I love Georgetown. The Square still feels like a place real people live. The chambers of commerce still meet in person. Sun City keeps stacking new residents who actually spend money at local businesses. There is a warmth here that newer suburbs are trying to manufacture.
There is also a quiet problem. Most Georgetown businesses are behind on AI. Not catastrophically. But measurably, and the gap is widening every month.
I spent a week auditing fifty Georgetown business websites across real estate, legal, medical, and retail. Here is what I found, and what the fastest way forward looks like.
The audit
Fifty Georgetown business websites. Pulled from Google Business Profile listings, chamber directories, and Yelp. All had active operations, at least one employee, and some recent customer activity. A mix of Sun City–serving professional services, Square-area retail, Wolf Ranch–area medical, and I-35 corridor trades.
What I checked: schema markup (does the site have any?), Google Business Profile completeness, blog or articles published in the last six months, AI voice agent or automated phone handling, and FAQ pages with actual customer questions.
Schema markup: present on 3 of 50. Nine in ten Georgetown sites are invisible to AI search for specific queries.
Google Business Profile fully completed: 12 of 50. The rest had partial info, missing hours, outdated services, or no Q and A section.
Recent content (last six months): 7 of 50 had any new blog post or article.
AI voice agent or after-hours phone automation: 1 of 50.
FAQ page with actual customer questions: 8 of 50, and only 3 of those had schema markup tying the questions to FAQPage structured data.
Five data points. The pattern is the same everywhere: Georgetown operators have not yet adopted the moves that are already standard for AI-ready businesses in Round Rock and Cedar Park.
Why Georgetown is different
This is not about intelligence or effort. Georgetown business owners are sharp and hardworking. The issue is that the market has protected them from urgency.
A family real estate firm on the Square has been booking listings the same way for twenty years. Phones ring, referrals come in, deals close. Nothing is visibly broken, so nothing gets replaced. Same for the Sun City insurance advisor, the Wolf Ranch orthodontist, the Southwestern-area boutique.
Newer businesses in Cedar Park and Leander do not have this luxury. They face crowded strip centers with three competitors per category, higher customer acquisition costs, and younger customers who expect text confirmations and instant replies. Pressure drives adoption. Georgetown's lower pressure lets operators wait.
But the AI search shift does not care how long you have been around. If a Sun City retiree asks ChatGPT for a local financial advisor and your practice is invisible to the AI, the referral goes somewhere else. That "somewhere else" is increasingly not in Georgetown.
The three fastest wins for a Georgetown business
1. Add an AI voice agent on your main line. One session of setup, ninety dollars a month to run. Answers after-hours calls, books appointments, texts you any question it cannot handle. The single highest-impact change a Georgetown service business can make in 2026.
2. Add LocalBusiness and FAQPage schema to your website. Two hours of work. Changes nothing a human sees. Turns your site from invisible to AI-ready. Every article I write here has an FAQ section with schema for this exact reason.
3. Finish your Google Business Profile. Every field filled in. Every photo slot full. Turn on Q and A, answer the first five questions yourself. Free and fast.
Do those three in thirty days and a Georgetown business goes from the bottom half of its category on AI readiness to the top. None require coding. None are glamorous. All three compound for years.
The windows closes fast
AI models build a mental map of local business categories based on what they find on the web. Once that map is set for "financial advisor in Sun City" or "dentist in Wolf Ranch," it takes months to displace the businesses already occupying those slots. Early adopters take the early slots. Everyone else fights for leftovers.
Georgetown still has time. Most categories in town do not yet have a clear AI-search winner. The first local operator in each category to take this seriously takes the slot for a long time. That is not hype, it is how entity recognition works in AI models.
If you run a Georgetown business and this article is the first you have heard of any of this, that is not a problem. It is an opportunity. Thirty days of focused work puts you ahead of 95 percent of your local category.
Book a 75-minute session at wilcoailab.com/contact. First ten minutes, audit your current state. Next sixty-five, we set up schema and the highest-return AI workflow for your business live on the call. Or email tj@wilcoguide.com with your business name and I will run a quick audit and send you a list of the five most important changes in plain language. Free.
Founder of WilCo AI Lab. Runs a 145,000+ subscriber newsletter network. Co-founded lightbreak. Builds with AI every day from Liberty Hill, TX.