From Oklahoma City to Tulsa, Norman to Broken Arrow — Oklahoma businesses are losing revenue to competitors with stronger Google presence. Find out your score free in 30 seconds.
Oklahoma's business landscape divides between Oklahoma City and the OKC metro — encompassing Edmond, Norman, Moore, and Yukon — and the Tulsa metro spanning Tulsa County, Broken Arrow, Owasso, and Jenks. Oklahoma City's energy, aerospace, and government sectors create a professional workforce that searches Google for every service. Edmond and Norman are two of Oklahoma's most rapidly growing communities, generating home services demand from a young, educated population. Tulsa has reinvented itself as a tech and arts hub, attracting remote workers through programs like Tulsa Remote that bring Google-native professionals from across the country.
Tulsa's Remote program has attracted thousands of professionals from major coastal markets — people accustomed to evaluating every local business through Google reviews and online presence. These new Tulsans have high expectations and limited local knowledge, making them almost exclusively Google-dependent for finding services. Oklahoma City's booming suburban corridors in Edmond and Yukon are similarly attracting young professional families who research every service purchase online. Both markets are transforming faster than local businesses are adapting.
In Oklahoma City's competitive market, home services businesses lose $2,000–$7,500 per month when their Google visibility is weak. Edmond and Norman contractors earn strong rates from the growing suburban markets, making each missed lead costly. Tulsa home services and professional services businesses lose $1,800–$6,500 monthly. Lawton, Enid, and Muskogee have low competitive bars where optimization investment quickly yields dominant results. Our free audit takes 30 seconds and scores your Oklahoma business.