Example local visibility dashboard for SEO, AEO, and GEO
A non-client example showing how Lantyrn thinks about local search, answer-engine coverage, AI search readiness, directories, proof, and next-step prioritization.
Important context
This is an illustrative Lantyrn example, not a client testimonial or claimed client outcome. It is designed to make our dashboard logic visible before public client proof is available.
Example scenario
A local business wants to know why it is not showing up clearly across Google, Maps, answer engines, and AI search. The dashboard translates that problem into categories, grades, evidence, and next actions.
The business has scattered visibility signals and no clear improvement sequence.
Grade core categories: baseline, SEO, AEO, GEO, directories, content, trust, and roadmap.
Grades should be honest and directional, not inflated to make the work look better.
Indexable pages, entity consistency, schema, questions answered, citations, reviews, and proof assets.
How Lantyrn would approach it
Establish baseline
Review public pages, metadata, local intent, crawlability, content depth, schema, and obvious trust gaps.
Separate SEO, AEO, and GEO
Show where traditional search, answer engines, and generative AI recommendation signals overlap and where they differ.
Turn findings into roadmap
Prioritize the next pages, profile work, proof assets, citations, or conversion improvements that should happen first.
Track category movement
Use the dashboard to show which category moved, why it moved, and what still blocks an A-grade score.
What this would make easier
- Clear visibility categories instead of vague SEO advice
- Better prioritization for local search and AI search work
- A shared source of truth for owners, advisors, and operators
- A dashboard structure that can absorb reviews, testimonials, and proof later
Questions this proof snapshot answers
Is this based on a real client dashboard?
This is an illustrative proof snapshot that reflects Lantyrn’s dashboard approach without making public client claims.
What categories belong in a local visibility dashboard?
Useful categories include baseline, SEO, AEO, GEO, content, directories, trust, competitors, roadmap, and next steps.
Can a dashboard improve rankings by itself?
No. A dashboard helps diagnose, prioritize, and track work. Rankings improve when the underlying pages, profiles, citations, content, reviews, and proof signals improve.