Why you need a Google Business Profile optimization checklist
Your Google Business Profile is the single most important asset in local SEO. It controls what customers see in Google Maps, the local 3-pack, and knowledge panels. Yet most business owners set it up once and never touch it again.
According to BrightLocal's research, businesses with complete Google Business Profile listings are 70% more likely to attract location visits and 50% more likely to lead to a purchase. The difference between a half-finished profile and a fully optimized one can mean thousands of dollars in monthly revenue.
This checklist covers every setting, field, and optimization opportunity in your Google Business Profile. Print it out, bookmark it, and work through it section by section. Each item takes five minutes or less on its own. The whole list takes about two hours to complete from scratch.
Step 1: Claiming and verification
Before you optimize anything, you need to own your listing. Here is what to check:
- Search for your business on Google Maps. If a listing exists that you did not create, Google likely generated it from directory data. You need to claim it.
- Sign in at business.google.com with the Google account you want as the primary owner. Use a business email, not a personal one — you cannot transfer ownership easily later.
- Complete the verification process. Google offers several methods: postcard (5-7 days), phone call, email, or instant verification if you have already verified your website in Google Search Console. Video verification is now available for many businesses.
- Check for duplicate listings. Search your business name and address on Maps. If you find duplicates, request removal through Google Business Profile support. Duplicates split your reviews and confuse Google's algorithm.
Verification typically takes 3-14 days. Do not skip this step — an unverified profile cannot rank in the local pack.
Step 2: Business information (NAP, hours, description)
This is where most businesses leave money on the table. Every field matters for Google Business Profile optimization.
Name, Address, Phone (NAP)
- Business name: Use your real-world business name exactly as it appears on your signage. Do not add keywords (e.g., "Smith Dental — Best Dentist in Dallas" violates Google's guidelines and risks suspension).
- Address: Match your address character-for-character across every directory. If your GBP says "123 Main Street, Suite 200," then Yelp, Facebook, and your website must say the exact same thing. Not "Ste 200." Not "STE 200." Exactly the same.
- Phone number: Use a local phone number, not a toll-free 800 number. Local numbers reinforce your geographic relevance. A Dallas dentist with a 214 area code signals Dallas to Google.
Hours of operation
- Set regular hours for every day of the week, including days you are closed.
- Add special hours for holidays and seasonal changes before they happen — Google rewards proactive updates.
- Set "More hours" if applicable: drive-through hours, senior hours, delivery hours, or happy hours for restaurants.
Business description
- Use all 750 characters. Google gives you the space — use it. Mention your city, your core services, and what makes you different.
- Lead with your primary service and location: "Riverside Family Dental has been providing comprehensive dental care to families in Riverside, California for over 15 years."
- Do not stuff keywords. Write naturally. Google's algorithm is sophisticated enough to understand context without you repeating "dentist in Riverside" six times.
Step 3: Google Business Profile categories and attributes
Primary category
Your primary category is the single most important ranking signal in your Google Business Profile. Choose the most specific option available. An HVAC company should select "HVAC Contractor" not "Contractor." A personal injury lawyer should select "Personal Injury Attorney" not "Law Firm."
Google offers over 4,000 categories. Search carefully — the right one may be more specific than you expect. "Cosmetic Dentist" ranks differently than "Dentist." "Thai Restaurant" ranks differently than "Restaurant."
Secondary categories
- Add every relevant secondary category. A dental practice might add: Dentist, Cosmetic Dentist, Pediatric Dentist, Emergency Dental Service, and Dental Implants Provider.
- Do not add irrelevant categories. A dentist should not add "Teeth Whitening Service" as a category if they outsource whitening to another provider.
- Review categories quarterly. Google adds new categories regularly. A category that did not exist when you set up your profile might be available now.
Attributes
Attributes tell Google and customers about your business features. Depending on your category, you might see options like: wheelchair accessible, free Wi-Fi, women-owned, veteran-owned, outdoor seating, appointment required, or LGBTQ+ friendly. Check every attribute that applies. These show as badges on your listing and influence how Google ranks local businesses.
Step 4: Photos and visual content
Businesses with more than 100 photos receive 520% more calls than average, according to BrightLocal. Photos are not optional — they are a ranking factor and a conversion factor.
Minimum photo counts by type
- Exterior photos: At least 3. Show your building from different angles and in different lighting (day and evening). Customers use these to find your location.
- Interior photos: At least 5. Show your waiting area, treatment rooms, dining space, or workspace. Customers want to see what the experience will look like.
- Team photos: At least 3. Show real staff members, not stock photos. A photo of your dental team in scrubs builds more trust than any marketing copy.
- Product/service photos: At least 5. For a restaurant, show your dishes. For a salon, show before-and-after results. For a contractor, show completed projects.
- Cover photo: 1 high-quality image that represents your business. This appears most prominently in search results.
- Logo: 1 clean version of your business logo on a white or transparent background.
Photo best practices
- Upload photos at 720px width minimum (Google recommends 720x720).
- Use real photos, never stock images. Google can detect stock photos and they provide no ranking benefit.
- Name your photo files descriptively before uploading: "riverside-dental-waiting-room.jpg" not "IMG_4392.jpg".
- Add new photos weekly. Consistent uploads signal an active, thriving business.
Step 5: Google Posts strategy
Google Posts are short updates that appear directly on your Business Profile. They expire after 7 days (events last until the event date), which means you need to publish consistently.
Post types and frequency
- Update posts: Share news, tips, or announcements. Aim for 1-2 per week. Example: "We just added same-day emergency appointments on Saturdays. Call us at 555-0123 to book."
- Offer posts: Promote specials or discounts. Use these for seasonal promotions. Example: "New Patient Special: Comprehensive exam, cleaning, and X-rays for $99 (normally $275). Valid through April 30."
- Event posts: Announce events with start and end dates. Example: "Free HVAC Maintenance Workshop — Saturday, May 10 at our showroom. Learn how to extend the life of your system."
- Product posts: Highlight specific products or services. Useful for restaurants, retail, and service businesses.
Every post should include a call-to-action button (Learn more, Call now, Book, Order online) and an image. Posts with images get significantly more engagement than text-only posts.
AdIQ clients get weekly Google Posts created and published by their account manager as part of every plan. We track which post types drive the most profile views and calls for your industry, then optimize accordingly. You never have to write a single post yourself — see our plans.
Step 6: Reviews and Q&A management
Reviews are the second most important local SEO ranking factor after your Google Business Profile itself. Here is how to manage them:
Review generation
- Create a direct review link. In your GBP dashboard, find the "Ask for reviews" short link. Share this link in follow-up emails, text messages, and on receipts.
- Aim for 2-3 new reviews per week. Consistency matters more than volume. A business gaining 3 reviews per week will outrank one that got 50 reviews in January and none since.
- Ask at the right moment. For a dentist: right after a cleaning when the patient is happy. For a contractor: the day after project completion. For a restaurant: when clearing a table where customers are visibly satisfied. Learn more in our guide to getting more Google reviews.
Review responses
- Respond to every review — positive and negative — within 24 hours.
- Thank positive reviewers by name and mention the specific service they received.
- Address negative reviews professionally. Acknowledge the issue, apologize, and offer to make it right offline. Never argue publicly. See our detailed guide on responding to negative reviews.
Q&A section
- Seed your own Q&A. Ask and answer the 10 most common questions your front desk or sales team receives. This prevents random users from posting inaccurate answers.
- Monitor new questions weekly. Unanswered questions look bad and anyone can answer them — including competitors.
- Use natural keywords in your answers. A question like "Do you offer emergency dental services?" answered with "Yes, Riverside Family Dental offers emergency dental services Monday through Saturday including same-day appointments" reinforces your relevance for those search terms.
Step 7: Products and services
The Products and Services sections in your GBP are underutilized by most businesses but provide additional keyword signals to Google.
- Add every service you offer with a clear name, description, and price (if applicable). A plumber might list: drain cleaning, water heater installation, pipe repair, sewer line replacement, bathroom remodeling, and emergency plumbing.
- Write unique descriptions for each service — do not copy and paste the same text. Each description is an opportunity to include location-specific keywords naturally.
- Add products if relevant. Restaurants should add menu items. Retail stores should add top-selling products. Service businesses can list packages or plans.
- Include price ranges. Google shows pricing information in search results, and listings with pricing tend to get more clicks because they set clear expectations.
Step 8: Advanced settings
Messaging
Enable messaging if you can respond within a few hours. Google tracks your response time and displays it publicly. If you cannot respond quickly, leave messaging off — a "typically replies in 2 days" badge does more harm than good.
Appointment links
Add your booking URL if you use an online scheduling tool. This creates a "Book" button directly on your listing, reducing the steps between search and conversion.
Service area settings
- Storefront businesses: Keep your address visible and set your service area to the cities/zip codes you serve.
- Service-area businesses (plumbers, electricians, mobile services): Hide your address and define your service area by cities, counties, or a radius. You can list up to 20 areas.
- Do not set your service area too wide. Claiming you serve a 100-mile radius dilutes your relevance. Focus on the areas where you actually want customers.
Website and UTM tracking
Add UTM parameters to your GBP website link so you can track how much traffic comes from your profile in Google Analytics. Use something like: ?utm_source=google&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=gbp_listing. This lets you measure the real revenue impact of your GBP optimization work.
Ongoing Google Business Profile optimization maintenance
Google Business Profile optimization is not a one-time project. Here is a maintenance schedule to keep your profile performing at its best:
Weekly (15 minutes)
- Publish 1-2 Google Posts
- Respond to all new reviews
- Upload 2-3 new photos
- Check and answer new Q&A questions
Monthly (30 minutes)
- Review your GBP Insights (views, searches, actions)
- Check for and report fake or spam reviews
- Update any seasonal hours or special offers
- Verify your business information is still accurate everywhere
Quarterly (1 hour)
- Audit your categories — are there new, more specific options available?
- Review and update your business description
- Check your visibility score to see how your overall local presence is performing
- Update your products/services list with any new offerings
- Audit your photo library and remove outdated images
Key Takeaways
- Claim, verify, and eliminate duplicate listings before optimizing anything else.
- Your primary category is the single most powerful GBP ranking signal — choose the most specific option available.
- NAP consistency (Name, Address, Phone) must be character-for-character identical across every directory and your website.
- Aim for 100+ photos with weekly additions. Businesses with more photos get 520% more calls.
- Publish 1-2 Google Posts per week to signal an active, thriving business.
- Respond to every review within 24 hours and aim for 2-3 new reviews per week.
- GBP optimization is ongoing — follow the weekly, monthly, and quarterly maintenance schedule to stay ahead of competitors.