Most local business owners spend 45 minutes a week trying to crack the Instagram algorithm for an audience that mostly isn't in walking distance. Meanwhile, their Google Business Profile - the one platform where someone is actively typing 'near me' with their wallet already out - was last touched the day they set it up. Google's local ranking system rewards recency and completeness. Three specific fields, updated in under nine minutes, have a disproportionate effect on how often your listing surfaces in those high-intent searches. No budget. No agency. No graphic design. Just the right nine minutes.
Why Google Rewards the Profile That Looks Alive
Google's local pack algorithm weighs three factors when deciding which businesses appear in the map results for a 'near me' search: relevance (does your profile match what they searched?), distance (how far away are you?), and prominence (how active and trusted does your listing appear?). You cannot move your front door. But you can make your profile look dramatically more current, relevant, and trusted than the competitor two doors down who set theirs up in 2021 and never came back. The three highest-impact levers are: your Business Attributes, your Google Posts, and your Q&A section. Almost nobody uses all three. Almost nobody ranks as well as they should.
A customer who types 'best hair salon near me' on Saturday morning has already decided to spend money. The only question is whether your profile gives them enough signal to choose you before they click the next result.
The 9-Minute Audit: Three Fields, Ranked by Impact
Field 1 - Business Attributes (3 minutes, highest impact)
Attributes are the small badges that appear on your listing - things like 'Women-owned', 'Outdoor seating', 'Accepts reservations', 'Free Wi-Fi', 'Wheelchair accessible entrance'. Google uses these to match searches far more specific than your category. A customer searching 'pet-friendly cafe Camden' will only see you if that attribute is checked. Go to your profile manager, click 'Edit profile', then 'More' and scroll to Attributes. Spend three minutes checking every attribute that genuinely applies to your business. Be thorough - most owners leave 60% of applicable attributes blank.
Field 2 - Google Posts (4 minutes, medium-high impact)
Google Posts appear directly on your listing in search results. They expire after seven days, which means an outdated post signals to the algorithm that your business is inactive - the equivalent of a dark shopfront. One post per week is enough to maintain the recency signal. The copy structure that converts best is simple: lead with a specific outcome or offer in the first 100 characters (Google truncates after that), add one clear call to action, and link to a relevant page or your booking system. A strong template: '[Specific thing] available [timeframe]. [One-sentence reason to care]. [Action].' Example: 'Fresh sourdough loaves ready from 8am Saturday. Baked in-house, limited to 40. Order ahead.' Four minutes. Done.
Field 3 - Q&A Seeding (2 minutes, compounding impact)
The Q&A section on your profile is public - anyone can ask a question and anyone can answer it. Most owners never look at it. The problem: unanswered questions or, worse, questions answered incorrectly by random users are sitting on your listing right now. The fix has two parts. First, search your own business name on Google and check the Q&A section for unanswered or wrong answers. Second, seed three questions yourself - log into your Google account as a customer and post the questions people actually ask you in person ('Do you need to book in advance?', 'Is there parking nearby?', 'Do you cater for dietary requirements?') - then switch to your business account and answer them clearly. These answers rank in Google search independently, and they pre-empt the objections that stop someone from choosing you.
The Part Most Guides Skip: Keeping It Current
The single audit above will move the needle. But the owners who consistently dominate local search results aren't doing a one-off fix - they've built a weekly habit of three things: post once, check Q&A once, glance at attributes when anything changes (new service, new hours, seasonal offering). That is under 10 minutes a week. The challenge is remembering to do it when you're also running the actual business. This is precisely where having a content and posting system matters - tools like Rulrr can prompt and draft that weekly Google Post in the same workflow as your other content, so the recency signal never lapses just because you had a busy Wednesday.
- Check and complete all Business Attributes - especially category-specific ones like 'dine-in', 'delivery', 'appointment required' or 'walk-ins welcome'
- Post once per week using the 100-character lead structure: specific outcome first, then reason, then action
- Respond to every existing Q&A entry - wrong or unanswered questions actively cost you customers
- Seed three high-value questions yourself and answer them from your business account
- Update your business description to include the neighbourhood name and two or three specific services - this is indexed text
- Add new photos at least twice a month - listings with recent photos receive significantly more direction requests
- Review your opening hours every time anything changes, including public holidays
What to Expect - and When
Local SEO is not paid search - results compound over two to four weeks rather than overnight. After the first full audit, most owners see a noticeable improvement in profile views and direction requests within three weeks, provided they maintain the weekly post cadence. The metric to watch is not follower count or likes. Open your Google Business Profile dashboard and track 'Search views' (how often you appeared in search), 'Maps views', and 'Direction requests' week on week. These are the numbers that connect directly to someone physically walking through your door. One more thing worth knowing: your competitors almost certainly aren't doing this. The bar for dominating local search in most neighbourhoods is not high - it is just consistent.
The 9-Minute Routine That Compounds Over Time
Block it in your calendar every Monday morning before the doors open. Three minutes on attributes whenever something changes. Four minutes to write and post one Google Post. Two minutes to check and answer Q&A. That is the full system. Over a month, it produces four active posts signalling recency to the algorithm, a clean Q&A section that pre-sells hesitant customers, and a fully attributed listing matching searches your competitors are invisible to. The owners consistently winning local search are not doing more marketing - they are doing this one channel properly while everyone else chases the next platform.