Google My Business Tips & Strategies

How to Get the 1st Ranking Position in Google My Business

By Spencer Lanoue
October 31, 2025

Getting your business into the top spot of Google’s local search results can feel like a game-changer, and honestly, it is. Dominating that map pack drives foot traffic, phone calls, and website clicks from customers who are searching right now for exactly what you offer. This guide breaks down the exact steps you need to take to optimize your Google Business Profile and work your way to that number one ranking.

Understanding the Google Local Pack (And Why It Matters)

When you search for something like "pizza near me" or "best coffee shop," Google’s first results are usually a map with three businesses listed below it. This is the “local pack,” or the “3-pack.” Earning a spot here is like getting primo real estate. It's highly visible, builds instant credibility, and captures the majority of local search clicks. Clicks from the local pack often convert into immediate customers because these searchers have high intent - they're ready to buy, visit, or call.

Google uses three main factors to decide who gets these coveted spots:

  • Relevance: How well your business profile matches what someone is searching for. If your primary category is "Plumber," you're relevant for "plumber near me."
  • Proximity: How geographically close your business is to the person searching. You can't change your location, but you can optimize everything else to win even if you aren't an inch away.
  • Prominence: How well-known your business is. Google measures this through online reviews, links back to your website, articles about you, and directory listings. Essentially, it's your online reputation.

You can’t control proximity, but you have complete control over relevance and prominence. Let's get to work on those.

Step 1: Get the Foundational Elements Right (The 'Table Stakes')

Before you get into the finer details, you have to nail the basics. These are the non-negotiable first steps that set the stage for everything else.

Claim and Verify Your Google Business Profile

If you haven’t done this yet, stop everything and do it now. A claimed and verified profile is a fundamental trust signal for Google. Go to google.com/business, find your business, and claim it. Google will usually send a postcard with a verification code to your physical address to confirm your business is legitimate. Once you enter that code, you have full control over your profile.

Perfect Your Business Name, Address, and Phone Number (NAP)

Consistency here is everything. Your Name, Address, and Phone number (NAP) must be identical everywhere it appears online - on your website, on your social profiles, on Yelp, on local directories, everywhere. Google cross-references this data across the web to confirm your details are correct. Inconsistencies confuse Google and hurt your rankings.

For example, if your Google profile says "123 Main Street" but your website says "123 Main St.", that's a small but meaningful inconsistency. Pick one format and stick with it. Here's a quick checklist:

  • Name: Use your actual business name. Don't stuff it with keywords like "Joe's Plumbing - Best Plumber in Town." That's against Google's guidelines and can get you penalized.
  • Address: Double-check for typos and use the same format (e.g., Street vs St., Suite vs Ste.) across all platforms.
  • Phone Number: Use your main, local business phone number.

Choose the Right Primary and Secondary Categories

Your primary category is one of the most significant ranking factors for relevance. It tells Google the main service you provide. Be as specific as possible. If you’re a pizzeria that also serves pasta, your primary category should be "Pizza Restaurant," not just "Restaurant."

After that, add secondary categories to capture all the other things you do. That same pizzeria could add "Italian Restaurant," "Catering," "Pizza Delivery," and "Pasta Shop" as secondary categories. Use as many as are genuinely relevant to your business. This helps you appear in more specific searches and paints a fuller picture for both Google and your potential customers.

Step 2: Optimize Every Single Section of Your Profile

An empty or incomplete profile is a missed opportunity. Your goal is to fill out every single field that Google provides. This gives Google loads of information to establish your relevance and shows users that you are an active, helpful business.

Write a Compelling Business Description

You have 750 characters to tell your story, so make it count. Don't just list your services, explain what makes you different. Why should a customer choose you over the competition down the street? Use this space to naturally include important keywords related to your services and location, but focus on speaking directly to your customer. Tell them about your business’s mission, history, or commitment to quality.

Add High-Quality Photos and Videos

Humans are visual creatures. A profile with sharp, professional photos gets significantly more engagement than one without. A steady stream of new photos also signals to Google that your business is active. Aim for a mix of different types of images:

  • Logo & Cover Photo: These are your brand identifiers. Make sure they are high-resolution and represent your brand well.
  • Exterior Photos: Show what your storefront looks like from different angles so people can easily find you.
  • Interior Photos: Give customers a feel for your ambiance. Show off your clean, inviting space.
  • Products/Work in Action: If you're a restaurant, post mouth-watering pictures of your food. If you're a contractor, show before-and-after photos of your work.
  • Team Photos: Help customers connect with the people behind the business.

Bonus points for adding videos! A short 30-second tour of your shop or an introduction from the owner can work wonders.

Utilize the Products and Services Sections

This is your digital storefront. Don't skip it. Systematically list all of your products or services, complete with detailed descriptions and pricing if applicable. Every item you add is another keyword you can potentially rank for. For a hair salon, this would mean creating separate entries for "Women's Haircut," "Balayage," "Men's Buzz Cut," etc., instead of just a single service called "Haircuts." The more detail, the better.

Answer Questions in the Q&A Section

The Question & Answer section is a public forum on your profile where anyone can ask a question, and anyone can answer it. This can be fantastic, but it can also be a spot for misinformation if left unmanaged. Take control of it by pre-populating it with your own Frequently Asked Questions.

Think about the top 5-10 questions you get from new customers and post them yourself, then answer them immediately from your business account. Examples include:

  • "Do you offer free Wi-Fi?"
  • "Is there parking available?"
  • "Are you open on public holidays?"
  • "Do I need to make a reservation?"

This provides instant value to users and helps you control the narrative.

Step 3: Actively Manage Your Profile to Boost Prominence

Earning that top spot isn’t a "set it and forget it" task. Google rewards businesses that are active and engaged. Your work here is centered on building prominence and showing both users and Google that you are a thriving, responsive business.

The Power of Google Reviews: Get More, and Respond to All of Them

Reviews are pure gold. They are a massive ranking factor and the number one thing customers look at when deciding between businesses. Your goal is twofold: get a steady stream of new reviews, and respond to every single one.

How to Get More Reviews:

  • Just Ask: The easiest way is to ask happy customers directly.
  • Make it Easy: Google lets you create a direct link for customers to leave a review. Put this link in your email signature, on receipts, or send it via a text message after a service.
  • Timing is Everything: Ask for a review right after a positive experience, when the customer is feeling their best about your business.

How to Respond to Reviews:

You must respond to both positive and negative reviews. Responding to positive ones shows gratitude and encourages more people to leave one. Responding to negative ones shows that you care, listen to feedback, and are committed to solving problems. A professional, non-defensive response to a bad review can often win over more future customers than a stream of 5-star reviews alone.

Create A Steady Stream of Google Posts

Google Posts are like mini-blog posts or social updates that appear right on your business profile. They are perfect for sharing business updates, announcing promotions, showcasing new products, or promoting events. They have a short shelf life, so you need to be consistent.

Make it a goal to publish at least one new post every week. This consistent activity is a very positive ranking signal. You can share behind-the-scenes photos, highlight a great new review, or even just link to your latest blog article. This content keeps your profile looking fresh and gives customers a reason to check back.

Turn on the Messaging Feature

Google has a messaging feature that allows customers to contact you directly from your profile. This is fantastic for lead generation and provides an excellent customer experience. However, there's a big catch: you have to be responsive. Google tracks your response time, and if it’s slow, it can hurt your profile’s visibility. If you decide to turn it on, make sure you can reply to inquiries quickly - ideally within a few hours.

Step 4: Advanced Signals and Off-Page SEO

Finally, your prominence is also affected by what happens outside your Google Business Profile. These off-page signals show Google that you are a legitimate, authoritative business in your local area.

Local Link Building and Citations

A "citation" is any mention of your business's NAP (Name, Address, Phone number) on another website. This includes online business directories like Yelp, Angi, and industry-specific sites. The more consistent, high-quality citations you have, the more confident Google is about your business's data. Run a quick check on major directories to ensure your information is correct and consistent everywhere.

Even better than a citation is a backlink from another local website. Was your business featured in a local blog? Did you sponsor a local charity event? Getting links from these kinds of relevant, local sites is a huge signal of prominence.

Embedding a Google Map on Your Website

This is a super simple but effective technical tweak. By embedding a Google Map of your business location onto your website's contact page, you are explicitly confirming your address and reinforcing that powerful location signal for Google.

Using Location Pages on Your Website

If your business operates in multiple locations, it is vital to have a dedicated page on your website for each and every location. This page should feature the unique NAP, hours, and description for that specific store or office. This provides a clear, authoritative source of information for Google to associate with each of your separate Google Business Profiles, preventing confusion and strengthening your local authority for each one.

Final Thoughts

Earning the top spot on Google's local search results requires a mix of thorough setup and consistent activity. By optimizing every aspect of your Google Business Profile and actively building your online prominence through reviews, posts, and local citations, you give yourself the best possible chance to climb the ranks.

Balancing all this with a consistent social media presence can feel overwhelming, especially when you're adding tasks like creating weekly Google Posts. At Postbase, we designed a simple, modern platform to give you that time back. With our beautiful visual calendar you can plan, schedule, and publish content across every platform from one place, ensuring your Google Profile and social accounts are always active and engaging without the daily chaos. Check out Postbase when you're ready to streamline your entire online presence.

Spencer's spent a decade building products at companies like Buffer, UserTesting, and Bump Health. He's spent years in the weeds of social media management—scheduling posts, analyzing performance, coordinating teams. At Postbase, he's building tools to automate the busywork so you can focus on creating great content.

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