Before a customer sets foot on your street, before they ask a friend, before they even type your name - Google has already made a case for or against you. Roughly 90% of people research a local business online before visiting in person, and the overwhelming majority of that research happens on Google Search and Maps. The unsettling part: most of what Google shows them is information you filled in once, forgot about, and haven't touched since. An outdated photo grid, a Q-and-A section full of unanswered questions, business hours that haven't reflected your actual schedule in eight months - these aren't minor oversights. They are silent redirects that send a ready-to-buy customer two doors down to a competitor whose profile just looks more alive.
The Six-Point Audit: Ranked By the Impact Each Fix Actually Has
Not all profile gaps hurt equally. Run through these six areas in order - the highest-leverage fixes are at the top, and most owners have never touched the bottom two at all.
- 1. Business hours and special hours - Google will mark your listing as 'may be temporarily closed' if your hours look stale or contradict user-reported activity. Check your main hours today and set special hours for every upcoming public holiday or seasonal change. This takes three minutes and prevents the single most trust-destroying signal on a local listing.
- 2. Primary category and secondary categories - Your primary category is the single biggest lever in local ranking. 'Restaurant' and 'Italian Restaurant' are not interchangeable - the more specific, the more relevant your appearance in nearby searches. Add up to nine secondary categories to capture adjacent intent (a bakery that serves coffee should have 'Cafe' as a secondary category).
- 3. Photos - recency, volume, and type - Google surfaces listings with recent, owner-uploaded photos more prominently. Aim for at least one new photo added per week. The mix matters: exterior (so people recognise the frontage), interior, product or dish shots, team, and candid in-action moments. A photo grid that hasn't moved since last year signals a business that may not be active.
- 4. Business description - You have 750 characters. Use the first 250 for the specific, differentiated value of your business - what you do, who it is for, and what makes it worth visiting. Do not waste this on your founding story. This text appears in search results and is indexed by Google, so include two or three natural-language phrases your customers actually search.
- 5. Q-and-A section - Almost no local business owner knows this section exists, let alone manages it. Anyone can ask - and anyone can answer, including strangers who may get it wrong. Check it now. Answer every open question, and proactively seed the five questions you get asked most often at the front desk. This is free, indexed content sitting on your Google listing.
- 6. Products and services menu - Restaurants should have a fully built menu with prices. Retailers and service providers should list individual services, packages, or product categories. This content is pulled directly into Google's AI-generated summaries, meaning it influences how your business is described to searchers without you even knowing it happened.
Why Review Responses Now Outweigh Star Ratings
A 4.2-star listing with 80 substantive owner responses will consistently outperform a 4.8-star listing with silence below each review. Google's own documentation confirms that responding to reviews improves local search ranking - but the more important shift is behavioral. Modern customers scroll past the score and read how the owner behaves when things go wrong. A thoughtful, specific response to a critical review communicates operational maturity in a way that fifty five-star reviews cannot. The response cadence that works is simple: acknowledge the specific experience, take responsibility or clarify context without arguing, offer a direct resolution path. Do this within 24 hours for anything three stars or below, and within 72 hours for positive reviews - because a warm, personal thank-you on a good review is a public signal of character that prospective customers notice.
The business that responds thoughtfully to a one-star review is telling every future customer: we take this seriously, and we show up when it matters. That is more persuasive than a perfect score.
The Q-and-A Section Is Free Indexed Content Most Owners Leave Blank
Google's Q-and-A feature lives on your listing and is invisible to most owners because it doesn't trigger notifications by default. But it is fully indexed - meaning the questions and answers appear in search results. Seed it yourself. Write the ten questions your staff answer at the door every single week: 'Do you take walk-ins?', 'Is there parking nearby?', 'Are you dog-friendly?', 'Do you do gift vouchers?', 'Is there a kids menu?' - then answer them precisely. Every answer you write is content Google can match to a nearby search query. Unanswered questions from the public can be answered incorrectly by other Google users, and Google may surface those incorrect answers prominently. This section takes 30 minutes to set up properly and then requires only a monthly check.
The 20-Minute Weekly Rhythm That Keeps It All Alive
A Google Business Profile isn't a form you fill in once - it is a living signal to Google that your business is active, accurate, and engaged. The businesses that consistently appear at the top of local map packs are not running elaborate SEO campaigns. They are maintaining a simple weekly rhythm that any owner can build into their existing routine.
- Monday (5 minutes): Post a Google Update - a photo with a short caption about something current: a new dish, a seasonal service, a weekend event, a team moment. Google Posts show up directly on your listing and decay in relevance after about seven days, so weekly publishing keeps the signal fresh.
- Wednesday (5 minutes): Respond to any reviews from the past seven days. Set a phone reminder. Use specific detail from the review in your response - it takes 90 seconds per review and the difference in quality is visible.
- Friday (5 minutes): Check the Q-and-A section for any new questions, verify that your hours are accurate for the coming week (especially around bank holidays), and quickly scan your photos to assess whether anything new and visual happened this week that's worth uploading.
- Monthly (5 minutes): Review your profile's performance data in Google Business Profile Insights - how many searches, how many profile views, how many direction requests and calls. One number to watch: 'direct searches' versus 'discovery searches'. Discovery searches mean customers who didn't know your name found you through a category or service query. That number should be growing.
When the Rhythm Becomes Automatic
The hardest part of maintaining a Google Business Profile isn't knowing what to do - it's finding the consistency when you're running a full business behind the counter. Platforms like Rulrr can take the content creation element off your plate entirely: generating weekly Google Post captions from your existing products and services, scheduling them automatically, and keeping your profile active without requiring you to sit down and write every Friday. The audit you run today matters. The system you build to maintain it is what compounds that into a long-term local ranking advantage.
The uncomfortable truth about local search is that the business winning the top spot on Google Maps for your category in your neighbourhood is not necessarily the best business on the block. It is the best-maintained profile on the block. That is a gap you can close this week - without an agency, without an ad budget, and without more than 20 minutes of focused attention. Start with the audit, fix the hours, seed the Q-and-A, and set a weekly reminder. The customers searching two streets away are already looking. The only question is whether your listing gives them a reason to walk toward you or scroll past.