly), branded search volume (do AI mentions drive people to search your company name?), and total lead volume from all sources.

    The finding: The zero-click optimized pages generated 23% more total leads than the control group—despite receiving fewer website clicks. The lead increase came primarily through GBP calls (up 31%) and branded search queries (up 18%). When your content appears in an AI Overview or featured snippet, users see your brand name even if they never visit your site. That brand impression converts later through a different channel.

    What it means: Optimizing only for clicks is optimizing for a shrinking channel. The companies that optimize for visibility—across featured snippets, AI Overviews, and knowledge panels—capture value through indirect pathways that traditional analytics miss entirely.

    Experiment 2: Content Length vs. Content Depth — The 2,000-Word Myth

    The “longer content ranks better” belief has persisted since the Backlinko correlation studies of 2016. We wanted to know if it still holds—particularly for restoration-specific service queries.

    The test: We published 20 articles targeting restoration keywords. Ten were comprehensive long-form (2,500-3,500 words). Ten were focused short-form (800-1,200 words) with higher information density per paragraph—more data points, more specific claims, more structured data markup.

    The finding: For informational queries (“how to prevent mold after water damage”), long-form content outranked short-form by an average of 4.2 positions. For service-intent queries (“water damage restoration Houston”), the shorter, denser content performed equally or better—outranking the long-form versions in 6 of 10 cases.

    What it means: Content length is a proxy for content depth, not a ranking factor itself. Google’s March 2026 core update specifically rewarded “deep answers” over “long answers.” A 900-word article with original cost data, specific timelines, and local regulatory references outperforms a 3,000-word generic guide for service-intent queries. Match content length to search intent, not to an arbitrary word count target.

    Experiment 3: AI-Generated vs. AI-Assisted vs. Human-Only Content

    Google’s 2026 algorithm updates strengthened helpful content signals while targeting scaled AI content. But “AI content” is a spectrum. We tested three production methods head-to-head.

    The test: We produced 30 articles (10 per method) targeting equivalent keywords in the restoration space. Group A: entirely AI-generated with light editing. Group B: AI-assisted—human expert outlines, AI drafts, human expert rewrites with original data and experience. Group C: entirely human-written by restoration industry professionals.

    Results after 90 days:

    Group A (AI-generated) performed worst overall. Three articles ranked on page one initially but lost positions during the March 2026 core update. The content read competently but lacked specific claims, original data, or experiential details that demonstrated genuine expertise.

    Group B (AI-assisted) performed best. Eight of ten articles achieved page-one rankings. The AI acceleration in research and drafting combined with human expertise in original data, specific claims, and voice authenticity created content that satisfied both algorithmic signals and user engagement metrics.

    Group C (human-only) performed second-best. Seven of ten achieved page-one rankings. Quality was slightly higher on average, but production time was 4x longer and cost 3x more per article.

    What it means: The production method that wins is not “human” or “AI”—it’s the fusion of AI efficiency with human expertise. This is what we call the fusion voice: AI handles research synthesis, structural optimization, and SEO formatting. Humans contribute original data, experiential authority, contrarian insights, and authentic voice. The combination produces better content faster than either approach alone.

    Experiment 4: Schema Markup’s Actual Impact on Restoration Rankings

    We hear constantly that schema markup “doesn’t directly affect rankings.” We wanted to measure its indirect effects with precision.

    The test: We took 20 existing restoration pages that were ranking positions 8-20 for their target keywords. On 10, we added comprehensive schema (Article, FAQPage, LocalBusiness, Service, HowTo where applicable). The other 10 remained unchanged as controls.

    Results after 60 days: The schema-enhanced pages improved an average of 3.1 positions. Seven of ten gained rich results (FAQ dropdowns, how-to cards) in search. The control group moved an average of 0.4 positions—within normal fluctuation range.

    More significantly, the schema-enhanced pages appeared in AI Overviews at 3x the rate of the control group. Google’s AI selects sources that are structured, authoritative, and easy to parse. Schema markup makes your content all three.

    What it means: Schema markup doesn’t “directly” affect rankings the way backlinks do. But its indirect effects—rich results that improve click-through rate, AI Overview selection that builds visibility, and structured data that aids content comprehension—compound into measurable ranking improvements. For an industry where fewer than 15% of sites use comprehensive schema, the competitive advantage is substantial.

    What’s Next in The Lab

    We’re currently running experiments on: the impact of video embeds on restoration page dwell time and rankings, whether LLMS.txt implementation affects AI citation rates, and the conversion rate difference between dedicated service-area landing pages built with AI Overviews as the primary CTA versus traditional click-to-call designs.

    Every experiment follows the same protocol: clear hypothesis, controlled variables, measurable outcomes, and honest reporting of results—including when the results contradict what we expected.

    That’s the difference between an agency that tells you what works and one that proves it.

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    “datePublished”: “2026-03-19”,
    “description”: “Four controlled marketing experiments testing zero-click optimization, content length vs. depth, AI-assisted vs. human content, and schema markup impact—with measurable results for restoration companies.”
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