Upselling local SEO to web design clients using GBP scan data works because you are not sharing opinions. You are showing clients a scored report on their own Google presence with their competitor’s numbers next to theirs, sourced from Google. The conversation moves from “would you like to add SEO?” to “here is what is happening and why it matters.”
For how to use this same data to handle objections in writing, see how to fix cold emails with real GBP competitor data. This article focuses on the in-person or video call upsell where the scan report is your primary tool.
In This Article
Which scan data points close the upsell?
Three data points close local SEO upsells faster than any other combination. Each one is sourced directly from Google:
| Data point | What to say | Why it closes |
|---|---|---|
| Competitor name + review count vs. client’s | “You have 14 reviews. [Competitor] has 52 and is ranking above you.” | Specific, named, verifiable — not an opinion |
| PageSpeed score vs. same competitor | “Your site scored 38. [Competitor]’s site scored 71.” | Ties the website they just paid for to a ranking problem |
| GBP completeness percentage | “Missing: business description, 3 attributes, special hours.” | Shows fixable wins — fast to address, visible impact |
You are not diagnosing a problem you invented. You are reporting what Google already measured. To pre-qualify prospects with this same data before the first meeting, see how to use a free GBP scan to pre-qualify web design prospects.
Should you scan before or after the project?
Both timing windows serve different closes:
- Before the project: The scan justifies the scope and surfaces what the redesign should fix. It also documents the baseline that makes the retainer conversation natural at launch.
- After the project: Shows what the new site did not solve. The client is in a positive mindset at launch, making them more receptive to a follow-on conversation.
If you only scan at one point, scan before quoting. The data shapes the scope, the proposal, and the retainer pitch before the project starts. For what to do with the data after launch, see what a GBP audit tells a web designer before a site rebuild.
How to present scan data without overwhelming the client
Lead with the overall score and one competitor comparison. Open the report in front of them and point to the competitor benchmarking section. Let them read it. Do not narrate the entire report line by line.
The AI summary at the top of the report translates the raw data into a plain-language diagnosis: “Your three biggest opportunities are review velocity, PageSpeed performance, and profile completeness.” That single paragraph is usually enough to open the upsell conversation without explaining what each metric means.
Silence after the client reads the competitor review gap is more persuasive than any explanation you can offer after it.
What if the client says their website is fine?
Point to the PageSpeed score. The Core Web Vitals and PageSpeed scores come from Google’s own measurement infrastructure, not from your diagnostic tool. “Google scored your site 38 on performance. That score is one of the signals Google uses to decide whether to show you above or below [Competitor] in local search results.” That is not your opinion. It is a number from the same system that determines their ranking.
What to leave behind after the meeting
The scan generates a shareable report link. Send it after the meeting as a follow-up. The client can review it again, share it with a business partner or co-owner who was not in the meeting, and come back to the conversation on their own timeline. The data keeps working after you leave the room.