Everything a new business needs to actually be findable online.
If you’ve just opened (or are about to), the question isn’t “what’s the latest SEO trend.” It’s “what do I need in place so customers can find me at all.” This is the working sequence — the things to do first, in order, without paying anyone retainers until you understand what you’re paying for.
“Every business that opened to a full room did the work before the doors opened.”
Most “small business SEO” advice was written for the wrong era.
The 2018 playbook was: build a website, claim a Google Business Profile, write a few blog posts, wait. That sequence still appears in most starter guides today — and it’s no longer enough.
In 2026, a new business has to be findable across Google Search, Google Maps, AI assistants, and structured data simultaneously. The work is the same kind of work, but the order matters more, and a few specific items are now non-negotiable that didn’t exist five years ago.
Read it in sequence. Each piece below assumes you’ve handled the one above it.
The New Business Sequence
10 articlesRead top to bottom. Each article assumes you’ve done the previous one. By the end, your business has a real digital presence — not a placeholder.
Every business that opened to a full room did the work before the doors opened
Why pre-launch digital work is the highest-leverage time you’ll ever have. The mindset before the checklist.
Everything your new business needs to get found online
The full inventory of digital assets a new business needs — website, profiles, schema, content — in the order you should set them up.
My website isn’t showing up on Google
The most common new-business question, answered systematically. Indexing, crawl errors, and the 4-week silence problem.
Your competitor is on Google Maps and you aren’t
Why local visibility starts with Maps, not your website — and the verification steps most new businesses skip.
Google Business Profile features most businesses ignore
The features inside GBP that move the needle — Q&A, products, services, posts, attributes — and the ones that don’t.
What to put on your website to get found
The actual page-by-page content inventory. What every new-business website needs, and the pages most templates leave out.
Schema markup for new business websites
The schema types every business needs (LocalBusiness, Organization, Service) and how to add them without a developer.
How AI search actually works — new-business edition
A plain-language explanation of why ChatGPT and Perplexity matter for a local business and what gets you cited.
Why social profiles matter for AI search
Social profiles aren’t about followers — they’re entity signals AI engines use to verify you exist and match you to a category.
You don’t need a publishing schedule — you need a system
Why content calendars fail new businesses, and the lower-friction system that actually keeps publishing going past month two.
Is this content actually for you?
An honest filter. The sequence above is calibrated for a specific situation — if you’re outside it, the rest of the site has better starting points.
You fit one of these
- You’re opening a business in the next 90 days and haven’t built the digital presence yet
- You opened in the last year and already feel behind on SEO/visibility
- You have a website and Google Business Profile but neither is doing anything
- You’ve been quoted retainers by an SEO agency and want to understand what you’d actually be paying for
- You’re a one-location service business or local operator (not a multi-location chain)
These describe your situation
- You’re an established B2B operator and your traffic just dropped — go to Diagnostics & Recovery
- You’re an industrial, medical, or technical brand looking for vertical-specific guidance — go to Industries We Serve
- You want the methodology and research behind AI search — go to AI Search Foundations
- You need an enterprise multi-location SEO program — we don’t do those
Want a real human to walk through it with you?
A 30-minute call to look at what you’ve already got, what’s missing, and what to prioritize first. No pitch deck, no retainer talk — just a working session.
Book a starting-line review →