Search Engine Optimization · For SMB owners
DIY Google Maps Optimization Guide For SMB Owner's.
What do you do when you cannot afford to hire an SEO company, in-house employee or software for your business's local presence on Google, Bing, and Yahoo? Simple, read this article and follow these basic recommendations.
Difficulty
Intermediate
No experience or skills required.
Time to results
60-120 days
Most maps listings will see an increase in visibility within weeks. Some will need more than a basic setup to see results.
You will need
Google account, address, phone, website
A Google account, a business address, phone, and a website you can edit to get started.
Cost
$0-$150/mo
Save yourself several hours of work by using a citation building service like BrightLocal. Otherwise, the work is free.
Table of contents.
01
How Do I Get my Google Business Listing to Rank?
→
02
Getting Started: Local SEO Signals and Optimization
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03
Create a Google Business listingIncludes · Points to remember when filling out your listing
→
04
Optimize Your Website. On-page SEO.
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05
Build Links & Citations. Off-Page signals.Includes · What is a data aggregator?
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06
Niche Directories for local businesses
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07
Paid Directories & Citations.Includes · Types of paid local citations and directories
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08
Follow the money. Install Google Analytics
→
09
Final Suggestions on Managing Your Local SEO.
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What do you do when you cannot afford to hire an SEO expert, in-house employee or software for your business's local presence on Google, Bing, and Yahoo? Simple, read this article and follow these basic recommendations.
This is a do it yourself Google maps SEO article for the business owner who doesn't have a clue what they are doing. From attorneys, b2b, and local small businesses this guide is perfect for the DIY business owner. I will keep it simple, and highlight the most important tactics, so you can easily follow a few steps and get your business ranking on Google, Yahoo & Bing.
Chapter 01
How Do I Get my Google Business Listing to Rank?
Chapter 02
Getting Started: Local SEO Signals and Optimization
Previous · Chapter 01How Do I Get my Google Business Listing to Rank?
Next · Chapter 03Create a Google Business listing
Chapter 03
Create a Google Business listing
Points to remember when filling out your listing.
Category Selection – Choose the most relevant business category as your main category. If you are not sure, I suggest going to Google and looking at competitors and what their main category is. Look at a few and see if there are all using the same. If not, choose the most relevant and you can add sub categories later. NAP: Stands for ame, address and phone number. Make sure you choose the exact business name, the exact address and phone number and stick to it. If you have a website, make sure these match. Your address should be consistent across the board. This is a signal Google references to develop trust in your business. The algorithm will verify your information against the most authoritative sources on the internet (Yellowpages, Whitepages). Incorrect or irrelevant information can cause Google's algorithm to neglect your business when it considers you for search results.- For example, if you spell out "Maple Drive" as your address in your listing, make sure you are spelling it out everywhere you use it. Something as simple as using "Maple Dr." instead can potentially negatively impact your listing, although google seems to not care as much anymore.
- Tip: Local businesses with keywords in them rank better and always have since the start. If you have a new business going online, we at Inbound suggest modifying the business name so it is relevant to search terms potential customers will use to find your business. Just make sure your business is registered with the same name at the local, state and federal level.
- A couple examples are as follows: With every purchase you can hand out a card or some type of documentation that mentions Google and your reviews. You can even print out a short URL to your listing (Create your short name & url for your business here). You can add this short url to your email signature. When customers say thank you for an awesome service or product, ask them to leave their experience on Google and send them the link. Use Google to find many more examples. There are companies and software that can help you automate this process. Here is our favorite
Chapter 04
Optimize Your Website. On-page SEO.
- Tip: start with the most important pages like your service or product and home pages and move onto your blog and other pages last.
- Tip: Put your NAP on the footer of every page and embed your Google map on the contact page for directions and reviews.
- Tip: Every page should have unique content. Do not create similar content that will compete with other pages on your site.
- Tip: Use only one H1 tag for the main title of every page. Instructions here
- Tip: Be specific with your main keywords. Our Houston BBQ restaurant has served over 1 million briskets to Houstonians over the last 20 years.
- Tip: Analyze competitors' content and come up with a plan. Here are a couple of great articles for more direction: Moz content planning for local seo and getting started with local content.
Chapter 05
Build Links & Citations. Off-Page signals.
What is a data aggregator?
These are large data bases that mine and gather information like your NAP or citation. They are used by sites like Yellow Pages to gather new business listings and import them into their website. This allows them to keep their listings up to date and add new businesses that have recently joined the economy. When you use a service like Yext or Moz Local, you are sending these data aggregators your NAP and making sure they distribute that across the globe's citation sources, ensuring everything is accurate, and up to date. This includes getting rid of duplicates or incomplete listings, which may affect your trust with Google. The major data aggregators are Acxiom, Neustar / Localeze, InfoGroup, and Factual.
Chapter 06
Niche Directories for local businesses
- Tip: Higher domain authority websites are more trusted by Google, and industry specific directories carry more credibility in Google's eyes when they compare you to your competitors. Your competitors are probably in this directory, and you should be as well.
Chapter 07
Paid Directories & Citations.
Types of paid local citations and directories
01Niche directories
02Chambers of commerce
03Local charities
04Local sponsorships
05Local bloggers
06Press Releases
- Search Engine Journals: Link Building for SEO: A Complete Guide
- Ahrefs: The Beginner's Guide to Link Building
- MOZ: Advanced Link Building Tips and Tricks
- MOZ: Link Building Tactics
Chapter 08
Follow the money. Install Google Analytics
Chapter 09
Final Suggestions on Managing Your Local SEO.
01Check your GMB, yahoo, bing listings often. This can easily become unverified or suggested edits can hurt your rankings. Always keep an eye out for emails and do not ignore emails coming in. For example watch out for this scam.
02Update your website's content regularly. If you are an attorney, add updated information for your legal content. Add new content or simply make edits with a goal of making the content easier to read and understand.
03Stay on top of Google updates. Google it [SEO Google ALgorithm updates] and figure out what has changed, what the SEO community is doing about it and what to expect.
04Stay on top of your rankings using tools like semrush.com or ahrefs.com and whitespark.ca.
05Keep an eye on your Google business analytics , insights and search term report. You can look at the keywords users are typing in to find your business, and implement them into your content. You can also use this report to identify keywords to be tracked in the tools I listed out above.
Local SEO References
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— End of guide · By Waqid Janjua · Inbound · Houston, TX
About this guide
Maintained by Inbound.
Houston-based search engine marketing agency. We update each chapter when the underlying mechanics change.
● v3.2 · May 2026 — Updated guide template and workbook sections.
● v3.1 · Feb 2026 — Refined implementation notes.
● v3.0 · Sep 2025 — Major rewrite for current search behavior.
● v3.1 · Feb 2026 — Refined implementation notes.
● v3.0 · Sep 2025 — Major rewrite for current search behavior.