Report for
Here's what I found: Top Shot Spearfishing is doing pretty well overall, but there's real money left on the table—you're passing 17 out of 24 checks, which means you're not showing up as much as you could when locals search for spearfishing services or map directions. The quickest wins? Make sure Google has your exact business name, address, and phone number locked in so you pop up in the map results people actually click on; add descriptions to your photos so they show up in image searches too; and create a FAQ section that answers the real questions your customers ask—this helps AI assistants like ChatGPT recommend *you* when someone asks about spearfishing.
When customers ask AI
Here's what I found — when we tested how AI assistants answer questions about businesses like yours, your company didn't appear in their responses. Based on how these AI systems typically work from their training data, that means potential customers asking AI for recommendations in your area might not even know you exist. The good news? This is fixable, and we'd love to help get your business showing up when customers ask AI for what you offer.
Radveo fixes all 7 of these for you — see the founding offer below ↓
Founding Member — first 100 only
Radveo does the work and a real human approves it before anything touches your Google. Your founding price is locked for as long as you stay (regular $349), with a 30-day money-back guarantee — no questions asked.
Claim my Founding-Member spot — $199/mo →Secure connection (HTTPS) · Working
Your site loads securely with HTTPS.
Page title · Needs a tweak
Your title is long (67 chars) and may get cut off in search.
Search description · Working
You have a well-sized description that reads like an ad.
Main headline · Working
You have exactly one clear headline.
Mobile-friendly · Working
Your site is set up to look right on phones.
Forward your report, or show your grade off on your site — it links back so customers can see you take getting found seriously.
Embed this badge on your site
Structured data · Working
Google can read structured data on your page.
Canonical tag · Working
You have a canonical tag so Google knows the main version of your page.
Social sharing preview · Working
Your links will show a nice preview when shared.
Content depth · Working
Your page has solid content (~733 words).
Page structure (subheadings) · Working
Your page is well-structured with 18 section headings Google can follow.
Links to your other pages · Working
You link out to your other pages (40 internal links) so people can explore.
Page language set · Working
Your page declares its language so Google serves it to the right searchers.
Site icon (favicon) · Working
You have a site icon so your tabs and listings look polished.
AI answer-ready (AEO) · Hurting you
No FAQ or question-and-answer content — AI assistants have nothing clean to quote when a customer asks about you.
AI entity clarity (AEO) · Hurting you
No clear business identity for AI — without Organization data + linked profiles, assistants can't confirm it's you and name a competitor instead.
AI can read your site (AEO) · Working
AI assistants (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI) are allowed to read and cite your site.
Local business signals · Hurting you
No local-business info that Google uses for the map pack.
Contact info (phone & address) · Working
Your phone and address are on the page — easy for customers to reach you.
Google Business Profile link · Working
You link to your Google Business Profile / Maps — great for local trust.
Local keyword in title · Needs a tweak
Your title doesn't clearly mention your city or service — adding it helps locals find you.
Image descriptions · Hurting you
Just 38% of your images are described — Google can't "see" most of your photos.
Accessible forms (a11y) · Working
No form fields to label — nothing to fix here.
Descriptive links (a11y) · Hurting you
3 vague links ("click here", "read more") — they're useless to screen-reader users and waste SEO value. Use descriptive text.
Labeled icons & buttons (a11y) · Working
Your links and buttons all have text or labels a screen reader can announce.