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Field notes on web development, AI, and digital marketing — for Indian founders, marketers, and developers. New posts every week.
Field notes on web development, AI, and digital marketing — for Indian founders, marketers, and developers. New posts every week.
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Your Google Business Profile is the highest-ROI marketing asset most Indian businesses forget to update. Here is what to fix first, what to publish weekly, and how to rank in the local map pack.
4 min read · Jun 23, 2026 · By Super Admin
Most Indian businesses set up a Google Business Profile once, leave the default photo from 2019, and never log in again. The profile quietly becomes a dead listing — wrong hours, no posts, no replies, and no photos. Meanwhile, the business pays for Meta ads and Google Ads to drive traffic that a well-maintained profile would have earned for free.
When someone searches "dentist near me" or "best biryani in Koramangala", Google shows the local map pack above every organic result and every ad. Three businesses get listed. The first three positions capture the vast majority of clicks and calls. Below the fold, the rest of the map pack might as well not exist.
The businesses that win those three spots are not necessarily the closest or the cheapest. They are the ones whose profile is the most complete, the most recent, and the most trusted.
If you are a clinic, your primary category should be "Dentist" or "General Practitioner" — not "Local business" or "Health". Secondary categories let you say "Cosmetic dentist" and "Pediatric dentist" as well. Be specific. Specific categories outrank generic ones.
Add every service you offer, with a short description and a price range if it is meaningful. The service list shows up directly in search results and feeds the "Services" tab. The more complete it is, the more queries you qualify for.
Set regular hours. Set special hours for every long weekend, every festival (Diwali, Eid, Holi, Christmas), and every local holiday. Customers who show up to a closed store do not leave a 4-star review.
Profiles with 100+ photos get 520% more calls than the average profile. The bar is low — phone photos of the storefront, the team, the work, a before-and-after, the menu, the parking. Refresh the cover photo seasonally. Add geo-tagged photos when you can.
GBP posts behave like a free social feed attached to your listing. Use them for: weekly offers, new arrivals, behind-the-scenes, event announcements, and links to new blog posts. Posts expire after 7 days, so cadence matters more than polish.
Aim for at least 5 new reviews per month. Reply to every review, positive and negative, within 24 hours. Reply with specifics — thank the reviewer by name, reference what they bought, and add a one-line takeaway. Keyword-rich replies help ranking.
Anyone can ask a question on your profile, and anyone can answer — including you. Seed the Q&A with the 8–12 questions you get asked most often, and answer them in your own voice. The answers become part of the listing.
The fastest compounding wins come from review velocity and post frequency. A realistic 90-day plan:
GBP Insights is a blunt instrument, but the metrics that matter are clear: searches (direct vs discovery), views (search vs maps), calls, direction requests, and website clicks. Compare month-over-month. If discovery searches are growing, your profile is getting more authoritative. If calls are growing, the listing is doing its job.
GBP is not glamorous. It does not have the dopamine hit of a viral reel. It is plumbing. But for any Indian business that serves customers in a defined geography — clinic, salon, restaurant, law firm, coaching class, plumber, gym — it is the most underpriced acquisition channel you have, and the only one that compounds when you stop paying for it.
Stop ignoring it. Spend two hours on it this week. The compounding return is real.
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