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Service pages are where local websites win or lose. They are what search engines rank, what AI tools extract, and what customers read right before deciding to call. Here is a structure that works, in the order it should appear on the page.
Open with the situation the customer is in, not with your company history. “Black streaks and moss shortening your roof’s life?” meets the reader where they are. Then state plainly what you do about it and where you do it. Customer first, service second, company third.
Name your city and service area naturally — it confirms relevance for customers, search engines, and AI tools alike. And write like you talk on the phone. If you would never say “we utilize industry-leading methodologies” to a customer, do not write it on your website.
Long enough to answer the customer’s real questions — often 500 to 1,000 words. Substance sets the length, not a quota.
Either can work. You know the customers; a good writer knows structure and search. The strongest pages usually combine both.
Only if you genuinely serve distinct areas and can write meaningfully different pages. Thin copy-paste city pages do more harm than good.
Want to know what is helping or hurting your visibility? Request a Website Visibility Review or call/text 971-563-2007 — talk to Melody directly.
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