My AI agents scrape Google Maps to make $$ in BORING businesses
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So, you want to start a boring business that prints cash, but you don't have the right idea. So, you go on YouTube or you go on X and you see start an HVAC business, start a plumbing business. But the reality is a lot of those businesses are really competitive and difficult to get into. So, I brought on the boring marketer and he shared he revealed his sauce for how to find startup ideas in boring spaces that print money. And he does so by using these NAN workflows that scrapes Google Maps data and then he actually uses AI to power the whole business. Now, I was hoping he was going to share this and I had to convince him, but he finally did. And this entire episode is about how to actually find these ideas, how to actually build these businesses, and actually how to quietly print money with boring businesses using AI. Thank you to the boring marketer for spilling the sauce and thank you to Hostinger for sponsoring this episode. Enjoy the episode. Like, comment so we can get started. >> We got the boring marketer on the pod. James, by the end of this episode, what are people gonna take out of it? >> I want to help people find the perfect niche to go and start a boring local business. I think that this is a very overlooked opportunity. Everyone's trying to create a sexy SAS and I want them to kind of look in their backyard for opportunities that can get them going. >> And are you going to use AI to help them figure that that out? >> Of course. Always do. We're going to we're going to look at some workflows, some cool AI use cases, and uh we're going to talk a little bit about how I've used this information for my own boring local business that's doing pretty well right now. >> Yeah. So, basically, there's this unfair advantage using AI to figure out which boring business to actually create. And James, by the end of this episode, are people going to have like the confidence, the prompts, the workflows to do this? >> Yep. They're going to have clear ideas what they should go attack. They're going to have some frameworks for how to think about what niche they should go after and I'm going to walk them through workflows that, you know, they can copy and use on their own if they want. >> Great. Let's get into it. >> Let's do it. All right. So, uh, you know, last time I was on, Greg, uh, I was telling you about, uh, Diesel Dudes, which is, >> uh, the local boring business that I started with one of my friends, uh, here in the Carolinas. And uh since I was on uh that business has grown to do like a consistent like $30,000 a month uh in a very short amount of time. Like honestly, I've been pretty much blown away by like how quickly it's it's taken hold. And I've been doing some reflecting on like why it worked out well. And I'm going to try to translate some of the key like patterns that I've seen so far uh in its success. So, there's a few things that people should be thinking about if they want to enter into the boring local business space. And uh the first thing is that you want to find underserved opportunities. So, you know, you look on X or whatever and there's a bunch of like MBAs and stuff like that and everyone's like, I'm going to go and start rolling up plumbing companies or HVAC companies or accounting firms and everyone's thinking about the same like three to five niches uh when they want to, you know, get into this uh type of space. So, what I think people should really be looking at is uh they should be going deeper and kind of ignoring the ones that everyone else is doing. Um, what do I mean by that? Um, if you think about like home services for example, um, there's all these like little micro niches that have very high uh, order value or customer value. So, I'll just ramble off a few and some people might know what these are, some people might not, but hardcaping. So, these are people that come and build like retaining walls at a house. Um, smart home automations or irrigation systems at a home. Uh these are like three to $5,000 uh services um on one job that someone comes out and accomplishes in basically a day. Um other ones that I really like uh closet redesign and organization sounds super niche, but there's a lot of wealthy people that want nice closets, believe it or not. The other one, garage organization and renovation. So my garage is an absolute disaster. I had a guy come out and give me a quote on like refinishing my garage and making it look nice and it was like a $15,000 quote. I was blown away. Um, I need to sell a lot more like local business services in order to go and do that. Uh, but I was I was pretty surprised as how few people were serving that market and how valuable a potential customer was. So, high customer value, underserved markets. So, the next question someone might ask is, "That sounds great, but how in the world do I actually find something like that?" And that's where AI is going to come into play. >> All right, you caught my attention. >> All right, cool. So, the first the first thing that someone needs to do is basically take what I said, take that transcript right there. I want to find underserved local business ideas that don't include plumbing and HVAC and all the common ones you see people talking about on X. I need a high customer value and I need this to be like an underserved market. So there's not a ton of providers. Um, you know, you can say list out 20 different potential niches uh in various locations. Locations that I like to target are referred to as like tier 2 cities or tier three cities. So don't think about like Los Angeles or New York or, you know, Chicago or San Diego or something like that. I live in Charlotte. There's a ton of opportunity here. Think about like Nashville or Atlanta or, you know, uh Dallas, Texas or Denver, Colorado. They're growing quick. They have uh you know, wealthy people that are like moving there in droves. And that tells me that there's probably a lot of demand uh for services and not enough providers uh that can actually go and do the work. So, you get a list of hypotheses, right? That's where I started. And then the next thing that you're going to do is you're going to run those hypotheses through a workflow like this that I'm about to show you. This is a local uh niche research workflow. And uh I'm going to walk you through kind of the main points here. And you know, this is like a pretty complicated workflow as you can see. Um it took a long time to actually build it out, but it has a lot of value. And um in terms of this workflow, uh it's going to be available in the marketers community. I'm just going to give it away for free there so that people can come up with all kinds of ideas. So if you want it, uh go to uh the vibearketer.com, sign up. You'll find this inside as like a community benefit. But uh what it's going to do is it's going to look at one of my favorite treasure troves for market intelligence and opportunity identification, and that's Google Maps. So, if you're looking for a service locally, one of the first things that you look at is Google. You're not going to chat GPT to find like local businesses that you want to go and hire. You're probably going to go to Google. You're going to look at reviews. You're going to see, you know, businesses that are close to you and all that. So, we created a scraper that goes out and takes these hypotheses for ideas and locations and runs them through this workflow in order to validate it, collect a bunch of data, and then let AI kind of synthesize it and tell you if it's a good idea or not. Make sense so far? >> Yeah, absolutely. >> All right, cool. So, um, basically, like I said, you're going to specify the niche and location that you want. It must be like a city and state, and then you can have like multiple keywords. So, we're going to go out and scrape Google Maps. So, we're going to look at the titles of different businesses, their domain, their address, their contact info, and we're going to collect the reviews. So, we're not just going to like look at the actual reviews. We want to understand review volume and velocity for one. So, why volume and velocity? To me, that's a good uh signal that there's a lot of demand in the market. You know, we don't want to go into a market where there's like five Google reviews out there. We want enough volume coming through that we know that there's plenty of customer demand. And then what we're going to do is actually look at those reviews and gather the sentiment around that service. So imagine, you know, you can go and find a niche that has, you know, hundreds of reviews every month, but customers are generally not happy. To me, that sounds like opportunity or arbitrage, right? Next thing we're going to look at social presence. We're going to get Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn details of all of these businesses. We're going to capture what times these businesses are open. You know, for instance, maybe there's a gap uh in terms of, you know, certain businesses don't have nighttime hours or something like that. And this could be like an emergency service that that people need. Um, so after we gather all of that data with this workflow, we're going to create some calculations. I kind of mentioned these a little bit, but how fast are new reviews coming in? How many players exist in that niche locally? um are customers satisfied? Is consistent service being offered? We're going to look at like the top uh 10 and the bottom 10 players and uh and really kind of identify who the market leaders are. So um next step like I said AI market analysis. So, we're going to get the data. Then, we're going to look at uh the patterns across the niches, missing high potential ideas within the niche, uh certain angles that a business could play on, um what the opportunities are, etc. So, I'll just give you like a quick look at uh at what that looks like, and then I want to touch on how uh you can set up uh workflows like this really, really quickly and uh and save a lot of money doing so. All right. So, here's um here's an example of the output. So, I ran it through uh like Charlotte, for example, and I've got landscaping. I've got cosmetic dentistry. I've got wedding uh design services, destination wedding planning, luxury tax advisory services, estate planning attorney for high netw worth individuals, smart home automation installation, luxury home security systems, exotic car detailing services, uh custom car wraps, body contouring med spa, dermal fillers, sports chiropractor, custom pool builder, and outdoor kitchen designer. So, we've got a lot of really interesting, unique markets that aren't the ones that, you know, everyone's typically trying to go after. >> Yeah. I mean, someone I will say someone's going to be looking at this and they're going to be like, "All right, but I don't know the first thing about car wrapping." >> Yeah. >> So, what do you say to someone like that? Well, uh, what I say to someone like that, you know, the the big opportunity here, you don't necessarily have to go and be an expert in any one of these markets to create a successful business here. So, let's say you know nothing about car rapping, but cars kind of interest you or something like that. One way you could play this is you could start a local newsletter uh that attracts the end customer. So maybe for instance you start a local newsletter on car meetups in the area or something like that. You know there's all kinds of them. I see like coffee and cars or you know antique car uh meetups or enthusiast groups. Enthusiast groups are also a great market to to think about. So think about creating like a newsletter or a directory that's sort of broad within the niche. So that's one way that you can leverage AI quickly. You could vibe code up a directory site. You could vibe code a newsletter landing page and then you could use some of the claude code SEO tactics that I talked about in our last video to get traffic to that site to get subscribers. Right after you get subscribers, that puts you in a totally different position to attack a market. You're not going and to the to the exotic car uh you know, service companies or whatever and saying, "Hey, like I'm starting an agency. I really want to help you grow your business." you know, they get hundreds of those types of uh messages a month. You're saying, "Hey, I have one of the top newsletters in the local market with a bunch of car enthusiasts and I want to figure out how I can pass some on to you and I think it would really benefit your business. Is there a way that we could partner up or something like that?" So, I I think that's the way to frame it and to think about it. Um, you know, you don't have to be an expert. If you know how to use some of these AI tools, you can attack these markets and really help out another one of these types of businesses. >> Yeah. I think the way to think about it is you're not going to be in the car rapping business. You're actually going to be in the media business, like the car media business. And people think that the media business is actually a bad business to be in. Because when they think of the media business, they think of like, you know, Time Warner or Kai Nast, you know, these big media conglomerates that have spent billions of dollars incubating and building these media assets. The difference today is, uh, you know, it just doesn't cost that much to create the media, you know, with all these AI tools. So if you can actually go and you know attract a highv value customer uh you know and and then ultimately pass them off from a lead genen perspective to someone else get a cut of that your margin is going to be super high your costs are going to be pretty low and your competition is going to be low and that's why I'm that's why I'm interested you still have my attention. Like think about it. If if you're going and trying to create like a national media company for like you know vehicles and cars or something like that, there's going to be a lot of competition. Good luck. >> Yeah. Good luck. Have fun. Like go on Instagram. There's pages with like millions of followers. There's established websites getting, you know, millions of visitors a month. But if you narrow that down into a local niche and you create, you know, the best kind of like vehicle media company in uh, you know, Nashville, Tennessee or something like that, your competition is going to be, you know, much smaller. And those media companies, if they even do exist, they're not an expert in leveraging AI to automate a lot of facets of this business, create highquality content quickly, and move fast. So, I think that that's really kind of one of the opportunities for people in terms of this arbitrage uh that's out there. >> And and in terms of like how big could this be? Like Nashville car wrapping like you know, are we talking $50,000 a year of profit, $200,000 a year of profit? Like what are you thinking? >> I mean, I can speak to like uh to the mobile diesel mechanic uh business in Charlotte and Colombia, right? If you think about that, uh, you know, top of your mind is probably it probably doesn't sound like that big of an opportunity. Uh, however, um, average customer size currently is $1,600 per job. Um, we get probably 10 inbound phone calls every single day. We can't even service all of the calls that we're getting right now. We're trying to hire up to keep up with the demand. So um you know I think that this alone could be like a multiple sevenf figureure business in two uh locations. So once we figure out those two locations and we have the playbook and we can scale that out or whatever um you know it can be really really significant. Um again uh I'm going the route where I'm actually building out this infrastructure and the operations and hiring the people but you don't have to do that. If I were doing it the way that we're talking about with more of a lead genen play or a lead genen model, uh there's really kind of two ways that you can approach that. Uh one is, you know, you create that newsletter uh type thing and uh you you acquire the end customers and you go to the business and you say, "Hey, like um I'm going to uh sell you leads for $100, $200 a piece or something like that." You know, if a company's got like a $1,600 average customer value, they would happily pay that. That's probably what they pay on Google Ads or something to get a a hot qualified call coming into their business. And this is just another channel that could add some incremental opportunities for them. So, you know, imagine if you uh are able to get, I don't know, 200 300 uh phone calls or hot leads a month for a business in in one of these markets that clearly have enough demand. I mean, your costs are pretty low. It could be a 20 $30,000 a month company right there. >> All right, let's continue. >> All right, cool. Um, all right. So, uh, something that I want to highlight when setting up a workflow like this, let's say you're an entrepreneur or something just kind of getting, you know, a business like this going, you want to keep costs low, you want to move quickly. Uh, one of the tools that you should think about, uh, which I use for this workflow is Hostinger. So uh Hostinger uh allows you to create virtual private servers for your inadin workflows. So you know typically uh people would go to NADN and they would sign up for a hosting account here. Uh and they would be you know limited in terms of the amount of workflows they can run per month and they'd be spending you know anywhere from 20 to 50 to 100 or $200 a month to to run these workflows and host them uh online. So >> wait so James Yeah. When when when you say that like I see the concurrent execution. So basically NAD limits the amount of workflow executions you can do at a given time. Is that what you're saying? >> Yeah. You get a certain amount of workflow runs per month per plan. So on the $20 plan you get like $2 and a half thousand. $50 plan you get 10,000. Uh you know bigger point is that uh you know it's $50 a month. We already subscribe to a lot of SAS tools. I have so many and I'm like always trying to cut my costs. So I use Hostinger for this and I was able to you know get this hosted on the cloud uh for you know between like five and and $7. So and I can create unlimited workflows on there and uh and scale this up. So in terms of like cost and scalability I think this is something people should look at uh when they're when they're working with like tools like inadin. >> Cool. >> Yep. So easy process. Choose your plan. Uh, you know, once you log into Hostinger, uh, there's a virtual private server item over on the menu. You're just going to add a new virtual private server. Uh, select your location where you want your server to be. Just type in inade. Select it. Hit next. You'll create a password uh to log in with. Um, I didn't select these additional features. You can if you want. And uh you know once you're in you'll just create some inadin credentials and uh you'll be able to log directly into uh to your workflows there and uh it's self-hosted on your own private server for for a lot cheaper than what you might typically uh pay. If you want to self-host your workflows super easy. You just go to hostinger.com/sip10s sip10 to support the channel. >> Cool. Yeah. Cheaper and and more workflows. for less. So yeah, so yeah, like basically, you know, we're getting the data here and uh I'll run through it a little bit uh more before we go to the next stage. So I just wanted to talk about a couple of these like unique angles within these markets. So uh for landscaping, you don't need to go and start like a landscaping business. You could be the eco-friendly or sustainable landscaping service that you know specializes in water features and koi pond installation or something like that, right? So, um, you know, there's a lot of money in these micro niches in local markets. That's the main point that I want people to kind of take away. And Google Maps is like a great data source uh to go and look at, hey, is there a high number of reviews? Uh, are there not that many providers in the market? And kind of look at those, pattern match a little bit. And, uh, it's a great way to, uh, you know, get over that, uh, you know, mental tail spin of like, I don't know what niche to target or or whatnot. So let AI help you there and uh and work with some data for it. Um so let's just take an example like let's say you decided to uh pick the cosmetic dentistry market or something like that and uh perhaps you have like a sub angle or a subniche within it. Maybe you focus on like you know uh family service and and you work well with kids or something like that. I don't know. So, uh, I fed in all of the the review sentiment and the pain points that are coming from this Google Maps information into another, uh, workflow, which is a newsletter creation workflow. So, this workflow here, it's going to feed in this data. We have an AI agent that's going to look at all of it. It's going to come up with a bunch of ideas in terms of like uh your topic, your angle, subject lines, uh and some business rationale to uh to decide if this is like a good newsletter issue or a good newsletter angle. So, uh this creates amazing newsletters uh after it's able to collect all that Google Maps data. It's got a wealth of of context that it's feeding into the agent and uh you know, I was really pleased with kind of like how it came out. Um, so yeah, hits on all the pain points someone might be thinking about. Uh, again, you could integrate things like local events or uh, you know, links or, you know, things of interest that the market might be into and then you're addressing all the pain points and you've got a bunch of content uh, that you can send out uh, to get those leads. >> It almost sounds too easy, dude. You know what I mean? >> I know. I know. >> Yeah. cuz like kind of what you're saying is like all right so I'm going to I'm going to use Google Maps which by the way I've never even thought of using Google Maps as the data source but makes complete sense so I'm going to use Google Maps data source to find reviews and I'm going to find niches with sort of bad reviews with high velocity so I'm going to find really good niches validated and then you're you're going to use AI to actually essentially build the media um completely reusing the words that people are using in Google reviews and just set it out on autopilot and just execute on this. >> Exactly. Exactly. I mean, you could use any any of the newsletter tools out there to build like a fast landing page or whatever. Um you know, build out some location or uh service pages or whatever that looks like. I mean, again, you could go to Chad GPT and say, "Hey, like here's the niche that I chose. Uh, it's going to be cosmetic dentistry. Uh, what other like SEO pages or whatever could I put on here to get people to come and sign up for my newsletter?" And, uh, you know, you don't need to go crazy and go into all the SEO keyword research tools and all that. I didn't do any of that for Diesel Dudes. And we get all of our traffic and and leads from the search research I did on on GPT5. So, uh, that's really all you need to do. And I think this is a massive arbitrage. Like, and and nobody's really talking about it, which blows my mind. >> You say nobody's really talking about it. Nobody is talking about it. Literally, on my timeline, it's literally, it's all the same things. HVAC, plumbing, uh, you know, pool cleaning, it's all the same thing. And what's going to happen is you're going to have a bunch of people who are just going to who have no business, you know, building in that space, go into an extremely competitive space with, by the way, a bunch of sharks. There's like a bunch of like >> Oh, yeah. >> Wall Street funded, you know, competition. And I know some of these people um and you're they're going to get their, you know, lunch eaten. >> Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, like if you know enough about AI to be dangerous, you can build workflows, you can use, you know, the tools that are out there, things like that. Um, this presents a great opportunity for you to create like a lowcost business by doing the research, right? Like find those underserved markets in in these tier 2 and tier three cities. find your angle, create the media asset, and then you can resell the leads, you can get verified partners, whatever. You could do that to fund actually creating your own uh operation if that's what you want to do after you learn enough uh over time. >> All right, man. Well, I appreciate you sharing the sauce. Um you could have kept this one to yourself, but you're too good of a person. I I app that's why I love you. I'm sure I'm going to get uh get some competitors that are going to be uh trying to get into this and stuff, but but that's okay. There's plenty of room for everybody to eat in this like local niche uh boring business space if they can use AI >> mobile diesel gals. >> That's right. That's right. Plenty of business. Maybe I can uh send them some of our lead overflow that we have. >> Um I appreciate you. If people want to learn more about workflows, learn more about Vibe Marketing, learn more about, you know, using AI for boring businesses, where could they go? >> They should go to the vibearketer.com. Uh, sign up for the newsletter. We send out workflows like the one we talked about every week. Uh, we highlight all the cool things that are happening at the intersection of AI and marketing. And then we have a community where we've got like over 2500 workflows and a directory we built for our members. Um, I've got a new secret project that I launched exclusively within our community. You know all about it, uh, Greg. We've been working on this for a while. I think it's going to take Vibe Marketing as a whole to the next level. We're giving away a bunch of free credits there. I'm doing Vibe sessions in the community every other week where I'm just getting on for like two hours at a time, jamming with members. We're building out a mentor program. A lot of cool things happening there. >> Amazing. Uh, I'll include the link. uh to that in uh to the VI marketer uh and the and the community in the in the show notes. Uh I'll include the link to Hostinger uh in the show notes. I think uh we reached out to them and got a a discount code, right? >> Yep. Exactly. Yep. We got a discount code. Throw it in the show notes and uh people can save a lot of money on their workflows. >> I think it's SIP 10. Uh, and thanks again for hosting her, for making this episode possible and and getting James to, you know, extract some sauce and and and I appreciate you. And, uh, I'll see you next time. Also, let us know what you want us to cover next. You know, we're always looking for topics for what, you know, what we should cover next. So, you know, I read every single comment. James goes in there and reaches comments, too. So, let us know and uh, we'll sauce it up. >> Awesome. Thanks for having me, Greg. Appreciate it.
Summary
The video explores how to identify and build profitable local businesses in underserved niches using AI-powered workflows that scrape and analyze Google Maps data to find high-value, low-competition markets.
Key Points
- The main topic is leveraging AI to find profitable, boring local businesses that are overlooked by mainstream entrepreneurs.
- The speaker identifies underserved niches like smart home automation, garage organization, and luxury car detailing as high-value opportunities.
- Google Maps is used as a data source to scrape business names, reviews, contact info, and social media presence to validate market demand.
- Key metrics include review volume and velocity, customer satisfaction, and the number of local providers to assess market potential.
- AI is used to analyze data and generate content like newsletters or directories that target specific niches without requiring expertise.
- The speaker demonstrates a workflow to find niches in tier 2 or 3 cities where demand exceeds supply.
- Instead of starting a service business, one can create a media or lead generation business to partner with local providers.
- Tools like Hostinger are recommended for hosting workflows cheaply and at scale compared to more expensive platforms.
- The approach enables low-cost, high-margin businesses by automating research and content creation with AI.
- The speaker offers free access to workflows and a community for those interested in building similar businesses.
Key Takeaways
- Use Google Maps to scrape local businesses and analyze review volume, sentiment, and competition to identify underserved niches.
- Apply AI to generate content like newsletters or directories that target high-value niches without needing expertise.
- Focus on tier 2 or 3 cities where demand is high but competition is low for better business opportunities.
- Leverage AI to automate market research and content creation, reducing costs and increasing scalability.
- Consider a lead generation or media business model to monetize niche markets without directly providing the service.