COMPLIMENTARY · 30 SECONDS · FOR DEALER PRINCIPALS
A half-million dollars of gear is waiting in your listening room. The question isn't the equipment. It's the audience.
The sale happens in the room. Stylus down, lights low, the right recording through a system that's been dialed in for years — that moment is what closes a customer, and no one has to tell you how well it works.
The harder question is what happens an hour earlier, when that same customer is standing in a kitchen three towns over, phone in hand, deciding where to drive.
This report tells you what they see. It runs in about thirty seconds, requires nothing but your store name, and produces real numbers about your real storefront — the same signals a serious listener uses to choose between you and the dealer across the county.
A new generation is listening again.
Your long-standing clients — the collectors you've guided through three or four systems over the years — aren't going anywhere. But they aren't the whole room anymore.
A second audience has arrived. Listeners in their thirties and forties, fluent in streaming but tired of it, are rediscovering the idea of a dedicated room, a proper source, and speakers that disappear. They want what you've spent a career curating.
They begin the way every buyer begins now: on a phone, in a search bar, with phrases like turntable shop or HiFi dealer near me. The only open question is whose listening room they end up sitting in.
What the report covers.
Four measurements, written in the language of the showroom rather than the language of SEO.
Presence across the 31 places a buyer might look.
We check the 31 directories and map services that feed every local search — Google, Apple Maps, Yelp, Facebook, and the rest. The report tells you where you're listed, where you aren't, and where your address or phone number has drifted out of date. Inconsistent listings are quietly the most common problem we find, and almost always the easiest to fix.
Your rank, shoulder to shoulder with every other dealer nearby.
You see your exact position on Google Maps for the searches that matter in your market, alongside every other audio dealer in range. The report shows who sits above you and why — the difference between earning the visit and handing it to the shop two exits away.
The first impression, before a single note is played.
Reviews, star rating, how recently and how thoughtfully you respond. This is the lobby your customer passes through before they ever hear the system. We summarize what it currently conveys about the room they're about to enter.
Whether your website holds them long enough to act.
A slow mobile site loses the customer who already found you, clicked, and was ready to drive over. The report measures load time and mobile experience so you know whether the site is earning the visit or quietly returning it.
The baseline, candidly.
The average HiFi dealer we audit scores 43% on online visibility.
For a specialist with two decades in the business, a properly voiced pair of demo rooms, and gear on the floor that costs more than most cars on the lot outside, a 43 isn't a reflection of the store. It's a reflection of the signals the store happens to be sending, most of them inherited from a phone book era and never deliberately tuned.
It isn't a product issue, and it isn't a pricing issue. It's a visibility issue — the kind that responds quickly once it's measured.
The encouraging part: most of what the report flags is straightforward to correct. Seeing the number is the first move.
Built for one industry.
We are Amplify HiFi, and home audio is the only industry we serve. Not restaurants, not dentists, not a broad bucket of "local businesses" — dealers with showrooms, listening rooms, and inventory that deserves to be heard. The report is free in the simple sense of the word, with no intake call attached, and what you do with the findings is entirely your own.
Run your report.
Thirty seconds. Delivered instantly. Your store name is all we need to begin.
Your data is held in confidence and never sold. Amplify HiFi exists to serve dealers, not market at them.