Every week, thousands of people in your neighbourhood open Google and type something with intent: 'butcher open Saturday near me', 'best lunch spot downtown', 'hair salon walk-ins welcome today'. They are not browsing. They are deciding. Within minutes, they will walk through someone's door - or call someone's number. The business that shows up with a fresh, relevant Google Business Profile post has a measurable edge over the one that hasn't touched its listing in three months. Yet most local owners are spending their limited marketing time on Instagram, where the same post reaches a passive audience that may never come in. This is not an argument to abandon social media. It's an argument to stop starving the channel that converts at a fundamentally different rate.
Why Local Search Intent Is a Different Animal Entirely
Social media audiences are built on interest. Local search audiences are built on urgency. When someone follows your cafe on Instagram, they might engage with your content over the next six months and eventually visit. When someone searches 'cafe open now' on a Tuesday at 11am, they are making a decision in the next ten minutes. Google's own data consistently shows that 76% of people who search for something nearby on their smartphone visit a business within a day. That number doesn't exist in any social media study - because the intent simply isn't comparable. Google Business Profile posts appear directly in those search results and in Maps. They show your hours, your offers, your latest update - at exactly the moment someone is looking for you. An Instagram post reaches an algorithm that decides whether to show it to people who already chose to follow you. The distribution logic alone should shift how you allocate your effort.
The difference between a social media follower and a Google searcher is the difference between someone who likes the look of a restaurant and someone who is already hungry and two streets away.
The Four Google Post Formats That Actually Drive Foot Traffic
Google Business Profile offers four post types, and they are not equal. Based on patterns across high-performing local listings, these are the formats worth rotating through each week - and what to include in each one.
- What's New post - the everyday workhorse: Use this to highlight something genuinely current: a new menu item, a product that just arrived, a staff change, a seasonal ingredient. The key is specificity. 'New autumn menu' is weak. 'Slow-braised lamb shoulder with roasted celeriac - available Thursday to Sunday from noon' is something a hungry person acts on. Include one sharp photo and a single call-to-action button (Order Online, Call Now, or Learn More depending on your setup).
- Offer post - for time-limited reasons to come in: Attach a clear expiry date. 'Free coffee with any breakfast order - this week only' creates urgency that 'we love our customers' never will. Google displays offer posts with a distinct badge in search results, which increases click-through. Don't discount your core margin - bundle instead. 'Blowout and brow tint together for £55 this week' protects your numbers while giving a genuine reason to book.
- Event post - for anything with a date and a door: A wine tasting, a trunk show, a kids' baking class, a late-night shopping event. Events with ticket links or booking URLs perform significantly better because Google can serve them to people searching for things to do locally - expanding your reach beyond people who already know you exist. Even a recurring weekly event (Friday live music, Saturday morning yoga) is worth posting each time.
- Product post - for retail, food, and product-led businesses: Showcasing individual products with real photos and prices performs strongly for searches that include pricing intent ('butcher wagyu beef price', 'vintage denim jacket near me'). These posts feed into Google's local inventory display and can surface in Shopping results as well as Maps. A boutique posting three specific items per week will consistently outperform one that posts a general 'new arrivals' update.
The 15-Minute Weekly Habit That Compounds Into Real Results
The owners who get consistent results from Google posting are not the ones who write the best copy. They're the ones who treat it like a non-negotiable weekly task rather than an occasional creative project. Here is a structure that takes under 15 minutes once it's a habit.
- Pick a fixed slot - Monday morning or Sunday evening works well for most. The specific day matters less than the consistency. Set a recurring calendar block and treat it like opening the till.
- Choose your format for the week - rotate through the four types over the month so you're not running only offers or only What's New posts. A simple four-week rotation (What's New, Offer, Event, Product) removes the decision entirely.
- Write one sentence that answers: 'Why would someone come in this week specifically?' That sentence is your post. Everything else - photo, button, details - supports it. Resist the urge to write three paragraphs. Google posts are skimmed in under five seconds.
- Use a real photo when you can - not a stock image. Google's algorithm favours fresh, original imagery, and customers consistently report that real photos of the actual space, product, or team build more trust than polished stock shots.
- Check your Q&A section while you're there - it takes 90 seconds. Unanswered questions on a Google profile are a quiet conversion killer that most owners never notice.
Why Neither Channel Should Be Abandoned - and How to Stop Choosing Between Them
The case for prioritising Google posts is not an argument against Instagram or Facebook - it's an argument for clarity about what each channel actually does. Social media builds awareness, brand personality, and community over time. Local search captures people who are already in decision mode. Both matter, but they operate on entirely different timescales and serve entirely different moments in the customer journey. The practical problem for most local owners is that maintaining both channels consistently feels like two separate jobs - which is exactly why one of them (almost always Google) gets deprioritised. Platforms like Rulrr are designed to remove that friction: scheduling Google Business Profile posts alongside social content in the same workflow means neither channel gets neglected, and the 15-minute weekly habit becomes a 15-minute habit that covers everything.
What Six Months of Weekly Posts Actually Does to a Local Listing
Google's ranking signals for local search include posting frequency, recency, and engagement - all of which compound over time. A listing with 24 posts over six months signals an active, reliable business to both the algorithm and the customer reading it. Beyond rankings, there's a simpler psychological effect: when a potential customer lands on your profile and sees a post from three days ago, it tells them you're open, engaged, and worth contacting. When the last post is from eight months ago, it raises a question they probably won't stay to have answered. The compounding effect of consistency here is one of the most underrated advantages in local marketing - and it costs nothing but 15 minutes a week.
Three Things to Check on Your Profile Before You Post Anything
A well-written post on a poorly maintained profile is still a leaky bucket. Before building the weekly habit, do a one-time audit that takes about 20 minutes. First, verify your hours are correct - including holiday hours and any special closures. Incorrect hours are the single most common reason a customer shows up and leaves frustrated, and Google allows customers to flag inaccuracies publicly. Second, confirm your primary and secondary business categories are as specific as possible. 'Restaurant' is a weak category. 'French restaurant' or 'Cafe' or 'Gastropub' serves a narrower, more relevant search audience. Third, check that your website link, phone number, and address all resolve correctly and consistently match what's on your website. Inconsistent NAP data (Name, Address, Phone) across the web is one of the factors that suppresses local search visibility - and it's entirely fixable in a single session.