Local SEO · 6 min read

Local SEO: how to win Google Maps for your business.

By Dave Kerpen · April 2026

If you run a local business, here's the brutal truth: Google Maps is more important than your website.

I know that's not what most web designers will tell you (we make websites for a living, after all). But facts are facts. For most local SMBs — restaurants, repair shops, salons, dentists, lawyers, contractors — 60-80% of new customers are coming from Google Maps. Not Google search. Not social. Not paid ads. The map.

So if you're going to invest 5 hours a month in marketing, the math says you should put 3 of them into Google Maps.

What's "the map pack"

When someone Googles "[your service] near me" or "[your service] [your city]," the top of the results is a map with three businesses listed. That's the map pack. Being one of those three businesses is the gold standard of local SEO.

According to research from BrightLocal, the top map pack listing gets ~44% of clicks. The second gets 14%. The third gets 8%. Everyone below them combined gets maybe 5%. Map pack is winner-take-most.

How Google ranks the map pack

Three factors, in this order of importance:

1. Relevance. Does your business profile actually match what the searcher asked for? Includes category, services listed, and the words on your profile.

2. Distance. How close is the business to the searcher? You can't move your shop, but you can choose where you focus.

3. Prominence. How well-known is the business? This is where you have the most leverage. Reviews, photos, posts, citations — all of it.

The actual playbook

This is what I'd do this month if I was opening a new local business:

Week 1: Claim and complete your Google Business Profile.

Week 2: Reviews.

Google Maps ranks businesses heavily by review velocity (rate of new reviews) and quality (number of stars + number of reviews). Most local SMBs are doing this badly.

Goal: 5-10 new Google reviews per month, every month. After a year, you're untouchable.

Week 3: Posts and updates.

Google Business Profile lets you post updates — like a mini-blog inside the map listing. Almost no business does this, and it's a ranking signal.

Week 4: Citations.

Citations = mentions of your business name, address, and phone (NAP) on other sites. Google trusts businesses that are listed consistently across the web.

Same business name, exactly the same address, exactly the same phone, on all of them. Inconsistencies hurt you.

Three mistakes that tank local SEO

1. The wrong primary category. If you're a wedding photographer who picked "Photographer" as your primary category, you're competing with sports photographers, real estate photographers, and everyone else. Pick a more specific category. "Wedding photography service" if available.

2. PO Box address. Google Maps wants real, customer-visit-able addresses. PO Boxes will get you de-listed.

3. Keyword-stuffing your business name. "Jim's Plumbing — 24/7 Best Brooklyn Plumber" used to work. Now Google penalizes it. Use your real business name.

The 90-day result

Here's what happens to most local businesses that follow this playbook for 90 days:

This isn't theory. I've watched it happen for clients in every category. Local SEO is one of the few areas where small business owners can outwork the big chains and win — because most chains are incompetent at it.

Make Google Maps your most important "marketing channel" for the next quarter. The ROI is wildly underrated.

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