Here is a number worth sitting with: 76% of people who search for something nearby on their phone visit a business within 24 hours. That search almost never lands on your website first. It lands on your Google Business Profile - the panel that appears before your Instagram link, before your homepage, before any ad you have ever paid for. And for the majority of local business owners, that profile is a ghost: wrong hours, four photos from three years ago, unanswered questions, and zero product or service detail. Your competitor with the same quality offering but a tighter listing is collecting those walk-ins instead of you. The good news is this is a one-time fix with compounding returns. Run through the ten checkpoints below in a single 40-minute session and you will have built the most consistently effective local marketing asset you own - without spending a penny.
Why Google Business Profile Beats Every Other Channel for Pure Walk-In Conversion
Social posts disappear in hours. Ads stop the moment the budget runs out. Your Google Business Profile works differently - it is an always-on, zero-cost local search result that Google actively surfaces to people who are already in buying mode. Someone searching 'hair salon near me open now' or 'best butcher in Fulham' is not browsing. They are deciding. The profile that shows them the right signals at that moment - accurate hours, strong photos, recent reviews, answered questions - wins the visit. The one that looks neglected loses it, regardless of how good the actual business is.
Customers don't give you the benefit of the doubt online. If your listing looks like nobody is home, they assume nobody is home.
The 10-Point Audit - Work Through These in Order
Points 1-4: The Basics That Are Probably Wrong
- 1. Business name, address, phone - Check that your NAP (name, address, phone) is identical across your GBP, your website footer, and any other directory you appear in. Google cross-references these. Any mismatch suppresses your ranking. If you have moved or changed your number in the past two years, this is almost certainly broken.
- 2. Opening hours including holidays - Log in right now and confirm today's hours are correct. Then check that you have added 'special hours' for any upcoming bank holiday, seasonal closure, or extended trading period. A customer who arrives at a locked door because your listing said you were open will not give you a second chance.
- 3. Primary and secondary categories - Your primary category is the single biggest ranking signal in local search. 'Restaurant' is not specific enough. 'Italian restaurant', 'vegan cafe', 'barbershop' or 'nail salon' - pick the most precise match for what you actually do. Add up to nine secondary categories for everything else you offer.
- 4. Website link and booking link - Click your own website link from the profile to confirm it still loads correctly. If you take appointments, add a direct booking URL under the 'Appointments' field. Every extra click you remove between search and booking increases conversion.
Points 5-7: The Visual and Content Layer Most Owners Skip
- 5. Photos - quantity, quality, and recency - Listings with more than 100 photos receive 520% more calls than the average. You do not need 100 on day one, but you need more than four, and none of them should be from 2021. Add exterior shots (so customers recognise the entrance), interior shots that show atmosphere, product or food close-ups, and at least one photo of you or your team. Upload five to ten strong images today, then set a reminder to add two or three per month.
- 6. Products and services with descriptions and prices - This is the most consistently ignored section and the one that directly affects whether customers choose you over a competitor. If you run a restaurant, list your signature dishes. A clothing boutique should list key product lines. A salon should list every service with a price range. Google uses this content to match searches - 'lamb chops near me' can literally surface your profile if you have listed it.
- 7. Business description (750 characters, use them) - Write a description that leads with what makes you worth visiting, includes the neighbourhood or area naturally, and names specific products, services or qualities that customers actually search for. Do not stuff keywords - write for a person who has never heard of you and needs one paragraph to decide you are worth the trip.
Points 8-10: The Trust Signals That Close the Decision
- 8. Review responses - every single one - Google's algorithm rewards owners who respond to reviews. So do customers: 89% read owner responses before choosing a business. Respond to every review posted in the last 90 days, starting with any unanswered negatives. A calm, specific, human response to a one-star review does more trust-building than five generic five-star responses. For positives, skip 'Thank you for your review!' and respond with something specific to what they mentioned.
- 9. Q&A section - seed it yourself - The Questions and Answers section appears on your profile and is searchable. Most owners do not know they can post their own questions and answer them. Log in, add the five questions you get asked most often ('Do you take walk-ins?', 'Is there parking nearby?', 'Do you do gluten-free options?'), and answer them clearly. This reduces friction at the exact moment a potential customer is still deciding.
- 10. Google Posts - one per week, minimum - Google Posts are short updates that appear directly on your profile in search results. A weekly post about a special, a new product, an event, or a seasonal offer keeps your listing looking active and gives Google fresh content to index. Each post can include a photo, a short text, and a call-to-action button. Spend ten minutes once a week on this and your listing will outperform competitors who have not touched theirs in months.
Keeping It Current Without It Becoming Another Job
The audit above is a one-time investment. Maintenance is where most owners fall off. The practical approach is to batch it: spend fifteen minutes every Monday morning responding to that week's reviews and posting one Google Post. Set a calendar reminder every three months to refresh photos and check that hours, categories, and service listings are still accurate. That is under two hours a month for a channel that sends real customers to your door without any cost per click. For owners using a platform like Rulrr to plan and schedule their broader content, the same rhythm that drives social posts can pull double duty here - drafting your weekly Google Post takes seconds when the content workflow already exists.
One Hour Now, Compounding Returns for Years
A fully optimised Google Business Profile does not decay the way a paid ad campaign does. The photos you upload today will still be converting walk-ins in eighteen months. The Q&A answers you seed this week will still be answering customer questions next year. The review response you write tonight will still be visible to every future customer who reads that review. This is the definition of compounding marketing: work done once that earns returns continuously. The 40 minutes you spend on this audit are almost certainly the highest-return marketing hours you will put in this quarter. Clear the next gap in your schedule and run through each point above. Your competitor's profile is probably still sitting on four photos and no review responses. That gap is yours to close.
One final note: after you complete the audit, turn on notifications for new reviews and new questions inside Google Business Profile settings. The profile you optimise today only stays ahead if you respond when it matters - and a customer who asks a question and gets an answer within a few hours is far more likely to walk through your door than one who waited three days and found a competitor instead.