The One Online Profile That Has More Power Than Your Website Right Now

You need to go on a search for a new dentist in your area, and you start with typing a few words into Google. Before you even see a list of websites, you start with the map pack (the business listed in maps) on the top of the search results. You see those three businesses with their hours, ratings, photos, and a button to call them right then and there.

You clicked one of those three. Before you know it in those top three, you find your next dentist and make an appointment. You never scrolled past the map pack.

The tool that gets a local business into the Map Pack is called a Google Business Profile (GBP). It is completely free to set up and manage. And yet the majority of small business owners either have never fully completed theirs, or set it up years ago and have not touched it since.

Those GBPs are extremely important in today's local searches and even taking well over 70% of search clicks.

What Google AI Is Doing With Your Profile Right Now

Google has been rolling out AI-generated summaries at the top of search results called AI Overviews. These summaries pull from trusted sources across the web, and one of the biggest contributors for local business searches is the Google Business Profile.

When someone asks Google 'Who is the best florist near downtown for same-day flowers,' the AI does not just list websites. It generates an answer, and that answer is built from profile information, reviews, photos, and how actively a business is maintaining their presence. A profile that is incomplete, inactive, or outdated gets left out of that conversation entirely.

A good marketing partner understands how to keep your profile optimized so that when AI-powered search is building those answers, your business is one of the ones it reaches for.

What a Fully Optimized Profile Actually Looks Like

It starts with the basics being completely accurate. Start with your business name, address, phone number, website, and hours need to be current and consistent with what appears everywhere else online. Inconsistencies send a confusing signal to Google and can actually work against you.

From there, photos make a real difference. Profiles with recent, real photos see significantly more engagement than those without. That means photos of your space, your team, your products, or your services in action. People are visual, and a profile that shows them something feels more credible. Give them texture to your profile’s content, not just the basic business info.

Reviews are that trust layer that AI and consumers are now looking for and at. The number of reviews, the recency of them, and how a business responds to them all feed into how search engines weigh a profile. Don’t stop at getting reviews! Responding to them shows Google and your future customers that there is an active, engaged team behind the business.

The Simple Habit That Keeps Your Profile Working

Google Business Profiles have a posts feature that most small business owners never use. It works a lot like a social media post so you can use them to give a short update, blast a promotion, or advertise a seasonal announcement. Posting to your profile regularly signals to Google that your business is active, which supports your local visibility, especially in those Map Packs.

Consistency is KEY! You need to be active on it and frequently. Each week you or your marketing partner should update your profile (if needed), respond to reviews, and share a quick post. This is a small investment with a steady long term return.

Frequently Asked Questions on GBPs

Is a Google Business Profile really free?

Yes, completely free to claim, set up, and manage. There are paid advertising options available through Google, but the profile itself costs nothing. It is one of the most impactful free tools available to local businesses.

Respond to it warmly and promptly. Acknowledge their experience, address the concern directly, and offer a way to make it right. Future customers read how you handle those moments just as closely as the review itself. A thoughtful response often leaves a stronger impression than a five-star review. However, spam reviews are real, so if you know for a fact that it is a false review, acknowledge it, and state it’s a false review and report it to Google.

Google's AI Overviews pull from your profile data including your business description, services, reviews, and how recently your information has been updated. A complete and active profile gives the AI more accurate information to work with when generating answers for local searches.

While we strongly recommend you do have a type of store front or a suite, the answer is, yes. Service area businesses, those who travel to clients rather than having a public location, can still create and maintain a profile. You can also hide your address while still showing the areas you serve, which is perfectly common for trades, mobile services, and in-home businesses.

Your profile might be the first impression someone gets of your business.
Let's make sure it is a strong one.

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