SEO FOR HAWAII CONTRACTORS

Stop renting leads. Own page one.

HVAC, roofing, solar, general contracting, landscaping — when the jobs are worth five figures, one ranking pays for a year of SEO. I get Hawaii contractors to the top of the searches that bring big-ticket work, and show you the cost-per-lead math next to your ad spend.

The math your ad budget doesn't want you to see

Paid ads work — until you look at what each lead costs and notice it goes up every year. You’re bidding against every competitor on the island for the same clicks, and the moment you pause the budget, the phone stops.

Rankings work differently. Example math for a roofing company: if “roof replacement Oahu” and its sister searches send you 20 extra visits a month, and even two of those become quotes and one becomes a $15,000–40,000 job — that single monthly job pays for the entire SEO engagement several times over. And unlike ads, the ranking keeps working while you sleep.

Every proposal I send includes this math for your numbers: your average job value, your close rate, the real search volume in your market — so you can compare cost-per-lead honestly against what you’re paying Google or HomeAdvisor today.

What an SEO engagement includes

Keyword & market strategy

Real search data for your island and trade: which searches carry buying intent, what they’re worth, and which ones you can actually win — prioritized by revenue, not vanity volume.

Technical SEO fixes

A full crawl of your site to find what’s silently costing you rankings — broken pages, slow load, missing meta, indexing problems — fixed in priority order.

Local SEO & GBP

Your Google Business Profile optimized and active — the map pack is where local contractor jobs are won, and most profiles are set up once and forgotten.

Content that closes

Service and location pages written the way homeowners actually search — costs, timelines, permits, financing — which is also exactly what AI search engines quote.

Competitor tracking

I watch who outranks you, why, and what it would take to pass them — so the strategy targets the gap between you and the companies winning your jobs.

Cost-per-lead reporting

Monthly plain-English reports: rankings won, traffic, leads, and what each organic lead cost versus your paid channels. If the math stops working, you’ll see it before I do.

Want AI search covered too? GEO — visibility in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews — is available as an add-on. Here’s how it works →

Built for trades where one job is worth five figures

SEO isn’t worth it for every business — it’s worth it when jobs are big enough that a handful of extra leads a month changes your year. I work with Hawaii contractors in:

Contractor SEO — common questions

Honestly: expect meaningful ranking movement in 3–6 months, with technical fixes and Google Business Profile improvements often showing sooner. Anyone promising page one in 30 days is selling something else. That’s why every engagement starts with the audit — so we both know the starting point and the realistic timeline before money changes hands.
Keep running them if they’re profitable — SEO isn’t a replacement, it’s the escape plan from paying for every single lead forever. Ads stop the day you stop paying; rankings keep producing. Most contractors I talk to end up shifting budget gradually as organic leads ramp up and their blended cost-per-lead drops.
Engagements are scoped to your market and competition — most fall in the low-to-mid four figures per month with a one-time setup fee. Every proposal shows the math against your average job value and close rate, so the price reads in cost-per-lead terms, not marketing-speak.
No — and neither does anyone honest, because nobody controls Google. What I commit to: a scored baseline audit, a specific plan, the work delivered on schedule, and monthly reporting transparent enough that you can fire me the moment the math stops making sense.
Usually not. Most contractor sites need targeted fixes — speed, structure, content — not a rebuild. The audit tells us which situation you’re in. If a rebuild genuinely makes more sense, I’ll say so and scope it separately rather than bolting SEO onto a site that can’t hold it.

Find out what page one is worth in your trade.

The free audit shows where you rank today, who’s beating you, and the three fixes that would move the needle most.

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