Voice search is no longer emerging — it’s mainstream. More than 40% of Canadians use voice search daily, primarily on smartphones and smart speakers. For local Toronto and GTA businesses, voice search represents a significant and largely untapped SEO opportunity.
This guide covers how Canadian businesses can optimize for voice search queries from Siri, Google Assistant, and Alexa.
How Voice Search Differs From Typed Search
Understanding the difference between voice and text queries is the foundation of voice SEO:
Typed search: “SEO agency Toronto”
Voice search: “Hey Google, what’s the best SEO agency near me in Toronto?”
Voice queries are:
Your SEO content needs to match this natural, conversational search style.
The “Near Me” Opportunity for GTA Businesses
Voice search drives more “near me” queries than any other search type. For Toronto and GTA businesses, this is your highest-value voice search opportunity.
“Near me” searches have exploded in Canada. Google says “near me” mobile searches grew 500% in recent years. The key: to rank for “near me” voice searches, your Google Business Profile must be fully optimized and accurate.
Voice search “near me” optimization checklist:
Optimizing Content for Voice Search Questions
Google Assistant and Siri often read out the featured snippet (Position Zero) as the voice search answer. Winning the featured snippet means winning the voice search result.
How to target featured snippets:
Identify the questions your customers ask and write clear, concise answers.
Structure your content with:
Example:
H2: How long does SEO take to work in Canada?
Most Canadian businesses see meaningful results from SEO within 4–6 months. Local searches can show improvement faster — often within 2–3 months — while competitive national keywords can take 9–12 months or longer. The timeline depends on your industry competition, website history, and the quality of your SEO strategy.
This structure is how you get read aloud when someone asks their Google Home “how long does SEO take?”
FAQ Pages: Your Voice Search Power Tool
FAQ pages are the highest-value content type for voice search because every FAQ item directly targets a conversational question.
For Toronto and GTA businesses, build FAQ pages that answer:
Use FAQPage schema markup (JSON-LD) so Google can index your Q&A pairs and potentially display them in voice results and rich snippets.
Local Business Voice Search Queries
For local businesses in the GTA, these are the highest-value voice search query patterns to optimize for:
“Is [business name] open right now?”
Optimization: Keep GBP hours accurate. Include hours on your website. Mark holiday hours proactively.
“What is the phone number for [business name]?”
Optimization: Consistent NAP across all directories. Phone number in your website header and footer.
“How do I get to [business name]?”
Optimization: Complete GBP with accurate address. Embed Google Maps on your contact/location page.
“Does [business name] offer [service]?”
Optimization: Complete GBP services section. List every service on your website with dedicated pages.
“Who is the best [service] near me in [city]?”
Optimization: High review count and rating. Strong local authority through citations and backlinks.
Schema Markup for Voice Search
Schema markup helps search engines understand your content in a structured way — which is exactly how voice assistants process information.
Priority schema types for voice SEO:
LocalBusiness schema: Tells Google exactly what you do, where you are, and when you’re open. This directly feeds into “near me” voice results.
FAQPage schema: Each Q&A pair is a potential voice search answer. Implement this on your FAQ page and on service pages that have FAQs.
Speakable schema: Specifically designed for voice search. Marks sections of your content as appropriate for text-to-speech audio. Still emerging but increasingly relevant.
HowTo schema: If your content includes step-by-step instructions, HowTo schema helps voice assistants read the steps aloud.
Writing Conversationally for Voice SEO
Voice search rewards content that sounds natural when read aloud. Adjust your content style:
Use contractions: “you’re” instead of “you are,” “we’ll” instead of “we will” — this is how people speak.
Use second person: Address the reader directly as “you.”
Keep sentences short: Voice assistants pause at punctuation. Long sentences are hard to follow aurally.
Answer questions directly: Don’t bury the answer after three paragraphs of introduction.
Use transition words: “First,” “Then,” “Finally,” “For example” — these make content flow better when spoken.
Mobile Page Speed: Non-Negotiable for Voice Search
Almost all voice searches happen on mobile devices. If your page loads slowly, voice assistants will find a faster source to read from.
For Toronto businesses targeting voice search:
Test your mobile speed at Google PageSpeed Insights and fix the highest-impact issues first.
Voice Search and Smart Speaker Local Commerce
Amazon Echo and Google Home are increasingly used for local commerce in Canadian households. “Alexa, order pizza from a restaurant near me” and “Hey Google, find a plumber open now” are real queries happening in GTA homes daily.
Alexa optimization:
Google Assistant:
Voice search in Canada is growing fastest in the 25–44 age demographic — exactly the decision-makers and business owners you’re trying to reach in the GTA. The businesses optimizing for it now will have a significant advantage as adoption continues to grow.


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