You have 340 reviews and a 4.7-star average. The Italian place two blocks over has 160 reviews and a 4.4. Yet they are sitting at position two on Google Maps and you are buried on page two. This is not a glitch - it is the predictable result of Google's local algorithm doing exactly what it is designed to do. Star count and review volume were dominant signals in 2019. In 2025, Google weighs five other factors far more heavily, and most local owners have no idea any of them exist. This piece names those signals, gives you a 20-minute audit to check where you stand right now, and closes with a weekly habit so small you will forget you are doing it - until you notice your pin climbing up the map.
The Five Signals That Actually Separate Page One From Page Two in 2025
1. Review Recency - Google's Freshness Filter
An avalanche of reviews you collected in 2022 is worth far less than a steady trickle arriving this month. Google's algorithm treats review recency as a proxy for business health - an active, living business earns new reviews regularly. If your last review was eight weeks ago and your competitor got three in the past fortnight, they win the freshness signal regardless of your total count. The goal is not a volume spike. It is a consistent drip: two to four reviews per month, every month, indefinitely.
2. Keyword Relevance Inside Review Text
Google indexes the body text of customer reviews and uses it as a content signal - the same way it reads your website copy. When a reviewer writes 'best gluten-free pasta in Edinburgh' or 'emergency dental appointment same day Hackney', that text reinforces your relevance for exactly those searches. You cannot write reviews for your customers, but you can influence what they write. A prompt like 'If you have a moment, mention what you came in for - it helps other locals find us' nudges specificity without being manipulative. Over time, keyword-rich review text quietly builds a relevance layer your competitors may not have.
3. Owner Response Speed and Consistency
Google measures whether you respond to reviews - and how quickly. Responding within 24 to 48 hours signals an attentive, active business. But consistency matters as much as speed. Responding to 90% of reviews over three months outranks a business that replies in batches whenever the owner remembers. Every unresponded review is a missed signal. And practically: a thoughtful response to a negative review does more for your ranking and your reputation than ten extra five-star reviews.
4. Profile Completeness and Category Precision
Google's algorithm gives weight to how completely you have filled out your Business Profile - not just name, address, and phone, but business hours (including holiday hours), service menus, product listings, booking links, question-and-answer responses, and your primary and secondary categories. Most owners set their primary category and stop. The businesses consistently ranking well use three to five secondary categories that reflect what customers actually search for. A hair salon that also offers nail services should have both listed. A restaurant open for brunch that only lists 'dinner' in its hours is invisible to morning searches.
5. Google Posts - The Most Ignored Signal on the Profile
Google Posts - the short updates you can publish directly to your Business Profile - are treated as an activity signal. A profile with a Post from the last seven days signals a business that is open, engaged, and worth surfacing. Most owners post to Instagram daily and last touched their Google Posts in 2021. One Google Post per week, even a single sentence about a special, an event, or a new product, is enough to keep this signal active. It takes less time than an Instagram caption.
The businesses winning on Google Maps in 2025 are not the ones with the most reviews. They are the ones who treat their Business Profile as a living channel, not a set-and-forget listing.
The 20-Minute Profile Audit - Run This Today
Pull up your Google Business Profile right now and check each item below. Be honest. Every gap here is a ranking gap you are leaving open for competitors to step into.
- Recency check: When did your last review arrive? If it was more than three weeks ago, your review velocity is too low - build a post-visit prompt into your checkout or follow-up process this week.
- Review text scan: Read your last 20 reviews. Do any mention specific services, dishes, neighbourhoods, or conditions you treat? If they are all generic ('great place, loved it'), your keyword signal is weak.
- Response audit: Count your unanswered reviews. If more than 10% are without a response - especially negative ones - this is costing you ranking and trust simultaneously.
- Category count: How many categories do you have listed? If the answer is one, you are almost certainly missing adjacent searches that customers use to find businesses like yours.
- Hours accuracy: Are your hours current, including any holiday or seasonal changes? Stale hours are a trust signal failure Google penalises.
- Services and products: Have you populated the Services or Products section of your profile? This is indexable content that most owners leave completely blank.
- Google Posts: When was your last post? If you cannot remember, it has been too long.
- Q&A section: Has anyone asked a question you have not answered? Unanswered questions erode trust and represent another dead signal to the algorithm.
The 15-Minute Weekly Habit That Compounds Over Time
None of the five signals above require a marketing agency or a paid tool. They require consistency - which is the one thing most busy owners cannot sustain manually across a full week. The routine below takes 15 minutes on a chosen day (Friday morning works well for most operators) and compounds quietly in the background.
- Monday to Sunday, flag every new review as it comes in - reply within 24 hours. Acknowledge the specific detail they mentioned. Never use a template that reads like a template.
- Once per week, publish one Google Post. Tie it to something real: a dish you are running this weekend, a slot that just opened, a product that arrived. Two to four sentences is enough.
- Once per week, send one gentle review prompt to customers who visited in the last 48 hours - via text, email, or receipt message. The ask should feel human, not automated.
- Once per month, spend ten minutes inside the profile itself: update hours if anything changed, add a new service or product, answer any open Q&A questions.
The compounding effect of this routine is not visible after week one. But at the three-month mark, you will have 12 fresh Google Posts, a near-perfect response rate, a steady review velocity, and a profile that Google reads as active and trustworthy. That is when the ranking shift becomes noticeable. This is also where a tool like Rulrr becomes quietly useful - it can surface review prompts, draft responses, and schedule your Google Posts as part of the same weekly content workflow you are already running, so none of this becomes a separate task you have to remember.
One Honest Rule Before You Start
Do not game the signals. Do not ask friends to leave keyword-stuffed reviews. Do not post fake Q&As. Google's spam detection has improved significantly, and manipulated profiles are being suppressed with increasing frequency. Every tactic in this article works because it is exactly what Google wants to see: an active, responsive, locally relevant business that real customers engage with. That is not a trick. It is just showing up consistently in a place most of your competitors have completely neglected.
Start With One Fix, Not Five
If the audit above surfaced multiple gaps, the temptation is to fix everything at once and then quietly stop doing all of it by week three. Pick the single biggest gap and close it first. If your response rate is low, spend the next two weeks replying to every review before anything else. If your profile has not had a Google Post in months, make that the first habit you lock in. Compounding only works if the habit actually sticks - and one consistent action beats five sporadic ones every time. Your competitor with half the reviews is not doing ten things right. They are doing two or three things consistently, in the places that matter most to Google's algorithm right now. That is a gap any owner can close before the end of the month.