Service fit
Can the page say exactly what the company does and who it helps?
Contractor visibility snapshot
This quick tool turns a contractor or service business website into a practical visibility scorecard: what is clear, what proof is missing, what a buyer may not trust yet, and what Uplink Local would tighten before chasing more traffic.
Preview tool only. It does not query live AI systems or guarantee rankings, recommendations, calls, leads, or placements.
Snapshot framework
Can the page say exactly what the company does and who it helps?
Can a buyer verify the business is real, local, and active?
Does the page answer the questions that block a call or estimate?
Is there a visible next step after trust is established?
How this becomes paid work
After the preview scorecard, the natural next step is a manual review: screenshots, public proof notes, local profile checks, and a 30-day page-improvement sprint. No scraping, outreach, CRM write, or ranking claim is needed to make the problem concrete.
A fast scorecard for one service page, location, and comparison target.
Screenshots, proof notes, Google Business Profile checks, and missing trust signals.
Page edits, proof additions, local answer coverage, and conversion cleanup.
AI visibility, without the hype
AI visibility starts with whether a local service business is easy to understand from public information: services, location, proof points, and the next step. Uplink Local uses the snapshot as a first-pass clarity check, not a live ranking test, lead guarantee, scraping workflow, or promise that AI tools will recommend a business.
It checks whether a local service business is easy to explain from public information: services, location, proof points, and the next step a customer should take.
No. The snapshot does not guarantee AI placement, search ranking, calls, leads, bookings, revenue, or customer acquisition. It is a practical clarity review.
No. This public tool stays generic and educational. Real prospect review, outreach, scraping, CRM updates, or customer workflow steps require a separate approved lane.
If the public basics are unclear, people and tools can struggle to understand what the business offers. A clarity check can surface missing service language, weak proof points, inconsistent location signals, or a confusing next step.
The safe next step is a human-reviewed cleanup plan: clarify service copy, confirm public proof, improve page structure, and decide what needs a separate approved workflow.
This section is public education and first-pass clarity support only. It is not a ranking test, AI-provider test, prospect review, scraping/list-building process, outreach workflow, CRM/form/calendar action, pricing offer, or customer-delivery promise.
A roofing demo report loads automatically so visitors can see the output format before entering real business information.
Method and limits
The snapshot creates a useful consult opener without claiming live AI rankings, leads, placements, or demand.
Visitors can enter example.com, www.example.com, or a full URL. The report normalizes it before scoring.
The output turns vague visibility problems into a specific proof, service-page, and conversion punch list.
No-send readiness asset
The readiness checklist gives a business-owner-friendly way to review public signals before anyone touches prospect data, CRM, outreach, forms, or live AI-provider workflows.
No-send follow-up
Use this worksheet for internal prep, demo walkthroughs, or VA research notes before anyone makes claims about rankings, AI answers, calls, leads, or customer demand.
Review framework
Can a buyer or assistant identify the exact service, service area, and best-fit customer quickly?
Are reviews, photos, service-area details, credentials, and project examples easy to verify?
Does the site answer the questions that usually happen before a call or quote request?
Is there a clear next step that turns visibility into a call, form fill, or booked estimate?