You run a local service business — plumbing, HVAC, roofing, remodeling — and when you started looking for someone to handle your marketing, SearchKings showed up on the shortlist. That makes sense. They're a large, established agency, a Google Premier Partner with real horsepower in paid search and managed local SEO, and they've served plenty of home-services and local businesses well. If you want a polished, corporate partner with a full team behind your account and a track record of running Google Ads at scale, they belong in your evaluation.
Then, somewhere between the sales call and the signature, a quiet question shows up. You're about to commit to a monthly retainer for work that happens behind a curtain, on a system that lives inside their shop, not yours. If you ever part ways, you keep whatever rankings are live that afternoon — and nothing else.
This isn't a case against SearchKings or any other capable managed agency. It's about a second path for the owner who wants to own the system — and how that path can run right alongside an agency instead of only replacing it.
Who SearchKings Is a Great Fit For
Let's be genuinely fair, because this is your money and your time on the line.
A managed, full-service agency is the right call when:
- You have zero time and zero interest in touching the work. You're dispatching crews, quoting replacements, and answering emergency calls at 8pm. You'd rather write one check and have it handled. That's a completely legitimate trade.
- You have the budget. Managed agencies in this tier typically land somewhere in the $500–$3,000/mo range depending on scope and market, and that's before ad spend. If that fits your marketing budget and you'd rather buy back the hours, an agency earns its keep.
- You want a full team behind the account. A larger shop like SearchKings brings account managers, paid-search specialists, and reporting infrastructure — the kind of bench a solo consultant or a busy owner simply can't staff.
- You want it fully hands-off. If your honest answer is "I never want to log into Google Business Profile myself," a managed agency takes that off your plate entirely.
If that's you, hire a good one, ask sharp questions, and hold them to their numbers. There's no shame in paying to protect your time.
Where a Managed Agency Leaves a Gap
Here's the part that isn't a shot at anyone — it's just the structural reality of the managed model.
When the agency does the work, the system lives inside the agency, not inside your business. That creates three gaps worth naming before you sign.
You get outputs, not a readable system. You'll see a tidy monthly report and some ranking movement, but you rarely see the methodology itself — what changed, in what sequence, and why. When the work is invisible, you can't tell whether you're funding real compounding progress or quiet maintenance.
There's no proof it compounds. Strong local SEO builds a durable asset: a fully-built GBP, clean citations, real service pages that keep earning. When all of that lives inside someone else's process, it's hard to know whether you're accumulating an asset or renting rankings by the month.
There's no skill transfer. A year into a retainer, your business understands local SEO exactly as well as it did on day one. Pause the contract or switch providers, and that knowledge walks out the door with the people who held it.
None of this makes the agency wrong. It's simply the trade you're making — and you deserve to see it clearly first.
The Transparent Alternative: Own the System
There's a second path, built for the owner (or the in-house person) who wants the methodology itself, not just the monthly outcome.
The AI-First Authority Framework™ is the same work a good managed agency does — GBP optimization, citation consistency, review systems, service and location pages — laid out as a transparent, step-by-step system you actually own. You run it yourself, or you hand it to one person on your team, and the knowledge stays inside your company for good.
Here's what most owners overlook: this can sit alongside an agency, not only replace it. Keep SearchKings or any managed provider, and the same framework becomes your accountability tool. You'll know exactly what should be happening each month, so when the report lands you can read it and tell whether the work is real. A transparent system doesn't just power DIY — it makes every dollar you spend on an agency easier to verify.
Own it outright, or use it to confirm you're getting what you pay for. Either way, the system belongs to you.
What Actually Moves Local Rankings
You don't need a mystery to rank in the map pack. The levers are well understood, and most of them are one-time projects or light weekly habits — not perpetual monthly line items.
Review velocity. Steady, recent reviews move map-pack rankings faster than almost anything else. A plumbing company generating a fresh flow of reviews each month tends to beat one sitting on a big pile of old ones. The engine is simple: a text asking for a review after every completed job — every drain clear, every water-heater swap, every AC install.
A fully-optimized, active Google Business Profile. Correct specific categories, complete services with real descriptions, current job-site photos, and steady posts. This is the single highest-leverage local asset a contractor owns, and it's maintained in minutes a week, not hours.
Citation consistency as a one-time project. Getting your name, address, and phone identical across the directories that matter is a finite cleanup task — done once, then spot-checked occasionally. It is not an ongoing monthly service, no matter how it gets billed.
On-page done once. Real service pages and location pages, each written for genuine local intent, built one time and left to compound. An HVAC company with distinct pages for AC installation, furnace repair, and heat-pump replacement consistently outranks one leaning on a single generic "services" page.
That's the whole game. It rewards doing a handful of things correctly and keeping two of them fresh.
The Math
Say your retainer sits at $1,500/mo — right in the middle of that $500–$3,000/mo range. That's $18,000 a year.
Local service jobs run larger than most, so put your average booked job at $700 with a 30% close rate on the leads the work produces. To break even on the spend, you need roughly 85 additional booked jobs a year attributable to the SEO — a little under two a week, every week, that trace back to search rather than word of mouth or the truck wrap.
That math can absolutely work with a good agency in a busy metro. The point isn't that the number is bad — it's that you should be able to see it. When you own the system, or use it to audit the one you're paying for, that break-even stops being a leap of faith and becomes a figure you can check.
Where to Start
Before you sign a retainer, renew one, or go the DIY route, find out exactly where you stand today.
Run your free SEO audit → — it shows you your current GBP, citation, and on-page picture in plain language, so you can tell what actually needs work and what an agency should be held accountable for.
Then, if you want to own the methodology yourself, the full AI-First Authority Framework™ walks you through every step — the same system a good managed agency runs, now transparent and yours to keep.