Someone in your town is searching for exactly what you do right now. At this moment. On their phone, probably. And if your business doesn't appear on Google Maps, they're going to call someone else — and they'll never even know you exist.
In this guide
Here is something that will either surprise you or confirm what you've quietly suspected for a while: most of your potential customers never make it to your website. They search. They see the map. They call directly from the search results — or they ask Google for directions and just show up.
The Google Maps local pack — those three businesses that appear with a map whenever someone searches for a local service — is the most valuable piece of real estate in local business marketing. It sits above the organic results. It appears before any websites. And increasingly, it's the only thing people look at before making a decision.
7x
more profile views for fully optimised listings
70%
of searchers visit a business within 24 hours of a local search
3x
more calls received compared to unoptimised listings
Free
Google Business Profile costs nothing to set up and maintain
And here's the part that always gets small business owners when I tell them: it costs nothing. Not a penny. Google Business Profile — the tool that gets you onto Google Maps, into the local pack, into the search results — is completely free. You just have to do it properly.
Most businesses don't. They claim their profile, fill in the basics, and then abandon it. Which means the bar for standing out is genuinely low if you're willing to put in an afternoon of work.
A story I hear all the time
There's a florist in Leicester I spoke to last year. She'd been running her shop for eleven years. Word of mouth, some flyers, an old website nobody visited. Business was okay. Not great. She was considering whether to close.
We spent one afternoon setting up her Google Business Profile properly. Added photos. Got her first ten reviews. Listed all her services.
Within three weeks, she was getting eight to twelve enquiries a week from Google Maps alone. People who had no idea she existed. People who had walked past her shop for years and never gone in — but searched "florist near me" on their lunch break and found her immediately.
She told me it felt like someone had finally turned the lights on. The customers were always out there. She just wasn't visible to them.
This is where everything starts. Open your browser and go to business.google.com. Type in your business name. One of two things will happen.
Either your business already appears — Google has created a basic listing automatically using information from around the web — in which case you need to claim it and take ownership. Or it doesn't exist yet, and you'll create it from scratch.
Neither takes more than ten or fifteen minutes to initiate. You'll need to verify ownership, which Google does by sending a postcard to your business address with a verification code, or occasionally by phone or email for certain business types.
Go to business.google.com — it takes 10 minutes and it's completely free
Go to business.google.com
Sign in with the Google account you want linked to your business. Search for your business name. If it appears, click "Claim this business." If it doesn't, click "Add your business to Google." Follow the prompts. Don't rush the verification step — without verifying, your profile won't show up properly on Maps.
This is where most people give up too early. They add their name, their phone number, tick a category, and consider the job done. Then they wonder why they're not appearing.
Google ranks businesses in the local pack based on three things: relevance (does your profile match what someone searched for?), distance (how close is your business to the searcher?), and prominence (how established and trustworthy does Google think you are?).
You can't control distance. But relevance and prominence are entirely within your hands — and a fully completed, well-written profile dramatically outperforms a half-finished one on both counts.
Every tick on this checklist is another signal to Google that you're a real, active, trustworthy business
Complete every single field
This means: your exact business name (matching your signage — no keyword stuffing), your primary category (the most specific option available), your address verified correctly on the map, a local phone number (not 0800), your website, your opening hours including special hours for bank holidays, a full and specific service list with descriptions, and a business description that mentions your location and what makes you different.
Businesses with photos on their Google profile receive 42% more requests for directions and 35% more clicks to their website than those without. That's not a small number. That's nearly half again as many customers noticing you, just because you added some pictures.
And yet the majority of local business profiles sit there with either no photos at all, or one blurry image taken on a phone in 2019.
Photos do something that words can't. They answer the question that every potential customer is silently asking before they call: is this a real, decent, trustworthy business? A professional exterior shot, a clean interior, photos of your work, a picture of your face or your team — these things say "yes, this is real, come here" in a fraction of a second.
This is the part that makes people nervous. Asking for reviews feels awkward. It feels like you're begging for compliments, or putting someone on the spot, or being needy in a way that doesn't suit how you like to do business.
I want to gently push back on that.
Your customers — the ones who were genuinely happy with what you did for them — want to help you. Most of them just never think to leave a review unless someone asks. When you ask, you're not being needy. You're giving them an easy way to do something kind. And it matters enormously, both to Google and to the next person trying to decide whether to trust you.
"A business with 50 genuine reviews doesn't just rank better. It feels safer. It feels like the obvious choice. People stop comparing and just call."
Three reviews on your phone this week could change how your business looks to everyone who finds you next month
Ask within 24 hours — while the feeling is fresh
The best moment to ask for a review is when the customer is still happy — still feeling the warmth of a job well done. Not a week later. Not in a follow-up email buried in their inbox. That same day, or the morning after. A simple text message works beautifully: "Really glad we could help — if you have two minutes, an honest Google review means the world to a small business like mine. Here's the link: [your review link]." That's all it takes. Genuinely, that's all it takes.
A Google Business Profile that was set up once and then left alone is like a shop window that hasn't been changed since 2022. It tells people something — just not the thing you want it to tell them.
Google rewards active profiles. Businesses that post updates, add new photos, respond to reviews, and keep their information current consistently rank higher in the local pack than those that go quiet. Google is looking for signals that you are a real, operating, engaged business — and activity is the most direct signal you can send.
The good news is that "active" doesn't require much. One post a week is enough. It doesn't need to be polished content marketing. It can be:
Here is something that surprises most business owners when they first hear it: one of the most important factors in your local search ranking has nothing to do with your Google profile at all. It's about whether your business information is consistent everywhere else on the internet.
Your name, address, and phone number — collectively called your NAP — need to be identical across every directory, listing, and mention of your business online. Not similar. Not close. Identical. Same capitalisation. Same abbreviations. Same format for your phone number.
Audit your NAP across the web
Search for your business on Google and note exactly how your name, address, and phone appear on your Google Business Profile. Then check: Yelp, Facebook, Bing Places, Apple Maps, Yell.com, Thomson Local, and any industry directories relevant to your trade. Wherever the information differs — update it. This typically takes two to three hours and has a measurable effect on your Maps ranking within weeks.
These are not marketing numbers. These are what Google and independent research consistently find about optimised listings vs. neglected ones.
I want to be straight with you here, because this is the part where optimism and reality need to meet.
Once you verify your profile and complete it fully, you will typically see it appearing in Maps searches within one to two weeks. Sometimes sooner. Sometimes a little longer in highly competitive categories or densely populated areas.
Appearing in the local pack — the top three results with the map — takes longer, because that depends on building trust signals over time: reviews accumulating, your profile staying active, your NAP becoming consistent across the web. For most local businesses in low to medium competition areas, you can realistically expect to start appearing in the local pack within four to eight weeks if you follow this guide properly.
For highly competitive categories — locksmiths, plumbers, lawyers, dentists in major cities — it can take three to six months of consistent effort. That isn't a reason not to start. It's a reason to start today, so that the clock is already running.
DPilot
Digital Growth Specialist — SEO, AEO & Local Search
I help small and medium businesses become visible where their customers are actually looking — Google Maps, organic search, and AI platforms. Everything I write here is based on real work with real businesses, not theory.
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