Most garage door companies have a website and a Google Business Profile. Neither one is set up to rank. I work exclusively with garage door businesses to fix that — through focused local SEO and WordPress website design built around how homeowners actually search for garage door services.
Most garage door GBP listings use the wrong primary category, leave the service list incomplete, and upload photos without geo-context. Google reads these signals to decide who to show. An incomplete profile rarely ranks in the top 3.
A single page covering spring repair, opener installation, panel replacement, and emergency service doesn't rank for any of them well. Each service has its own search demand and its own keyword intent. One page can't serve all of them at once.
Garage door companies often serve 6–15 cities but have no local landing pages for any of them. Without city-specific content and proper internal linking, Google doesn't know where you operate — and you don't rank in surrounding areas.
I don't offer a generic SEO package or a template website. Both services are structured around how garage door businesses get found, and how homeowners decide who to call.
When someone searches "garage door repair near me" or "broken spring replacement [city]," they're not browsing — they have a problem and need it solved today. The question is whether Google surfaces your business or someone else's. I focus on the specific signals that determine that: GBP optimization, service page structure, local citations, review velocity, and service area coverage.
A slow, poorly structured website doesn't just frustrate visitors — it actively limits what SEO can accomplish. I build WordPress sites for garage door companies that load quickly on mobile, give Google a clear content structure to crawl, and give homeowners a clear reason to call rather than click back. The design serves both the search engine and the person on the other side of the screen.
I stopped taking clients outside the garage door industry in 2020. Not because other niches aren't valid — but because I kept noticing the same pattern: generalist SEO agencies were applying restaurant or law firm frameworks to garage door businesses, and it wasn't working. The search intent is different. The service structure is different. The GBP category logic is different.
So I went narrow. I built keyword research libraries specifically for garage door searches. I mapped which GBP categories trigger which queries. I documented how service area pages perform differently by market size. That work lives inside every project I take on.
Every project I've taken since 2020 has been a garage door company. No HVAC, no plumbing, no general contractors. That focus shows in the quality of execution.
GBP category selection, service list completeness, review velocity, proximity signals, and citation consistency all interact. I optimize each one systematically — not as isolated tasks.
Monthly reports show keyword positions, GBP call volume, organic traffic by landing page, and lead counts. Not sessions. Not impressions. The metrics that tell you whether SEO is working.
You communicate with me directly. When something needs to change, it changes quickly. There's no layer of project managers between the strategy and the execution.
The first conversation is a diagnostic, not a sales pitch. I look at your current GBP, your rankings, your site structure, and your local competition before we talk about strategy.
I manually review your GBP, your current keyword positions, your website's technical structure, and how your top local competitors are outranking you. You receive a plain-language summary of findings — no charge.
Every city has different competition levels, different keyword volumes, and different GBP dynamics. The plan I build is specific to your market — not a template applied to every client.
GBP optimization comes first because it typically produces the fastest local ranking movement. Then service pages, city pages, citations, and link signals — each built in sequence, not simultaneously and sloppily.
Every month, you see your keyword positions, your GBP call volume, your organic traffic by landing page, and any adjustments made to the strategy. Nothing vague. Nothing hidden.
I'm not going to show you screenshots with inflated numbers. What I can tell you is what I observe consistently across garage door markets: companies that fix their GBP structure, build proper service pages, and build citation consistency tend to see meaningful local ranking movement within 60–90 days. Competitive metros take longer. Smaller markets move faster.
"Before working with Muhammad, we had a GBP listing that was basically empty — no services listed, maybe 15 photos, and the wrong category. Within a couple of months of fixing all of that, we started showing up for searches we'd never appeared in before. The calls came from that, not from anything magic."
"We'd been running Google Ads for two years. The clicks were expensive and the moment we paused the campaign, the leads stopped. Muhammad helped us build out our service pages and city pages properly, and now we get consistent inbound calls from organic search. It took about four months to really kick in."
"Our website looked fine but it wasn't structured for search at all — one page for all services, no city pages, slow on mobile. After the rebuild and SEO work, we rank for things like 'garage door repair [our city]' and 'same day opener installation.' The phone rings more. That's what matters."
Most garage door companies have at least two or three fixable problems that are suppressing their local rankings right now. The audit call is how I find out which ones apply to you. I review your GBP, your site structure, your keyword positions, and your local competitors before we speak — so the conversation is specific, not generic.
Google Maps ranking check — where you currently appear for your core service searches, and which GBP signals are most likely suppressing your position in the 3-Pack.
GBP completeness review — category selection, service list, photo volume and geo-tagging, Q&A activity, and posting frequency. Most profiles have 3–5 fixable gaps.
NAP and citation audit — inconsistent business information across Yelp, Angi, HomeAdvisor, and similar directories is a common and underdiagnosed ranking issue.
Website structure assessment — whether your current site architecture gives Google enough context to understand your services and your service area coverage.
Competitor gap review — what your top two or three local competitors are doing differently in terms of GBP signals, page structure, and citation profile.
Fill this out and I'll review your business personally before reaching out to schedule a call. Usually within one business day.
I review every submission personally. Before I reach out, I'll look at your GBP, your current search positions, and your website — so the first conversation is about your specific situation, not a generic introduction.
If your GBP is underoptimized, your service pages are thin, or your city coverage is missing — the audit will tell you that clearly. No sales presentation. Just an honest look at where you stand and what's worth fixing first.