This editorial library covers, point by point, the 25 criteria analysed by Arkhoni to map your local competition and identify your opportunities. Each point comes with a clear explanation, a concrete example drawn from the real life of a small business, and the benefits you get from it. The 25 points are organised into 7 thematic sections.
Mapping and identification
1Mapping and identification
Direct competitors in your category
This point identifies all the companies doing the same business as you within the chosen radius (5, 15, 30 or 50 km). The AI cross-references public sources (Google Maps, OpenStreetMap, Google Business profiles) so as not to stop at the three or four competitors you already know.
Example: A hairdresser in the 15th arrondissement may face ten other salons within a 5 km radius, half of which never appear in their daily field of vision.
The benefits: You discover the true competitive density around you and miss no direct player, which radically changes your perception of the market.
2Mapping and identification
Indirect competitors and related activities
The AI detects the companies that serve the same customer need as you, even if their business category differs. A customer need is not a company registration category.
Example: A beauty salon can be an indirect competitor of a hairdresser when it now also offers cuts and blow-dries alongside treatments.
The benefits: You identify competitors no one would spontaneously put on your list, and you understand where the real pressure on your revenue comes from.
3Mapping and identification
Interactive map with filters
All the identified competitors are displayed on an interactive map with filters by rating, distance and business category. You can explore your market geographically.
Example: For a restaurant owner, seeing at a glance all the restaurants rated 4.5★ and above within 1 km changes the reading of the competition.
The benefits: A synthetic map view supports strategic decisions (catchment area, repositioning, relocation, opening a second address).
4Mapping and identification
Precise distances and geographic coordinates
The AI calculates the exact as-the-crow-flies distance between your address and each competitor of the analysed TOP. This lets you prioritise what is genuinely close.
Example: A garage 11 km away from a potential customer doesn't weigh as much as a competitor 800 metres away, even if both appear in Google Maps.
The benefits: You distinguish immediate competition from distant competition, which helps prioritise the actions to take.
5Mapping and identification
Competitors' website presence and condition
For each TOP competitor, the AI checks whether a website exists and its visible fundamentals: secure connection (HTTPS), mobile readability and a working link from the Google profile. A simple public visit suffices; no private data is used.
Example: A florist discovers that 4 of their 9 TOP competitors have no website at all and that 2 others display an insecure site: their digital shop window becomes an immediate advantage.
The benefits: You spot the digitally vulnerable competitors and measure the real effort required to take the lead on the local web.
Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
6Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
Each competitor's average Google rating
The AI retrieves the average rating given by customers on Google for each competitor identified in the TOP. This rating is one of the three most-watched criteria before a local purchase.
Example: An average rating of 4.7★ at a direct competitor is a major signal when yours stands at 4.1★.
The benefits: You immediately see where you stand on the scale of quality perceived by customers.
7Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
Number of verified reviews
Review volume weighs as much as the average rating. A competitor at 4.5★ with 250 reviews inspires more trust than another at 4.9★ with only 8 reviews.
Example: For a restaurant owner, going from 30 to 100 Google reviews in 6 months radically changes their visibility in the local pack.
The benefits: You identify your review gap with the leaders and set realistic, quantified goals to close it.
8Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
Composite Google ranking
An Arkhoni composite score calculated from the average rating, the number of reviews, the establishment's age and the completeness of the Google Business profile. It is the criterion closest to the logic of Google's algorithm.
Example: Two competitors with the same rating (4.5★) can have very different composite scores: one established for 8 years with a perfect profile, the other for 6 months with an incomplete profile.
The benefits: You understand Google's ranking logic and see where to focus your efforts to climb the local TOP.
9Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
Sentiment analysis of recent reviews (AI)
The AI reads recent Google reviews to detect the dominant feeling: satisfaction, frustration, trust, disappointment. This reveals dynamics that the average rating doesn't show.
Example: A shop rated 4.3★ for years may be tipping over: its recent reviews mention waiting problems, where they used to praise the welcome.
The benefits: You detect the weak signals of a coming drop, at your business and your competitors', before they show up in the average rating.
10Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
Recurring strengths and weaknesses (AI)
The AI identifies the strengths and weaknesses that recur in each competitor's reviews: welcome, prices, quality, waiting time, cleanliness, etc. It is a qualitative reading you wouldn't have time to do by hand.
Example: A restaurant may discover that its well-rated competitors are systematically praised for their "warm welcome", ground where it can take the lead with minimal effort.
The benefits: You turn review reading into a concrete competitive advantage by identifying the differentiation levers to activate.
11Ratings, customer reviews and reputation
Review reply rate
The AI measures the share of Google reviews each establishment replies to, at your business and at your TOP competitors'. This public data, visible on every profile, is a strong engagement signal for customers and for the local algorithm.
Example: A restaurant owner finds that the leader in their area replies to 90% of reviews, positive and negative, while they haven't handled any for a year.
The benefits: You discover that the review race is also played on follow-up quality, and you gain a free, immediate lever for progress.
Activity and footfall
12Activity and footfall
Detailed opening hours
The AI retrieves the opening hours published by each TOP competitor, day by day. Gaps in opening hours can explain gaps in footfall.
Example: A hairdresser open on Monday morning while all their competitors are closed can capture a significant off-peak clientele.
The benefits: You identify the time slots not covered by the competition and can adjust your opening range accordingly.
13Activity and footfall
Busy times (Popular Times)
Public footfall data by day and hour, where available in Google. This reveals when your competitors are at full capacity.
Example: A restaurant that sees its competitor full on Tuesday lunchtime but empty on Friday evening better understands the make-up of the local clientele.
The benefits: You adapt your promotional campaigns, your staffing and your communication to the real peaks in demand.
14Activity and footfall
Photos and public presentation
The AI examines the photos and descriptions publicly displayed by each TOP competitor. Visual freshness weighs on the customer's decision.
Example: A beauty salon that hasn't updated its photos for 3 years sends a signal of neglect, even if the quality of service remains excellent.
The benefits: You know whether you are visually competitive in your market and identify the refreshes to plan.
15Activity and footfall
Google profile freshness
The AI records the date of the latest photos and Google posts of each TOP competitor. A maintained profile signals an active establishment; a frozen profile sends the opposite signal.
Example: A bakery updates its photos every season while its competitors haven't published anything in 18 months: at equal rating, it is the one that reassures the passing customer.
The benefits: You know what publishing pace is enough to appear more alive than your market, often with less effort.
Market and opportunities
16Market and opportunities
Local market saturation level
A calculation of the number of players relative to the geographic area, to estimate whether your local market is saturated or under-exploited.
Example: A town with 12 hairdressers for 8,000 inhabitants is saturated; a town with 3 hairdressers for 12,000 inhabitants offers obvious opportunities.
The benefits: You take investment decisions (opening, hiring, repositioning) based on real figures rather than impressions.
17Market and opportunities
Detected local opportunities (AI)
The AI cross-references ratings, reviews, player density and market data to spot the opportunities to seize: strong demand with few well-rated players, poorly covered segments, unoccupied niches.
Example: In one area, the AI may detect that all competitors' reviews mention the lack of a specific service (delivery, extended hours, mobile payment, etc.).
The benefits: You get a list of concrete opportunities rather than an abstract analysis, immediately usable in your action plan.
18Market and opportunities
Geographic white spots (AI)
Identification of the sub-areas where demand exists but few competitors are established. A map reveals these white spots.
Example: A paramedical practice may discover that 4 km from its address, a residential area has no practitioner of its speciality within 15 minutes.
The benefits: You identify territories for expansion or targeted communication, where local competition is minimal.
19Market and opportunities
Temporal market trends (AI)
The AI analyses the observable changes: new entrants, closures, review growth at certain players, weak signals of market transformation.
Example: In a given area, the AI may detect that over 12 months 3 new players arrived, 1 closed and 2 strongly increased their Google reviews: the market is moving.
The benefits: You anticipate changes in your local market rather than endure them, and prepare your counter-strategies.
Competitors' advertising strategy
20Competitors' advertising strategy
Active Meta ads (Facebook and Instagram)
Automatic detection of the Facebook and Instagram campaigns currently running at each TOP competitor, via the official Meta Ad Library (public data made available by Meta).
Example: A local shop may discover that one of its competitors is running 4 different Instagram ads targeting the same geographic area, with manifestly regular budgets.
The benefits: You know exactly who is investing in social visibility around you, in which formats and at what frequency, to decide your response.
21Competitors' advertising strategy
Google Ads (sponsored listings)
Detection of the competitors that appear in sponsored Google listings on relevant local queries (the "Ad" label at the top of results), via a specialised service that queries the ads automatically.
Example: A garage owner who sees a competitor investing in Google Ads on "garage 75015" queries knows that competitor is capturing demand that should come to them naturally.
The benefits: You identify the competitors spending on commercial visibility and can adjust your local SEO strategy so you don't depend on ads.
Your positioning
22Your positioning
Arkhoni Local Score
Your positioning score from 0 to 100, calculated from your visibility, your reviews, your profile and your public activity. Above 80: you dominate locally. Around 60: you are competitive. Below 50: you are at risk.
Example: A local shop with an Arkhoni Local Score of 42 must first strengthen its Google profile and reviews before any other investment.
The benefits: You get a single synthetic indicator to track your progress over time, month after month.
23Your positioning
Your exact position in the ranking
You know precisely where you stand among the competitors identified within your radius: 7th out of 22 at 5 km, 18th out of 47 at 15 km, etc.
Example: Knowing your exact place changes the reading: being 7th out of 22 in a dense market is nothing like being 7th out of 8 in a weakly competitive one.
The benefits: You replace intuition ("I must be among the good ones") with a precise, actionable data point.
24Your positioning
Comparison of your offer with competitors' (AI)
The AI compares what you publicly highlight (Google Business description, photos, listed services) with what your well-ranked competitors highlight. The gaps become visible.
Example: If your 3 TOP competitors all highlight a service you also offer but mention nowhere publicly, you are losing visibility and ranking without knowing it.
The benefits: You identify precisely the communication gaps to fix in order to align or differentiate.
Action plan and recommendations
25Action plan and recommendations
Personalised action plan based on your position
At the end of a one-off analysis, the AI selects the most relevant recommendations for your actual situation, but it first delivers the priority recommendation to apply. If you are outside the TOP, this first action aims to help you enter it; if you are already in it, it aims to move you up. The following 11 recommendations are delivered through subsequent analyses or monthly tracking.
Example: For a shop outside the TOP, the first actions typically concern Google profile completeness and review collection. For a shop in the TOP, work focuses instead on review sentiment and differentiation.
The benefits: You receive recommendations suited to your real context rather than generic advice, and you know exactly what to do month after month.
This library is the complete reference for the 25 points: the site's main page links here directly, with no duplicated content.
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