You answered the phone. They sound ready to buy. You think the conversation is just beginning.
But here’s the thing: for them, it’s almost over.
By the time a prospect dials your number, they’ve already spent time on Google, read through your reviews, visited your website, and sized up your competitors. They’ve formed an opinion. Maybe even a preference. In many cases, the only thing left to decide is whether you’ll confirm what they already believe, or give them a reason to call someone else.
This isn’t a guess. It’s backed by years of research into how people actually make purchasing decisions. And understanding it changes everything about how you think about your online presence.
The Decision Is Almost Made Before You Pick Up the Phone
Back in 2011, Google introduced a concept that quietly rewired how marketers think about the buyer journey. They called it the Zero Moment of Truth, ZMOT for short. The idea was simple but profound: before anyone ever steps into a store or picks up a phone, they do their research. They go online. They search, compare, read, and evaluate. And by the time they make contact, their mind is already leaning heavily in one direction.
The numbers that followed have only gotten more striking.
Studies show that77% of consumers do online research before making a purchase or booking a service. Nearly two-thirds,62%, say that the information they find online affects whether they actually go through with it. That’s not a small slice of the market. That’s the overwhelming majority of people who will ever consider calling your business.
Think about what that means for the sales conversation you think you’re having.
When someone calls you, they’re not at the beginning of their journey. They’re at the end of it. They’ve already googled you. They’ve already seen, or failed to find, your Google Business Profile. They’ve already looked at your star rating, scrolled through your reviews, and made a gut-level judgment about whether you’re the kind of business they can trust. You just don’t know any of that because you weren’t there when it happened.
Most business owners are only showing up for the last five percent of a decision that was ninety-five percent made without them.
This is why a great phone manner, a polished sales script, or a beautiful product can still lose business to a competitor with a mediocre service but a better digital footprint. It’s not fair. But it’s real. The research phase is where trust is built or broken, and if you’re not actively shaping what happens in that phase, you’re leaving your reputation to chance.
The good news? Chance isn’t the only option.
The Exact Path They Take (And What They’re Looking For)
Let’s make this concrete. Walk through the actual sequence a typical prospect follows before they ever contact a local business. It’s not random. It’s remarkably consistent, and each step either builds confidence or introduces doubt.
Step 1: The Google Search
It starts the way almost everything starts now: with a search. “Best plumber in [city].” “Roof repair near me.” “HVAC company with good reviews.” The phrasing varies, but the intent is the same. They want options, and they want them ranked.
Google’s local results, the Map Pack at the top of the page, immediately surface three businesses. Those three get the lion’s share of attention. Everything below them is a harder sell. So before a single word is read, your visibility already determines whether you’re even in the conversation.
Step 2: The Star Rating Scan
The first thing people notice after the business name? The stars. This happens in seconds, almost involuntarily. A 4.8 with 200 reviews reads very differently than a 3.9 with 12 reviews, even if the service is identical. People use ratings as a quick proxy for trustworthiness when they don’t yet have any other information to go on.
This is why a missing or thin Google Business Profile isn’t just an inconvenience. It’s an active disadvantage. Businesses with no reviews, or worse, outdated profiles with stale information, are quietly filtered out at this stage before the prospect even knows they’ve done it.
Step 3: Diving Into the Reviews
Here’s where it gets more nuanced and more important. Once someone is intrigued enough to look closer, they read the reviews. Not just the star count. The actual words.
88% of consumers check Google reviews before engaging with a local business. That figure alone should stop you in your tracks. Nearly nine out of ten people who might call you are reading what your previous customers had to say, often before they’ve looked at your website.
And what they’re looking for goes beyond whether the reviews are positive.74% of consumers say they only trust reviews written in the last three months.A string of glowing five-star reviews from three years ago doesn’t reassure them the way recent ones do. It can actually raise questions: Why has nobody reviewed this business lately? Has something changed?
They’re also reading for specificity. Vague reviews like “great service!” carry less weight than detailed ones that describe the actual experience, mention a team member by name, or walk through how a problem was solved. Specificity signals authenticity. And authenticity is what converts a skeptical researcher into a confident caller.
One negative review, handled well with a professional response? Usually not a dealbreaker. A pattern of unaddressed complaints? That’s a red flag that sends people elsewhere.
Step 4: The Website Check
If the reviews hold up, most people will click through to your website. This is the moment where the story either continues or collapses.
A website visit at this stage isn’t exploratory. The prospect isn’t browsing out of curiosity. They’re looking for confirmation. Does this site look like it belongs to the business I just read good things about? Is it professional? Is the information current? Does it make it easy to get in touch?
If the website feels dated, confusing, or inconsistent with the impression the reviews created, it introduces friction. And friction at this late stage, when they were almost ready to call, is costly. They’ll go back to the search results and try the next business on the list.
Step 5: The Final Check
Before they dial, some prospects take one more pass. They might glance at your social media profiles. They might check whether you’ve responded to recent reviews. They might look for any red flags they missed. This is the last opportunity for something to shake their confidence, or the last opportunity for something to cement it.
Every touchpoint in this sequence is a moment of evaluation. The businesses that win the most calls aren’t necessarily the ones with the best service. They’re the ones who built the most convincing case during the part of the journey the customer controlled, the research phase.
What You Can Actually Control
Here’s the reframe that changes everything.
You can’t be in the room when the decision happens. You can’t jump in during the Google search and explain why your reviews from last year still reflect the quality of your work today. You can’t walk the prospect through your website in real time. The research phase belongs entirely to them.
But, and this is the crucial part, you can shape what they find.
That’s not a small thing. It’s everything. Because if you can influence the information landscape a prospect moves through, you’re effectively participating in that private decision-making process even when you’re not there. You’re building trust before they ever speak to you.
Here’s what that looks like in practice.
Keep Your Google Business Profile Current
Your Google Business Profile is often the first substantive impression a prospect gets of your business. It needs to be accurate, complete, and active. That means correct hours, including holiday hours. Up-to-date contact information. Current photos that reflect what your business actually looks like today. Service categories that match what you actually offer.
An outdated profile doesn’t just fail to impress. It actively creates doubt. If your hours are wrong and someone drives to your location only to find you closed, you’ve lost that customer permanently, and possibly earned a one-star review in the process.
Maintain a Steady Flow of Recent Reviews
This is the single highest-leverage thing most local businesses can do, and the one most consistently neglected.
Reviews are not a “set it and forget it” asset. They decay in relevance. A hundred reviews from two years ago is genuinely less valuable than twenty reviews from the past three months, because that’s how prospects evaluate them. Recency signals that your business is still active, still delivering, and still earning the trust of real customers.
The challenge is that most satisfied customers don’t leave reviews unless you make it easy for them. This is where Reviews™comes in. gotcha!’s review tool is built to do exactly this: help your business build a consistent, current stream of authentic customer reviews without the awkward follow-up or the guesswork. It puts a system behind something that most businesses are trying to do manually and sporadically, and it shows in the results.
A steady review cadence doesn’t just improve your star rating over time. It signals to every new prospect, in the most visible way possible, that people are still choosing you, still happy with the experience, and still willing to say so publicly. That’s a powerful signal.
Make Sure Your Website Confirms What Your Reviews Say
There’s a coherence test happening in every prospect’s mind as they move through the research sequence. Do all the pieces fit? Does the professionalism of the reviews match what I see on the website? Does the service described in five-star testimonials match what the site says they actually do?
When the answer is yes, confidence builds. When there’s a mismatch, slick reviews but a clunky site, or a beautiful website for a business with almost no review presence, it introduces a subtle but real sense of unease.
This is also where gotcha!Places™becomes relevant. Gotcha!’s local presence management tool ensures that your business information is accurate, consistent, and optimized across Google and beyond, so that no matter where a prospect encounters your business during their research, they’re seeing information that builds the same coherent, trustworthy picture.
Consistency isn’t glamorous. But it’s the thing that quietly closes the gap between “this business looks promising” and “I’m going to call them.”
Respond to Your Reviews, All of Them
This one is free, takes minutes, and most businesses don’t do it nearly enough.
When you respond to a positive review, you’re not just thanking a customer. You’re demonstrating to every prospect reading that review that you’re engaged, you care, and you run the kind of business that pays attention to its people.
When you respond to a negative review, professionally, without defensiveness, with a genuine offer to make things right, you do something even more powerful. You show that problems don’t send you into hiding. That signal matters more than the negative review itself to many prospects.
Businesses with active, thoughtful review responses consistently outperform silent ones, even when the raw review scores are similar.
The Bottom Line
The sales conversation doesn’t start when they call. It starts the moment they search.
Every prospect who contacts your business has already taken a journey through search results, star ratings, review pages, and your website. They’ve been forming an impression, building trust or losing it, long before you knew they existed.
The businesses that understand this don’t just wait to be good on the phone. They invest in what happens before the phone rings. They keep their profiles accurate. They build and maintain a real, recent flow of reviews. They make sure every digital touchpoint tells a consistent, credible story.
That’s not just marketing. That’s the new front door of your business.
And unlike a lot of things in business, it’s something you can actually control.
Interested in building a stronger local presence? Explore how Reviews™ and gotcha!Places™ can help your business show up, and show well, at every stage of the customer’s research journey.