Local SEO Articles
Your Google Business Profile Is Gathering Dust. Here's How To Fix It (From Your Sofa)
You set it up. Probably a few years ago. Maybe you remember doing it. Maybe you don't.
Your Google Business Profile is sitting there right now, on Google Maps, showing up (or not showing up) in local searches. And unless you've been actively maintaining it, it's costing you business.
The problem? Most small business owners don't even remember how to access it anymore.
"What's my password again?" "Which email did I use?" "Where do I even log in?"
Sound familiar?
Here's the good news: you don't need to be sat at a desktop with a cup of tea and your brain switched on. You can do this from your sofa on your phone. And it takes about 10-15 minutes every couple of weeks to keep your profile working hard for you.
Here's exactly how.
How To Access Your Profile (If You Remember Your Login)
Via Google Business Profile (The Proper Way):
On your phone, open Google Chrome (or your default browser)
Go to google.com/business
Tap the Sign In button (top right)
Enter the email address you used to set up your profile
Enter your password
You'll see a list of your business profiles (if you have more than one)
Tap the one you want to manage
That's it. You're in.
Via Google Maps (The Easier Way):
Open Google Maps on your phone
Tap your profile icon (bottom right)
Tap Your Business Profile or Manage Your Business
Search for your business name
Select your business from the results
You'll see an "Manage" or "Edit" button—tap that
This is often faster if you just need to make quick updates.
How To Access Your Profile (If You've Forgotten Your Login)
This happens more often than you'd think. You set it up years ago, used a random password, never saved it anywhere.
If you've forgotten your password:
Go to google.com/business
Tap Sign In
Enter the email address you think you used
Tap "Forgot password?"
Google will ask you to verify your identity (usually by sending a code to your recovery email or phone)
Follow the prompts to reset your password
Log in with your new password
If you've forgotten which email you used:
This is trickier, but doable.
Go to google.com/business
Tap Sign In
Try common emails you might have used (main business email, personal email, old email)
If one works, great—proceed with password recovery
If none work, tap "Can't sign in?" and follow Google's account recovery process
If you genuinely can't remember anything, you can verify ownership of your business another way. Google will ask for business documents or a phone verification code sent to your business number.
Once You're In: The Weekly Maintenance Checklist
Okay, so you've logged in. Now what? Here's what actually matters:
1. Update Your Business Details (5 minutes)
Tap "Business Info" or "About"
Check:
Business name (spelled correctly, no random capitals or symbols)
Phone number (is it current? Can people actually reach you?)
Address (still correct? Updated recently?)
Website (if you have one—is the link working?)
Business hours (do they match reality? Updated for holidays or changes?)
Small changes here make a massive difference. A wrong phone number costs you jobs. Out-of-date hours frustrate customers.
2. Add Or Update Your Services (5 minutes)
This is the bit most people miss.
Tap "Services" (or "Products" depending on your business type)
Add every service you actually offer. Don't be vague.
Instead of: "Cleaning" Write: "Commercial office cleaning," "End of tenancy cleaning," "Deep carpet cleaning"
Why? Because customers search specifically. They're looking for "lock changes" or "emergency locksmith," not just "locksmith services." The more detailed your services list, the more likely you show up for what people are actually searching for.
3. Add Your Service Areas (3 minutes)
Tap "Service Areas"
List every area you actually serve. Be specific:
"Malvern, Worcestershire" rather than "West Midlands"
If you serve multiple towns or postcode areas, add them all. This tells Google (and your customers) where you operate.
4. Add Photos (5 minutes)
This matters more than people think.
Tap "Photos" or "Gallery"
Add photos of:
Your work in progress (shows competence)
Finished jobs (shows quality)
Your team (builds trust)
Your workspace or van (shows you're professional)
Don't use stock photos. Real photos of real work beat polished nonsense every time. Customers want to see what you actually do.
Recent photos matter too. Google prioritizes fresh content. If your photos are from 2022, update them.
5. Check Your Reviews (2 minutes)
Tap "Reviews"
Read through recent reviews. Respond to them—especially the good ones (say thanks) and the bad ones (address the issue professionally).
This shows you're actively managing your profile. It also shows Google that your profile is maintained and current.
Why You Should Do This Every Couple Of Weeks
I know what you're thinking. "Every couple of weeks? That's loads of work."
It's not. It's 15 minutes. From your sofa. On your phone.
Here's why it matters:
Google rewards fresh, updated profiles with better visibility. A profile that's actively maintained shows up higher in searches than a neglected one.
Customers trust maintained profiles more. Recent photos. Updated information. Responded-to reviews. These things signal that you're a business that cares.
Your competitors probably aren't doing this regularly. That's your competitive edge.
The Reality Check
One of your competitors probably has a better website than you. That's fine. But I guarantee they're not maintaining their Google Business Profile fortnightly. So while they're focused on their website, you're the one showing up in the Map Pack with up-to-date information and recent photos.
That's the job you win.
Where To Start
If your profile is currently a mess—outdated information, no photos, incomplete details—don't panic. You don't have to fix everything at once.
Tonight, from your sofa:
Log in (using the steps above)
Update your phone number and hours (5 minutes)
Add a couple of recent photos of your work (5 minutes)
Add your service areas if they're missing (3 minutes)
That's it. You've just improved your profile significantly.
Then, make a note to do a full check every couple of weeks. Not because it's a chore. But because it's the easiest way to stay visible in local search.
Your Google Business Profile isn't a one-time setup. It's an ongoing sales tool. Treat it that way and it'll work hard for you.
Thanks for reading,
Ollie
Ps. Sign up to my free newsletter here for more local SEO tips and guidance.
I Needed A Locksmith but I Never Visited Their Website
Yesterday I had a problem. A genuine, needs-fixing-today problem.
I needed a locksmith in Malvern. Urgently.
So what did I do? I did what everyone does. I opened Google, typed in "locksmith Malvern," and looked at the Map Pack results.
Three options appeared. Three locksmiths, all in my area, all showing up in that golden real estate at the top of Google search results.
One stood out immediately.
Why? Two things.
He had the most reviews. Not just good reviews—the most of them. That signals consistency and real customer experience.
His profile was complete. No missing information. No red flags. It looked professional and trustworthy.
So I did what any sensible customer would do. I quickly scanned through a handful of his reviews.
All recent. All five stars. Not a dodgy review in sight.
And here's the important bit—they mentioned specific details. Lock changes (exactly what I needed). Good pricing. Fast service. Quick response times. Professional work.
By the time I'd finished reading those reviews, I knew exactly what I was getting.
So I called.
He answered with expertise. Gave me clear information. No confusion. No hard sell. Just straightforward answers to straightforward questions.
I booked him for the next day.
He's coming tomorrow, the job will be done, and I'll pay him immediately.
All within 24 hours from the moment I started searching.
Here's Why This Matters For Your Business
I run a digital strategy consultancy. I help local businesses get found online. And even I—someone who absolutely knows better—completely bypassed the website.
Because the decision was already made before I ever would have clicked it.
The Google Business Profile made the sale. The reviews closed it. The responsiveness confirmed it.
The website never got a look in.
This is the reality most local business owners don't understand.
The Website Myth
There's this persistent belief in small business that the website is where the magic happens. That if you just get your website right, customers will find you and buy from you.
It's not completely wrong. But it's not the full picture either.
For a lot of local service businesses—plumbers, electricians, locksmiths, cleaners, builders—the website isn't the primary decision driver. It's the afterthought. The thing people might look at if they've already decided to call you.
But they have to find you first. And they have to trust you before they dial.
And in 2026, that happens on Google Maps.
The Map Pack Is Where You Win
The Google Map Pack—those three results that show up at the top of a local search—is where the real competition happens.
When someone searches for your service in your area, they see those three listings first. They see ratings. They see review count. They see how many people have rated you. They see your phone number, your address, your hours.
If you're not in those top three, you're fighting for attention further down the page.
But here's the thing: being in the top three isn't enough. Your profile has to be complete. And you have to have reviews—recent ones, genuine ones, that mention the specific services people are searching for.
That's what converts.
The Locksmith's Winning Formula - The locksmith I called didn't win the job because his website was beautiful. He won it because:
He showed up in the Map Pack - Top three. Right there when I searched. That's visibility.
He had more reviews than his competitors - Not just good reviews—more of them. That signals consistent quality and real customer experience. That builds trust instantly.
His profile was complete and accurate - No missing information. No confusion. No reason to distrust him. That removes friction.
His reviews were genuine - Recent. Consistent quality. Five stars across the board. No obvious fake reviews. That's authentic social proof.
His reviews mentioned what I was actually looking for - Lock changes. Good pricing. Fast service. Professional work. They answered my questions before I even called him. That's targeted social proof.
He responded with real expertise - When I called, he was informative, helpful, and clear. No runaround. That confirmed what the reviews suggested.
He converted fast - From search to booking within minutes. From booking to job completion within 24 hours. That speed is trust in action.
That's the entire sales process. Compressed into less than an hour.
What His Website Actually Did
Now, does he have a website? Probably. Maybe it's great, maybe it's terrible. I have no idea because I never went there.
But here's the thing—even if his website had been stunning, it wouldn't have mattered. The decision was already made through the Map Pack listing and reviews.
If he'd invested in a beautiful website but neglected his Google Business Profile and reviews, he'd have lost this job to someone with a worse website but better local SEO and social proof.
Because I wasn't looking for a website. I was looking for a locksmith who was easy to reach, came recommended by real customers, and could actually solve my problem.
The Lesson For Your Business
If you're a local service business owner, this should be your priority order:
Google Business Profile. Full, complete, accurate, with all the information a customer needs. This is where customers find you. Don't leave anything blank.
Recent, genuine reviews. Actively collect them. Respond to them. Make it easy for customers to leave feedback. Recent reviews (last few months) matter more than old ones. And reviews that mention specific services and details matter far more than generic praise.
Responsiveness. When someone calls, emails, or messages you through Google, be fast. The locksmith called me back quickly. That confirmed the reviews. That sealed the deal.
Quality service. The reviews were five stars because the work was good. That's not luck—that's consistency.
A functional website. Not fancy. Just working. Clear information about what you do and how to contact you. It's the safety net, not the main event.
Everything else. Social media, clever copywriting, fancy design—these are nice to have. But they're not what drives the phone ringing.
The Real Opportunity
Here's what excites me about this: most of your competitors are probably getting this wrong.
They're focused on their website. They're not actively managing reviews. They're not responding quickly to inquiries. They're not optimizing their Google Business Profile for visibility. They're not collecting reviews that mention specific services.
That means there's a massive opportunity for businesses that do get it right.
Show up in the Map Pack. Have a complete profile. Get more recent reviews than your competitors. Make sure those reviews mention the services people are searching for. Respond faster. Be helpful. Be professional. That's the formula.
The locksmith I called understood this. Whether by accident or design, he was the option that looked most trustworthy, most complete, and easiest to reach. His reviews answered my questions before I even called. And when I called, he delivered exactly what the reviews promised.
So I booked him. Paid him the next day. He converted a lead to a paying customer within 24 hours.
That's what happens when you get the fundamentals right.
Thanks for reading,
Ollie
Ps. Sign up to my free newsletter here for more local SEO tips and guidance.
My mates Cousin Built My Website - And Why It's Killing Your Local SEO!
We've all heard it. Or maybe you've been it.
"Oh, my website? Yeah, my mate's cousin's quite good with computers. She built it for me one weekend. Didn't cost much."
Sound familiar? Here's the thing—that website probably cost you far more than the few hundred quid you saved.
I'm not being dramatic. I'm being honest.
The Problem With "Good Enough" Websites
When someone without proper experience builds your website, they're usually optimizing for the wrong things. They're making it look nice (or at least, they think they are). They're getting your contact details on there. Job done, right?
Wrong. Dead wrong.
A website isn't just a digital brochure. It's your shop window, your salesperson, and increasingly—your biggest competitor's biggest vulnerability. Because if your website doesn't work hard for you, your local competitors' websites will work hard against you.
Here's What Happens
Bad websites are like having a beautiful storefront with a broken door. People can see it looks nice from the street, but they can't actually get inside to buy anything.
Technically, this shows up in several ways:
Your site loads slowly. When your mate's cousin builds a site, they often don't care about file sizes, image optimization, or server performance. Google certainly cares though. So do your potential customers, who'll click away after three seconds if your site crawls along like a tired snail.
The code is a mess. Poor structure means search engines struggle to understand what your site is actually about. You could be ranking for nothing even though you should be ranking for everything. SEO doesn't happen by accident—it happens because someone understands how to build it in from the start.
There's no strategy. A proper website isn't just pages. It's a system that guides people toward a specific action—calling you, getting a quote, booking a consultation. Without that structure, visitors wander around lost. They leave. Your conversion rate becomes your biggest problem.
The SEO Disaster
This is where it gets really painful for local business owners.
Local SEO—getting found by people searching for your services in your area—depends on your website sending consistent, correct signals to Google. A badly built site sends mixed signals. Or no signals at all.
Missing meta descriptions. Broken internal linking. No local schema markup. Duplicate content issues. Keyword stuffing that makes your site read like a ransom note. These aren't just technical glitches—they're the difference between showing up on page one and disappearing into page ten.
And once you're on page ten? You might as well not exist.
The Credibility Problem
Here's something people don't talk about enough: a bad website makes you look small.
When someone lands on your site from a local search, they're making a split-second judgment. Does this business look professional? Can I trust them with my money? Will they actually deliver?
I covered this in yesterday artticle which you can find here.
A poorly designed website—even if it's technically functional—tells visitors you don't care enough to invest in your business. They'll click to your competitor's site instead. The one that looks like someone actually put thought into it.
This isn't vanity. It's pure business logic.
What A Proper Website Actually Does
A strategic website:
Works on every device (mobile-first, because that's how people search now)
Loads fast enough that people don't bounce before it even appears
Has clear navigation so visitors find what they need in seconds
Uses proper SEO structure so Google understands your business
Converts visitors into leads because there's an actual strategy behind the layout
Builds trust through professional design and clear information
Tells your story in a way that matters to your specific local audience
Stays updated and secure (because an outdated website is a liability)
The Reality Check
You wouldn't ask your mate's cousin to do your accounts, right? You'd get an accountant. You wouldn't ask them to handle your legal stuff—you'd get a solicitor.
Your website deserves the same level of professionalism, if you’re not getting the enquiries you deserve then it might well be be problem.
I'm not saying every website needs to cost a fortune. But it needs to be built with strategy, purpose, and technical competence. It needs to work for you, not against you.
Because in local business, your website is often the first impression. Make it count.
Thanks for reading,
Ollie
Ps. Sign up to my free newsletter here for more local SEO tips and guidance.
Your Website Gets Visitors. Why Aren't They Calling?
You're showing up on Google. People are landing on your website. But the phone isn't ringing and the enquiry form stays empty.
Here's the uncomfortable truth: most local business websites are digital brochures, not sales tools. They tell people what you do but make it surprisingly difficult to actually get in touch.
The 5-Second Test
When someone lands on your homepage, they decide within five seconds whether to stay or leave. In those five seconds, they need to know three things:
What do you do?
Do you serve my area?
How do I contact you?
If any of these require scrolling or hunting, you're losing enquiries.
Your Phone Number Belongs at the Top
This sounds obvious, but I audit local business websites every week where the phone number is buried in the footer or hidden on a contact page.
On mobile especially, for the vast majority of local service businesses your number should be:
Visible without scrolling
Clickable (tap-to-call)
Large enough to tap with a thumb
Next is The "What Now?" Problem
Every page on your website should answer one question: what do you want the visitor to do next?
Read your services page? There should be a clear next step
Finished reading a blog post? Direct them somewhere
On your homepage? Make the action obvious
Buttons that say "Get a Quote" or "Book a Free Call" outperform "Contact Us" every time. Be specific about what happens when they click.
Forms = Shorter is Better
Every additional field on your contact form reduces submissions. Name, phone, email, brief message. That's it. You can qualify leads on the phone – your job online is just to start the conversation.
Speed Matters More Than You Think
If your website takes more than three seconds to load on mobile, roughly half your visitors leave before seeing anything. Check yours at Google's PageSpeed Insights. If it's slow, that massive hero image or unoptimised photos are likely the culprits.
The Trust Gap
People searching locally are often comparing three or four businesses at once. They're looking for reasons to trust you:
Reviews prominently displayed
Real photos (not weird stock images that show an American call centre from 2010)
Clear pricing or at least pricing guidance
Proof you're established and legitimate
A website that looks professional but feels anonymous loses to one that feels human and trustworthy.
One Change This Week
If you’re getting traffic to your website but not many enquiries the look at your website on your phone. Time how long it takes to find your phone number and tap to call. If it's more than two seconds, fix that first. Everything else can wait.
Thanks for reading,
Ollie
Ps. Sign up to my free newsletter here for more local SEO tips and guidance.