Is it worth optimizing for AI search if most locksmith calls are emergencies?
Yes. Even during a lockout, most people pull out their phone and search or ask a voice assistant before they call anyone, which means an AI-generated answer often decides which locksmith gets the call. If a business isn't named in that answer, it loses the job to whichever competitor is, regardless of how good its actual service is.
Why urgent lockout customers still start with a search or voice assistant
A person locked out of their car or home doesn't skip search entirely; they compress it. Instead of comparing five websites, they ask their phone one question, like "locksmith near me open now," and act on whatever answer comes back first. That single query, answered by Google AI Overviews, Siri, or a chatbot, now carries the full weight of a decision that used to involve several tabs and phone calls.
This shift matters because urgency doesn't remove the search step, it shrinks the decision window around it. The customer isn't reading reviews line by line or scrolling past the third listing. They're taking the first credible name the AI assistant gives them and dialing. Locksmiths who assume emergencies bypass search entirely are misreading where the actual moment of choice happens.
How AI answers shorten the path from panic to a phone call
AI search tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews now often skip the traditional list of blue links and instead give a direct, conversational answer: a name, a phone number, maybe a note about hours or service area. For a locked-out customer, that means the gap between typing a question and dialing a number has gotten much shorter, and there are fewer competing options shown along the way.
That shortened path cuts both ways for a locksmith business. If the AI tool names your business, you get a call almost immediately, often before the customer even opens a maps app or reads a review. If it names a competitor instead, you don't get a second chance in that moment. There's no scrolling to page two of results when the assistant already gave a confident, singular answer.
Why being the named answer matters most under time pressure
Under normal shopping conditions, a customer might tolerate being the fourth call after three don't answer. During a lockout, they will not. The person standing outside their car or house wants one name, one number, and a fast callback. Whoever the AI assistant surfaces first as the answer effectively becomes the only option the customer seriously considers.
This is why ranking as "one of the businesses that shows up" isn't the same as ranking as "the business the AI names." AI search tools tend to summarize and recommend a small handful of options, sometimes just one, based on signals like how clearly a business describes its services, service area, and availability. A locksmith whose online information is vague or outdated is easy for these tools to skip over, even if the business is fully capable of handling the job right now.
What planned work (rekeys, upgrades) adds on top of emergencies
Emergency lockouts are not the only jobs on a locksmith's schedule, and the search behavior around planned work looks different. Someone rekeying locks after a move, upgrading to smart locks, or scheduling commercial hardware installation has time to compare options, read more detail, and ask follow-up questions of an AI assistant before choosing who to call.
This planned-work traffic compounds the value of showing up well in AI search results. A customer researching smart lock installation might ask an AI tool several questions over a few days, and a locksmith who consistently appears as a knowledgeable, named answer across those questions builds familiarity before the first phone call ever happens. That familiarity carries over into how the same customer thinks about locksmith needs the next time there's an emergency, because they already have a name in mind.
Balancing effort against call volume
The core objection is fair: why put effort into AI search visibility if the phone already rings for genuine emergencies? The answer is that current call volume reflects only the customers who already found you, often through word of mouth, past service, or repeat business, not the larger pool of new customers who are searching right now and getting handed to a competitor by an AI assistant instead.
Weighing effort against call volume also means recognizing that visibility work isn't a one-time task competing for attention against daily service calls. It's closer to keeping accurate, complete information about services, hours, and service area visible where AI tools look for it, which pays off across every future emergency and planned job rather than needing to be redone for each one. Skipping it doesn't reduce workload; it just caps how many of those future calls ever reach the phone.
The one step that outranks everything else this month
If there's only time for one thing, make sure the AI assistants a lockout customer might ask can find a complete, accurate, current profile of the business: correct phone number, real service area, actual hours, and a clear list of services from emergency lockouts to rekeys and smart lock installs. This single fix outranks any other marketing effort this month because it's the raw material every AI search answer draws from; without it, nothing else a locksmith does to attract customers has anywhere to land.