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Marketing built for Los Feliz.
From the Vermont strip to the foot of Griffith Park, Los Feliz runs on locals who walk to dinner and decide on a phone. We build fast sites and win the local search that turns a Hillhurst stroll into your next regular.
Los Feliz
© OpenStreetMap contributors
The premise
A walkable village that searches before it strolls.
Los Feliz Village is two commercial spines running parallel: Vermont Avenue, where Skylight Books, the Los Feliz Theatre, and the Dresden hold down blocks that have barely changed in decades, and Hillhurst Avenue one block east, denser with restaurants and independent shops. Between and around them sit the side streets and the flats below the hills, where most of the customer base lives. Almost everything here is independently owned, which means almost everyone is fighting the same local-search fight without a corporate team behind them.
The customers come from two directions. Down from the hills come the regulars — people who walk to dinner, buy their books in person, and pick between two cafés while standing between them. Down Vermont from Griffith Park come the visitors: Observatory crowds on weekends, Greek Theatre crowds on show nights, all of them hungry and none of them sure where to go. Both groups decide the same way — a quick search mid-stroll — and the businesses that show up cleanly get the walk-in.
One ZIP, one village
Vermont & Hillhurst, a block apart
How the Village searches
Where we are based
What good local marketing looks like in the 90027 village.
Search, locally
What "near me" means when the movie lets out on Vermont.
Los Feliz Village is two parallel streets a block apart, and most searches here happen on foot between them. Someone leaves the Los Feliz Theatre, wants a drink or a late dinner, and types three words while standing on the sidewalk. The results they see are decided by pins, categories, and hours — not by which storefront is actually closest.
one village, two spines
Vermont and Hillhurst read as a single market
The Village runs down Vermont and Hillhurst with only a block between them, so a search made on one street surfaces businesses on both. That cuts both ways: you compete with the street you're not on, but you can also win customers who never planned to cross over. Your profile has to say plainly which street and cross-street you hold.
the park funnel
Griffith Park traffic searches by landmark, not neighborhood
Observatory visitors and Greek Theatre crowds come down Vermont without knowing the word Los Feliz. They search against the landmark — food near the Observatory, coffee before the show — and a profile that never mentions the park is invisible to them. Accurate evening hours matter most on concert nights, when "open now" quietly filters the list.
long memories
The anchors have decades of reviews
Skylight Books, the Dresden, Fred 62, House of Pies — the Village's fixtures have been collecting reviews since Google started counting. A newer business won't out-age them, but it can out-fresh them: recent photos of the actual storefront, replies to this month's reviews, and a page written for 90027 instead of everywhere.
Most of this is groundwork, not budget — knowing which searches your block actually gets is the place to start.
What we do here
Everything it takes to win two spines and one park.
Win the map pack
Google Business Profile, citations, and reviews tuned to win the "near me" searches happening between Hillhurst and Vermont.
Local SEO → Web DesignA site that loads instantly
Fast, considered sites that put your menu, hours, and directions one tap away for the walk-up crowd — and look the part doing it.
Web Design → Paid MediaReach the next regular
Targeted Google and Meta ads that catch Griffith Park visitors and weekday commuters before they pick somewhere else.
Paid Media → AutomationPut the busywork on autopilot
Review requests, lead follow-up, and the reminders that keep regulars coming back — wired up so they happen without you lifting a finger.
Automation →Who we work with
The cafés, shops, and studios of Vermont and Hillhurst.
Cafés & restaurants
Fill tables and win the brunch line with a listing and site that earn the everyday "where should we eat in Los Feliz."
Shops & boutiques
Turn the Vermont and Hillhurst foot traffic into sales, with a clean way to sell online when you want to.
Studios & services
Trust-first sites and search that turn high-intent neighborhood visits into booked appointments.
Nearby neighborhoods
Questions from the Village.
The specifics, no jargon.
Still wondering something? Just ask — no jargon, promise.
Let's grow your corner of L.A.
Own Los Feliz search.
Tell us about your business and we'll show you exactly where you stand in Los Feliz search today — and the three highest-impact moves to climb. Free, no obligation.