Google Business Profile Optimisation for Singapore SMEs (10 Steps)
- Nigel

- 6 days ago
- 20 min read
Search for "dental clinic near me" or "bak kut teh Toa Payoh" on your phone and look at what Google shows you first. Before any website, before any paid ad most of the time, you get a map with three businesses pinned on it — names, star ratings, photos, opening hours, and a Call button. That box is called the Map Pack, and for most local searches in Singapore it swallows the majority of clicks before anyone scrolls further.
Here is the uncomfortable part: whether your business appears in that box has surprisingly little to do with how nice your website is, and a great deal to do with a free listing many Singapore SME owners set up once in 2019 and never touched again — the Google Business Profile. We have audited hundreds of local listings as an SEO agency that has grown organic traffic for more than 50 Singapore SMEs, and the same picture repeats: a half-filled profile, three photos from opening day, a handful of unanswered reviews, and a category chosen in thirty seconds that quietly suppresses the listing every single day.
The good news is that Google Business Profile optimisation is one of the few marketing jobs you can genuinely do yourself, in a weekend, for free. This guide gives you the exact 10 steps we run for our own clients, in order, with Singapore-specific details — and the honest numbers on what each step is worth.
What Is a Google Business Profile?
A Google Business Profile (often shortened to GBP, and formerly called Google My Business) is the free business listing that controls how your company appears on Google Search and Google Maps. It is the panel that shows your opening hours, photos, reviews, address, phone number, and the Call, Directions, and Website buttons. When someone searches your brand name, it is the big box on the right of the desktop screen. When someone searches "plumber Ang Mo Kio", it decides whether you are one of the three businesses in the Map Pack or invisible on page two of the map results.
Think of it as your second homepage — except this one lives inside Google's property, gets shown to people at the exact moment they are looking for what you sell, and is judged in about three seconds against the two competitors displayed beside it. A polished profile with 200 photos and 4.8 stars from 300 reviews wins that three-second judgement. A sparse profile with a blurry shopfront photo from five years ago loses it, even if the business behind it is better.
One important clarification, because it confuses many owners: your Google Business Profile is not your website, and it does not replace one. The profile wins the click; your website (or your booking page, or your WhatsApp line) converts it. They work as a system, and later in this guide we cover how the two connect. If you want the broader picture of how local visibility works beyond the profile itself, our explainer on what local SEO means for a Singapore business is the natural companion to this piece.
How Google Decides Who Shows Up in the Map Pack
Before the 10 steps, you need to understand what you are optimising for. Google ranks local results on three factors, and it publishes them openly:
Relevance — how well your profile matches what the searcher typed. This is driven by your business categories, the services you list, your business description, and the content of your reviews.
Distance — how far your business is from the searcher (or from the area they named). You cannot change your address with optimisation, but you can stop losing to closer competitors on the other two factors.
Prominence — how well-known and trusted Google thinks you are. Review count and rating, review velocity (how regularly new reviews arrive), photo activity, mentions of your business across the web, and the strength of your website all feed this.
A worked example makes this concrete. Imagine two aircon servicing companies in Bedok. Company A has 31 reviews at 4.2 stars, last photo uploaded in 2023, one category ("Air conditioning contractor"), and no services listed. Company B has 280 reviews at 4.7 stars arriving at roughly 12 per month, 150 photos, the same primary category plus "Air conditioning repair service" as a secondary, every service listed with prices, and posts weekly. For a searcher sitting equidistant from both, Company B wins the Map Pack slot close to every time — and because profiles compound, next month the gap is wider. The 10 steps below are, in essence, how you become Company B.
If your business is not appearing at all — not just ranking low, but missing — work through our checklist on why your Singapore business is not showing up on Google first, because a suspended or unverified profile needs fixing before optimisation can help.
The 10 Steps: Google Business Profile Optimisation for Singapore SMEs
Step 1 — Claim, verify, and lock down ownership
Everything starts with control. Search your business name on Google Maps; if a profile exists that you did not create (Google auto-generates them from directory data), claim it rather than creating a duplicate. Verification in Singapore is usually by video call or a recorded video walkthrough of your premises these days — the old postcard method has largely been retired. Have your signboard, your unit number, and proof of operation visible when you do it.
Then check who has access. We regularly find Singapore SMEs whose profile is still owned by an ex-employee, a former agency, or a web designer who vanished in 2021. Open the profile settings, review every manager, remove anyone who should not be there, and make sure the primary owner is an email account the business controls — not a staff member's personal Gmail. This step is worth zero rankings by itself, and it is still first, because losing access mid-campaign sets everything else on fire.
Step 2 — Get your name, address, and phone number exactly right (and consistent everywhere)
Your NAP — name, address, phone — must match across your profile, your website, and every directory that mentions you. In Singapore that means the same unit number format (#03-21, not 03-21 or Unit 3-21), the same building name spelling, and the same phone number format everywhere. Google cross-references these mentions; inconsistencies erode its confidence that the listings refer to the same business, and that drains the prominence factor.
Two Singapore-specific traps. First, do not stuff keywords into your business name field — "Tan's Plumbing | Best Plumber Singapore 24/7" violates Google's guidelines, and competitors can (and in competitive niches, do) report it, which triggers suspensions that take weeks to recover from. Your name field should be your actual registered trading name, nothing more. Second, if you operate from home or serve customers at their location, set the profile as a service-area business and hide the address — listing a residential HDB address as a storefront is both a guideline violation and a trust-killer.
Step 3 — Choose your categories like rankings depend on them, because they do
The primary category is the single strongest relevance signal on the entire profile. "Restaurant" and "Japanese restaurant" produce completely different visibility for the search "japanese food near me". Be as specific as the category list allows: a clinic doing mostly aesthetic work ranks better as "Skin care clinic" than as the generic "Medical clinic"; a firm doing mostly renovation should not sit under "Interior designer" because that was the first suggestion that appeared.
Then add secondary categories for every genuine line of business — most businesses can justifiably use three to six. A bakery-café should carry "Bakery" as primary, plus "Cafe", "Dessert shop", and "Coffee shop". Each legitimate secondary category opens another set of searches you can appear for. Review this twice a year: Google adds new categories constantly, and the more precise option may not have existed when you set up.
Step 4 — Fill in services, products, and attributes completely
Under each category, Google lets you list specific services with descriptions and prices — and most Singapore SMEs leave this section empty. Fill in every service you offer, with realistic prices or price ranges in SGD. "Aircon chemical wash — from SGD 80" does two jobs: it matches the long-tail searches people actually type, and it pre-qualifies callers so you stop fielding enquiries from bargain hunters your pricing does not fit.
Attributes matter more than they look. Wheelchair accessibility, halal certification, "women-owned", outdoor seating, free Wi-Fi, accepted payment types including PayNow — these appear as filters and badges, and in Singapore the halal attribute alone is a deciding factor for a large share of F&B searches. Retail and F&B businesses should also load the Products section with photos and prices; product tiles show directly on the profile and routinely get more taps than the description text.
Step 5 — Write a business description that sells, in plain English
You get 750 characters. Spend the first 250 on what you do, who you serve, and where — because only the first few lines show before the "More" link. Mention your neighbourhoods and your specialisms naturally: "Family dental clinic in Toa Payoh serving the central heartlands since 2008, with a focus on anxious patients and kids' dentistry." Do not waste characters on slogans ("Your satisfaction is our priority") that match no search and convince no one. The description is a minor ranking input but a real conversion input — people read it when comparing you against the profile next to yours.
Step 6 — Build a photo engine, not a photo dump
Profiles with regular photo activity earn measurably more direction requests and website clicks than stale ones — Google has published figures on this, and our client data agrees. The standard to hit: a proper logo and cover image, at least 20 interior and exterior shots so customers recognise the place from the street, photos of every key product or service outcome, and team photos that make the business feel human.
Then keep it moving: add 3–5 new photos every month. Real ones — phone-quality is fine, stock photos are poison and Google can detect them. For F&B, shoot the dishes people actually order. For services like renovation, before/after pairs are the highest-converting photos that exist. Geotagging photos is largely a myth; consistency and recency are what actually register.
Step 7 — Build a review system you do not have to think about
Reviews are the heaviest prominence lever you control, and the pattern matters as much as the total: 12 reviews arriving every month beats 150 reviews that all arrived in 2022. The mechanics that work for Singapore SMEs:
Generate your review short-link from the profile and put it in a QR code at the counter, on receipts, and in your post-job WhatsApp message
Ask at the moment of peak satisfaction — when the customer compliments the meal, when the aircon blows cold again, when the renovation handover walkthrough ends
Make it a process, not a mood: tie the ask to an existing step like sending the invoice, so it happens every time
Never buy reviews or run "review for discount" promotions — incentivised reviews violate Google's policy, and Singapore's review-farm crackdowns have wiped profiles to zero overnight
Reviews that mention your services and location ("best chemical wash in Hougang") feed the relevance factor too, so when you ask happy customers, it is fair to say "it helps us if you mention what we did for you". You cannot script the words, but you can prompt the specificity.
Step 8 — Reply to every review, especially the bad ones
Owner responses are visible to every future customer and signal an actively managed business to Google. Reply to positive reviews briefly and personally — name the dish, the job, the visit, so it reads human rather than templated. For negative reviews, the playbook is: respond within 24–48 hours, stay calm and factual, acknowledge the experience, state your side once without arguing, and move the resolution offline ("we've tried to reach you directly — please call us at..."). You are not writing for the angry reviewer; you are writing for the hundred silent readers deciding whether one bad night defines your business. A 4.6-star profile with thoughtful responses to its critics regularly out-converts a suspicious wall of 5.0 perfection.
Step 9 — Use posts, Q&A, and messaging so the profile looks alive
Google Posts are mini-updates — offers, events, news — that appear on your profile and expire after about a week. One post a week is enough: this week's promotion, a new menu item, a completed project, a CNY or National Day operating-hours notice. Singapore searchers check profiles heavily around public holidays, and a business whose holiday hours are posted and accurate wins customers from the competitor whose profile says "Open" while the shutters are down.
The Q&A section is public and anyone can answer questions about your business — including strangers guessing wrongly. Seed it yourself with the ten questions you hear every week (parking, halal status, walk-ins versus appointments, PayNow acceptance) and answer them as the owner. Turn on messaging only if someone will actually answer within a few hours; a chat button that goes silent is worse than no chat button.
Step 10 — Track the numbers and connect the profile to your website
The profile's Performance tab shows calls, direction requests, website clicks, and the actual search terms people used to find you. Check it monthly. If "calls" is your business's lifeblood, use a trackable forwarding number carefully (keep the real number as the primary to protect NAP consistency) or simply log "found us on Google" at the front desk. The searches report tells you what Google thinks you are relevant for — if your renovation firm is showing for "furniture shop", your categories need revisiting.
Finally, connect the system: link the profile to the most specific relevant page of your website, not just the homepage — a "Aircon Servicing in Tampines" landing page converts profile clicks far better than a generic homepage. Add LocalBusiness structured data to your site so Google can cross-confirm your details; our plain-English guide to what schema markup is covers how that works. The profile and the website reinforce each other — that loop is the core of local SEO optimisation done properly.
One final note on the 10 steps before we compare what the outcomes look like: order matters less than completeness, but momentum matters most of all. The profiles that win in Singapore are rarely the ones that did one heroic optimisation sprint — they are the ones where somebody owns the monthly routine. Put a recurring 30-minute slot in the calendar, assign it to a named person, and treat it like reconciling the till: photos uploaded, one post published, hours checked against upcoming holidays, new reviews answered, Q&A swept. That half hour is the entire maintenance cost of a channel that, done well, outperforms paid placements many businesses spend four figures a month on.
Neglected vs Basic vs Fully Optimised: What the Difference Looks Like
Map Pack visibility
Neglected profile: Rarely appears outside brand-name searches
Basic profile: Appears for some "near me" searches in immediate vicinity
Fully optimised profile: Competes for Map Pack across the whole service area and category set
Reviews
Neglected profile: Under 30, stale, unanswered
Basic profile: 50–100, slow drip, some replies
Fully optimised profile: 150+, steady 8–15/month velocity, every review answered
Photos
Neglected profile: 3–10, years old
Basic profile: 20–40, occasionally added
Fully optimised profile: 100+, refreshed monthly, covers products, premises and team
Categories & services
Neglected profile: One generic category, no services
Basic profile: Right primary category, partial services
Fully optimised profile: Precise primary + 3–6 secondaries, full services with SGD prices
Monthly actions (calls + directions + clicks)
Neglected profile: A trickle — often under 50
Basic profile: Few hundred
Fully optimised profile: Often 4–10x the neglected baseline for the same business
Typical effort
Neglected profile: None
Basic profile: 2–3 hours once
Fully optimised profile: A weekend to set up, then 1–2 hours per month
The jump from neglected to basic is the cheapest marketing win in Singapore. The jump from basic to fully optimised is where the Map Pack positions — and the compounding — actually live.
Common Mistakes Singapore Businesses Make With Google Business Profile
Mistake 1: Keyword-stuffing the business name. Adding "Best | Cheap | Singapore | 24/7" to your name field feels free and works briefly — until a competitor reports it and Google suspends the listing. Suspensions take anywhere from days to over a month to appeal, and during that time you vanish from Maps entirely. The money lost in one suspension month dwarfs whatever the stuffed name gained. Fix: registered trading name only, and put the keywords in categories, services, and description where they belong.
Mistake 2: Treating reviews as something that happens to you. Most owners only engage with reviews when an unfair one-star arrives, by which point the profile shows 40 reviews in 6 years while the competitor across the road collects 15 a month. The passive approach costs real money: review count and velocity are prominence signals, and conversion research consistently shows customers filtering out businesses below 4 stars or below a credible review count. Fix: Step 7's QR-and-WhatsApp system — ten minutes to set up, runs forever.
Mistake 3: Wrong or lazy category selection. We audited a Singapore aesthetic clinic listed as "Doctor" — invisible for every treatment search that mattered, while a technically weaker competitor sat in the Map Pack under "Skin care clinic". One category change moved them from outside the top 20 to the top 5 for their core searches within six weeks. Fix: be maximally specific with the primary, add every legitimate secondary, and re-check the category list every six months.
Mistake 4: Ghost-town signals — outdated hours, dead photos, unanswered Q&A. Wrong CNY hours send customers to locked doors, and a single "is this place still open?" sitting unanswered in Q&A for eight months tells both Google and humans that nobody is home. The cost is silent: Google quietly favours actively managed profiles, and customers quietly choose the listing that looks alive. Fix: a monthly 30-minute profile routine — photos, post, hours check, Q&A sweep — plus special-hours entries for every Singapore public holiday at the start of the year.
Mistake 5: Stopping at the profile and ignoring the website behind it. The profile wins the click, but if it links to a slow homepage with no clear next action, the click dies there — and your website's overall SEO strength feeds back into the profile's prominence anyway. Businesses that pair an optimised profile with proper on-site local SEO consistently outrank profile-only competitors. If you want to see how deep that work goes, this is exactly what a good SEO agency in Singapore spends its first month on.
Quick Reference by Industry
F&B and cafés
Best approach: relentless food photography (weekly), halal and dietary attributes set, menu loaded as products, holiday hours always current. Realistic target: 200+ profile actions per month for a neighbourhood outlet, and Map Pack presence for "[cuisine] + [neighbourhood]" searches. Why it works: food is searched visually and impulsively — the profile with this week's photos beats the profile with 2022's photos before the searcher ever compares menus.
Medical, dental and TCM clinics
Best approach: precise treatment-level categories, every service listed with honest price ranges, careful review responses that never confirm someone was a patient (PDPA and medical advertising rules apply). Realistic target: 5–15 new patient enquiries per month attributable to the profile for a heartland clinic. Why it works: healthcare choices run on trust at short distance — reviews and proximity decide, and clinics that answer their critics professionally convert the silent readers.
Renovation and home services
Best approach: service-area business setup covering your real coverage zone, before/after photo pairs as the backbone, services priced "from SGD X", reviews requested at handover every time. Realistic target: 10–25 enquiries per month once review count passes ~100. Why it works: renovation is a high-ticket trust purchase — a profile with 200 documented projects and detailed reviews is social proof no brochure matches.
Legal, accounting and professional services
Best approach: practice-area categories, individual-partner profiles where appropriate, review system aimed at the natural thank-you moment after a matter closes, description that names your specialisms and languages served. Realistic target: 3–10 qualified consultations per month from branded plus "near me" discovery. Why it works: professional services are compared in threes — the firm with 80 specific reviews wins against the firm with 9 generic ones at identical expertise levels.
Beauty, fitness and wellness
Best approach: booking link connected directly on the profile, fresh result photos (with consent), posts for monthly promotions, Q&A seeded with pricing and walk-in policy. Realistic target: 30–60% of new client bookings traceable to Maps within six months in dense residential areas. Why it works: these are recurring, hyper-local purchases — winning the Map Pack in your own neighbourhood captures customers for years, not visits.
Retail and showrooms
Best approach: full product catalogue with prices, stock-relevant posts, accurate mall floor/unit details, photos that show exactly where you are inside the building. Realistic target: measurable lift in direction requests and "where to buy X" visibility within a quarter. Why it works: retail searches are decided on "is it nearby and do they have it" — products and location precision answer both inside the profile itself.
When This Is Enough — and When It Is Not
Profile optimisation alone is genuinely enough if: your customers are overwhelmingly local, your category is not saturated, and your current profile is in the neglected or basic state — the 10 steps will produce visible movement in 4–8 weeks. It is the right first move before spending anything on ads, because it converts demand that already exists, for free.
It is not enough on its own if: you are in a brutally competitive central category (aesthetics, law, fitness in the CBD) where every serious player already runs an optimised profile — then website authority, content, and reviews at scale become the tiebreakers. It also cannot create demand that does not exist; if nobody searches for your category, the Map Pack has nothing to give you, and paid channels like pay-per-click for local businesses are how you put yourself in front of people instead. And if you need volume this month rather than this quarter, run ads in parallel — profile gains compound, but they are not instant.
Real Singapore Case Study: Bakery-Café in Toa Payoh
Business: A second-generation bakery-café in Toa Payoh Central, seating for 28, known locally for kaya toast sets and custom celebration cakes.
Situation: Walk-in traffic was healthy at breakfast but dead in the afternoons, and custom cake orders — the highest-margin product — were stuck at around 9 per month. The profile had been claimed in 2019: one category ("Bakery"), 11 photos, 38 reviews at 4.3 stars with the most recent eight months old, no services or products listed, and opening hours that still showed pre-2024 timings on weekends.
Problems identified: Wrong weekend hours actively sending people away; no "Cafe" or "Dessert shop" secondary categories, so afternoon "cafe near me" searches never surfaced the business; zero product tiles despite cakes being the margin driver; review velocity near zero; and the profile linked to a Facebook page instead of the ordering site.
What we fixed: All 10 steps over two weekends. Categories rebuilt (Bakery primary; Cafe, Dessert shop, Coffee shop secondary), 60 photos shot on a phone in two sessions, the cake range loaded as products with SGD prices, hours corrected including special hours for every 2026 public holiday, a review QR code at the till with a one-line ask printed on receipts, weekly posts featuring the cake of the week, Q&A seeded with the twelve questions staff hear daily, and the website link pointed at the cake-order page.
Results after 90 days:
Profile actions (calls + direction requests + website clicks) rose from 217 to 941 per month
Reviews grew from 38 to 104, arriving at roughly 21 per month, rating moving from 4.3 to 4.6
Custom cake orders went from 9 to 27 per month, worth about SGD 3,400 in additional monthly revenue at margins far better than walk-in coffee
The café entered the Map Pack for "cafe Toa Payoh" and "birthday cake Toa Payoh" — searches it had never appeared for — with afternoon walk-ins up noticeably by month three
Total spend: zero on ads. The cost was two weekends of setup and about 90 minutes a month of upkeep. For a similar transformation on a larger scale, see our local SEO case study for Carre Jewellery, where the same profile-plus-website system was applied to a far more competitive retail category.
What's Changing in 2026
1. AI summaries are reading your profile out loud. Google's AI-generated answers increasingly summarise local businesses directly — pulling from your description, reviews, and attributes to tell searchers "this bakery is known for kaya toast and custom cakes". You cannot write these summaries, but you feed them: profiles with specific reviews and complete attributes get described accurately and attractively; sparse profiles get described thinly or not at all. The optimisation work in this guide is exactly what makes AI describe you well.
2. Review authenticity enforcement is tightening. Google has escalated automated detection of purchased and incentivised reviews, and entire profiles in Singapore have had review counts slashed or listings suspended in the sweeps. The era of quietly buying 50 reviews is ending with real casualties. Slow, systematic, genuine review generation — the unglamorous Step 7 — is now also the only safe option.
3. The profile is becoming the transaction surface. Bookings, menus, quotes, and chat increasingly happen inside the profile without the customer ever reaching your website. Businesses that connect booking links, keep products current, and answer messages quickly are capturing customers at the search moment itself. Treat the profile as a storefront with a till, not a signpost.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does Google Business Profile optimisation take to show results?
Expect first movement in 2–4 weeks (hours corrections and category fixes act fastest) and meaningful Map Pack changes in 6–12 weeks as reviews and activity accumulate. The compounding continues for as long as you maintain the monthly routine — this is a flywheel, not a switch.
Is a Google Business Profile really free?
Yes — creating, verifying, and fully optimising the profile costs nothing. Google makes its money when businesses additionally buy ads. Be wary of cold callers "from Google" demanding payment to keep your listing active; that is a scam that targets Singapore SMEs constantly.
What do I need before I start?
Control of the profile (or the ability to claim it), your exact registered business details, a phone with a decent camera, 20–30 minutes for verification, and a free weekend for the full 10 steps. No software, no budget, no agency required for the foundation.
How many reviews do I need to rank in the Map Pack in Singapore?
There is no magic number — it is relative to your neighbourhood competitors. As a rule of thumb, match the review count of the businesses currently in the Map Pack for your target search and sustain a faster monthly velocity than them. In most heartland categories that means 100+ total with 8–15 arriving monthly; in CBD-competitive niches, several hundred.
Can I optimise my profile myself or should I hire someone?
The 10 steps in this guide are deliberately DIY-able — most owners can complete them in a weekend. Hire help when you lack the 1–2 hours monthly for upkeep, when you are in a category where every competitor is already optimised, or when the profile work needs to connect to website SEO, content, and landing pages as one system.
Why did my profile get suspended, and what do I do?
The usual Singapore triggers: keyword-stuffed business name, a residential address listed as a storefront, sudden bursts of reviews, or address edits that tripped re-verification. Fix the violation first, then appeal through the profile dashboard with documentation (ACRA record, signboard photos, utility bill). Appeals take days to weeks — which is why prevention beats cure.
Do Google Posts actually help ranking?
Directly, only marginally — posts are primarily a conversion and freshness tool. Indirectly they matter: an active profile earns more clicks and engagement, and engagement feeds prominence. One post a week for ten minutes is among the best effort-to-return ratios on the profile.
Is Google Business Profile worth it for home-based and online Singapore businesses?
If customers come to you or you serve a local area, yes — set it up as a service-area business with the address hidden. A purely online store with no local service area generally should not have one (and may not qualify under the guidelines); your effort is better spent on standard SEO and e-commerce channels.
What is the difference between Google Business Profile and local SEO?
The profile is the single most visible piece of local SEO, but local SEO is the whole system: the profile, your website's location pages, consistent directory citations, local backlinks, and reviews. The profile gets you into the Map Pack conversation; the rest of the system wins the tougher fights and converts the clicks.
How much does it cost to hire an agency for this in Singapore?
Standalone profile optimisation is typically SGD 300–800 as a one-off setup, with ongoing local SEO retainers (profile + website + content + citations) running SGD 800–2,500 per month depending on competitiveness. If an agency promises guaranteed #1 Map Pack placement, walk away — nobody controls Google's rankings.
Conclusion
The Map Pack is the most valuable free real estate in Singapore marketing, and it is won by the unglamorous work this guide lays out: accurate foundations, precise categories, complete services, living photos, systematic reviews, and a monthly half-hour of upkeep. None of the 10 steps requires budget. All of them require doing — which is exactly why most of your competitors will not.
The decision is straightforward: spend one weekend and a small monthly routine to compete for customers who are already searching for what you sell, or keep paying full price for attention while a free channel sits idle. The businesses that treat their profile as a living storefront in 2026 — feeding it photos, reviews, and accurate answers — will increasingly be the only ones Google's AI bothers to describe to searchers at all.
Get a Free Local SEO Review
Want to know exactly where your profile stands today? We will audit it against the full 10-step checklist and your three closest Map Pack competitors — free, no sales pitch, no obligation, just honest expert analysis from the team behind PaperCutCollective's local SEO service and SEO programmes for Singapore SMEs.
In your free review, PaperCutCollective will analyse:
Your profile's completeness against all 10 steps, with the gaps ranked by impact
Your category and service selection versus what Singapore searchers actually type
Your review count, rating, and velocity benchmarked against your Map Pack competitors
Where you currently rank on the map grid across your service area
Whether your website is helping or dragging down your local visibility
Book your free consultation here — bring your postal code, and we will bring the map.




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