Stewart makes a fair point that the Maps Pack should be prioritized nowadays (2025) but I think he may be overreaching a bit when he says that "traditional SEO is dead". Publishing content that isn't actually helpful or useful to your target market(s) is dead, sure. But if you have the resources to do both local SEO optimization and "traditional SEO", well, why not do both? Besides, who knows how long it'll be before Google does another inevitable SERP UI change that de-prioritizes the Maps Pack, or even removes it entirely, thus making this book largely obsolete? I wouldn't put it past Google.
Good tips on setting up and managing your Google Business Profile(s), although some are a bit iffy, such as individual lawyer headshots. That's going to be a hassle to maintain once lawyers inevitably leave the firm. Good advice to setup a monthly or at least annual citation audit/cleanup practice. Some useful templates for bottom-funnel and top-funnel content creation, along with good suggestions on how to write AI prompts.
I think the whole "Fire Your Agency" brand name is a bit in poor taste considering, well... you're also running an agency, Ryan.