Ranking higher on Google Maps is not about gaming the algorithm. It is about giving Google the clearest possible picture of who your business is, where it operates, and why it is the right result for a local search. Seven specific factors drive Map Pack positions, and most businesses are underperforming on at least three of them. Addressing each one systematically produces measurable ranking improvements that compound over time.
Before working through the ranking factors, it helps to understand the goal. When someone searches “marketing agency Toronto” or “roofing contractor near me,” Google wants to surface the business most likely to satisfy that search. It evaluates three broad signals: relevance (does this business match what the searcher wants?), distance (how close is this business to the searcher?), and prominence (how well-known and trusted is this business online?).
You cannot control distance. Your business is where it is. You can control relevance and prominence almost entirely. The seven factors below map directly to those two signals.
Your Google Business Profile is the single most important local SEO asset you control. Google uses the information in your GBP to determine relevance for local searches. An incomplete profile gives Google less to work with, which means fewer searches where your business qualifies as a relevant result.
Completeness means more than filling in your name, address, and phone number. It means selecting all applicable business categories, writing a keyword-informed business description that accurately reflects what you do, adding your service areas, listing every service you offer, and uploading a full set of photos. Businesses with complete profiles receive significantly more clicks, calls, and direction requests than those with partial profiles, according to Google’s own data.
The category selection is especially critical. Your primary category is the strongest relevance signal in your entire GBP. Choose the most specific category that accurately describes your core business. Add secondary categories for related services. Changing your primary category to better match high-value search queries is one of the fastest ways to shift your relevance signals for the searches that matter most.
Google does not just read your Google Business Profile in isolation. It cross-references your business information against dozens of other online sources to verify that what you have told it about your business is accurate.
When your name, address, and phone number appear in exactly the same format everywhere, Google’s confidence in your business data increases. That confidence directly translates into stronger local authority and better Map Pack positions. When the data conflicts, Google loses confidence and pulls back on rankings.
A comprehensive citation audit should be the starting point for any business serious about improving Map Pack performance. Identify every platform where your business is listed and correct inconsistencies in priority order: GBP first, then major data aggregators, then high-authority directories. Whissel Strategies’ SEO and hosting services include citation management as part of every local SEO engagement. Businesses that clean up citation conflicts regularly see ranking improvements within 30 to 60 days of corrections being confirmed.
Reviews are one of the most visible local ranking signals, and they work on multiple levels simultaneously. A higher volume of positive reviews increases your prominence score. Recent reviews signal to Google that your business is active and currently serving customers. Your response rate signals engagement and legitimacy.
The businesses that dominate Map Pack results in competitive markets are not always the ones with the most total reviews. They are the ones generating reviews consistently over time. A business with 50 reviews published in the last six months will often outrank a competitor with 200 reviews, most of which are two or three years old.
Getting reviews at scale requires building a process, not just asking occasionally. Request a review at the moment of maximum satisfaction, immediately after a project completion, a successful appointment, or a strong customer interaction. Make it frictionless with a direct review link. Follow up once if you do not receive a response. And respond to every review you receive. Google’s algorithm interprets owner responses as a signal of an active, engaged business.
Your website and your Google Business Profile are evaluated together, not separately. Google looks at the content of your website to validate and reinforce the relevance signals in your GBP. A GBP that claims expertise in commercial landscaping carries more weight when backed by a website with detailed service pages, location pages, and blog content that consistently address commercial landscaping topics.
The most impactful on-site local SEO signals are your title tags and meta descriptions (include your city and primary service), your H1 headings on service pages, your website’s footer (where your NAP should appear in text format, not an image), and your service area or location pages. If you serve multiple cities, a dedicated page for each service area provides far stronger local signals than a single service areas list page.
Internal linking between your location pages, service pages, and blog content reinforces geographic and topical relevance. A well-structured local SEO content strategy creates a web of signals that compounds over time rather than relying on a single page to carry the full load.
Google tracks how users interact with your listing in Map Pack results. Click-through rate, calls initiated from your GBP, requests for directions, and visits to your website from your profile are all behavioral signals that feed into local ranking calculations. A listing that users actively engage with signals to Google that it is satisfying search intent.
This is why profile completeness and photo quality matter beyond their direct completeness score. A listing with a complete profile, recent photos, clear business hours, and active posts gives users more reasons to click. Higher engagement metrics reinforce the ranking position, which generates more visibility, which generates more engagement. The effect is compounding.
You can influence these signals legitimately through consistent GBP posting, fresh photos, and prompt review responses. If you want a team handling all of this as part of a coordinated system, Whissel Strategies’ full-service marketing solution includes ongoing GBP management built into every engagement.
Backlinks from locally relevant websites, local news outlets, local business associations, chamber of commerce listings, community organizations, and regional industry groups signal to Google that your business is a recognized part of the local business landscape. These local links contribute to prominence, which is the most controllable of Google’s three core local ranking factors.
Not all links carry equal weight for local SEO. A link from a national directory provides broad citation value. A link from the Toronto Board of Trade website, a local industry association, or a regional news feature provides local authority that national links cannot replicate. For Canadian businesses, local link building should prioritize community involvement, local sponsorships, and relationships with other businesses in the region.
Building local links takes time, but the compound effect is significant. A business with strong local link authority typically maintains higher Map Pack rankings with less effort over time because the foundation is harder to displace. An SEO strategy that ignores local link building is leaving one of the most durable ranking signals on the table.
Google rewards active businesses. A Google Business Profile that has not been updated in six months sends a passive signal that the business may not be current. A profile updated weekly with posts, photos, and accurate information signals an active, engaged business, which is exactly the kind of business Google wants to put in front of local searchers.
GBP posts do not directly rank for keywords the way website content does. But they contribute to the overall activity and engagement score that feeds into prominence signals. Regular posting gives searchers more reasons to choose your listing over a competitor’s. A post featuring a recent client result, a current promotion, or a local event makes your profile feel alive and relevant in a way that a static listing never can.
The practical approach is simple: block one hour per week for GBP management. Add one post with a relevant update or offer. Add one or two new photos of recent work. Check for and respond to any new reviews or questions. This cadence is enough to maintain strong activity signals without requiring a significant time investment from your team.
None of these factors operates in isolation. Google’s Map Pack algorithm evaluates them as a composite picture of your business’s relevance and prominence. A business with perfect NAP consistency but no reviews will underperform a competitor that handles both well. A business with excellent reviews but an incomplete GBP is leaving relevance signals on the table. Strong local link authority amplifies the impact of every other signal you build.
The businesses that consistently hold top Map Pack positions are not necessarily doing anything extraordinary on any single factor. They are doing the fundamentals consistently, and that consistency builds an authority gap that is difficult for competitors to close quickly.
Timeline varies depending on the specific changes made and how competitive your market is. NAP consistency corrections typically show ranking movement within 30 to 60 days of updates being confirmed across major platforms. Review generation improvements can produce faster results in less competitive markets. Profile completeness and posting activity changes tend to produce incremental improvements over two to four months of consistent effort.
Not necessarily. Review quantity is one signal among many. Recency matters significantly. A business generating reviews consistently will often outrank one with more total reviews that stopped getting new ones. Quality signals like response rate and review content also factor in. Reviews are most powerful when combined with strong profile completeness, NAP consistency, and active GBP management.
This is one of the more nuanced areas of local SEO. Service-area businesses without a public storefront can rank in their designated service areas, but ranking prominence typically decreases with distance from the verified business address. Building strong service-area page content on your website and earning local links from target cities improves your ability to rank across a broader geography. Results vary significantly by industry and market competitiveness.
Review count is just one factor. A competitor outranking you despite fewer reviews likely has stronger signals in other areas, including more complete GBP, better NAP consistency, more active posting, stronger local link profile, or better behavioral engagement metrics. An audit of your current GBP against the seven factors in this guide will typically reveal which areas are underperforming relative to competitors holding the positions you want.
Yes. Google evaluates your website and your GBP together. Your website’s title tags, header tags, location and service pages, and overall content structure all send relevance and authority signals that support your Map Pack rankings. A business with a strong GBP but a weak website will hit a ceiling in Map Pack rankings that a competitor with both a strong GBP and a well-optimized website will not face.
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