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ChatGPT vs Google AI Overviews: where your next locksmith customer will look first

A locked-out driver at 11pm doesn't search the way a homeowner comparing rekey quotes does. Here's how ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews handle those different moments, and what that means for where a locksmith business should show up.

· 4 minute read

Google AI Overviews and ChatGPT answer locksmith-related questions in different ways because they pull from different sources and serve different moments of intent. Google AI Overviews, built into search results, tends to favor map-based local results and business listings for "near me" urgency. ChatGPT, when connected to web browsing, tends to synthesize written content like reviews, guides, and service pages. For a locksmith, that means your visibility depends on which surface a customer opens and what they're trying to do when they open it.

How each surface handles an urgent lockout query differently

A person locked out of their car at night types a short, urgent query and wants a phone number in seconds, not a paragraph of explanation. Google AI Overviews responds to that urgency by surfacing local business panels, maps, and click-to-call options alongside any summarized text. ChatGPT, especially in a conversational app without a map interface, is more likely to describe what to look for in an emergency locksmith and may name businesses only if it can browse the web in that session. The practical result is that lockout traffic still leans toward Google, while ChatGPT plays a larger role earlier in the decision, before the emergency happens.

Which engine leans on maps and which leans on web text

Google's AI Overview sits on top of an ecosystem built around Google Business Profile, maps, and local pack results, so proximity and verified business data carry heavy weight in what gets shown. ChatGPT has no native map layer of its own; it reasons over text it can access, meaning articles, directory pages, and review content matter more to how it describes or recommends a locksmith. A business with a well-optimized Google Business Profile gains an advantage on Google's surface, while a business with substantive, published information about its services gains an advantage inside ChatGPT's answers.

This distinction matters because the two engines are not competing for the same query in the same way. Someone asking "locksmith near me" in Google is almost certainly going to see a map-driven answer. Someone asking ChatGPT "what should I look for in a trustworthy locksmith" or "how much does rekeying a house typically involve" is in research mode, and the answer ChatGPT gives will be shaped by whatever web text it can draw on, not by which business happens to be closest.

Where paid ads still appear and where they don't

Paid search ads continue to appear above or alongside traditional Google search results and, in many cases, alongside AI Overview panels, giving locksmiths a way to buy visibility even when organic map ranking is competitive. ChatGPT, in its standard conversational interface, does not sell ad placement the way Google search does, so a locksmith cannot currently pay to appear inside a ChatGPT answer the way they can bid on a Google Ads campaign. This creates a split: paid spend still buys attention on Google's surfaces, while influence inside ChatGPT's answers depends on what's written about the business elsewhere on the web, not on ad budget.

That split changes how a locksmith should think about spend versus content. A pay-per-click campaign aimed at emergency lockout keywords can still put a phone number in front of a driver stranded outside their car, because that inventory exists on Google. But no comparable paid lane exists yet to influence what ChatGPT says about a business, which means earning a mention there depends on the same things that earn a mention in any written source: clear service pages, credible reviews, and consistent information about hours, service area, and specialties.

How the customer's device shapes which engine they use

A driver locked out of their car is almost always on a phone, and phone behavior for urgent local needs still runs heavily through Google search or Google Maps, either by habit or because that's the default assistant on the device. A homeowner researching whether to rekey locks after moving in, comparing smart lock installation options, or trying to understand what a service call usually costs is more likely to be at a laptop or using a conversational AI app during a calmer moment, which is where ChatGPT sees more use. The device and the moment together decide which engine gets asked.

This means a locksmith's two customer types, the person in crisis and the person planning ahead, are sorted almost automatically by circumstance. The emergency customer defaults to whatever is fastest on their phone, usually Google. The planning customer has more patience to type a fuller question into a chat interface and read a longer answer, which plays to ChatGPT's strengths as a research tool rather than a dispatch tool.

Deciding where to focus limited time

A locksmith business with limited hours to spend on marketing should weigh where each type of customer actually looks. Keeping a Google Business Profile accurate, complete, and active protects the emergency lockout traffic that still runs through Google's map-driven results and AI Overview panels. Publishing clear, specific information about services, service area, and pricing structure on a website protects the slower-moving research traffic that increasingly touches ChatGPT before a customer ever calls.

Neither surface can be ignored outright, because they capture different halves of the same customer base. A locksmith that only optimizes for Google's map pack may show up for lockouts but stay invisible in the written answers ChatGPT gives to someone comparing options before they need emergency help. A locksmith that only publishes strong web content but neglects its Google Business Profile risks losing the higher-frequency, higher-urgency traffic that still defaults to a map and a phone number. The efficient path is treating profile accuracy and website content as two separate but equally maintained assets, not choosing one over the other.

The clearest way to think about this split is that Google AI Overviews still rewards proximity and profile accuracy for the customer who needs help right now, while ChatGPT rewards clear, specific written content for the customer who is still deciding, and a locksmith business that wants to be found in both moments has to maintain both kinds of visibility rather than picking a single surface to win.

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