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Google Business Profile optimisation: the 2026 UK small business guide

12 May 2026 9 min read By Digitally Done

If you run a UK small business and you're not in Google's local map pack, you're invisible to roughly two in three local buyers. Google Business Profile (the new name for Google My Business) is the single most cost-effective marketing channel a UK small business can run in 2026 — and most owners are leaving it half-finished.

This guide is the same checklist we run for every new Digitally Done client. It takes a few hours the first time, and ten minutes a week after that. Done properly, it'll get you ranked in the "near me" results for your category in 60–90 days.

What's in this guide
  1. Why Google Business Profile matters more than your website
  2. Claim and verify your profile (the right way)
  3. Get your NAP perfect across the web
  4. Pick the right primary and secondary categories
  5. Write a description Google's algorithm rewards
  6. Photos: the rule UK businesses keep breaking
  7. Google Posts (the free billboard nobody uses)
  8. Reviews: how many you need to rank in the UK
  9. Q&A and Messaging
  10. How to track if it's actually working

1. Why Google Business Profile matters more than your website

When a UK buyer searches "plumber near me", "Indian restaurant Manchester" or "hairdresser in Leeds", Google shows three results above the rest of the page: the local map pack. Roughly 44% of all clicks on that search go to those three listings (BrightLocal, 2025 UK study). Your website's rank on page 1 only matters after a buyer has scrolled past the map.

That map pack is powered by Google Business Profile, not your website. So if your profile is incomplete, you can have the prettiest website in the world and still lose the customer to a competitor with a bare-bones site and a sharp profile.

2. Claim and verify your profile (the right way)

Go to business.google.com and search for your business. One of three things will happen:

UK tip: If you're home-based (a mobile mechanic, a wedding photographer, a builder), set your profile as a service-area business and hide your address. Set your service areas as the actual towns and postcodes you serve — not a 50-mile radius. Google is wise to padding.

3. Get your NAP perfect across the web

NAP = Name, Address, Phone. Google ranks profiles partly on how consistently your business is referenced across the rest of the UK web — Yell, Thomson Local, Companies House, Trustpilot, your Facebook page, your website footer. Every variation ("Ltd" vs "Limited", "Rd" vs "Road", an old phone number) waters down your authority.

Audit yourself: search "Your Business Name" + your postcode on Google. Fix or close any duplicates. Then make sure these all show the identical NAP, character-for-character:

4. Pick the right primary and secondary categories

Your primary category is the single biggest ranking lever on the profile. Get it wrong and no amount of reviews will save you.

Open an incognito Google tab. Search the term you most want to rank for ("Italian restaurant Birmingham"). Click the top three map-pack results. Use a free Chrome extension like GMBspy to read off their primary categories — those are the categories Google has already decided rank for that term in your city.

Match the most popular primary category among the top three. Then add up to nine secondary categories that genuinely apply (e.g. "Pizza restaurant", "Caterer", "Gluten-free restaurant"). Don't pad with categories you don't actually serve — Google's spam team is faster than it used to be.

5. Write a description Google's algorithm rewards

You get 750 characters. The description doesn't directly affect ranking, but it absolutely affects whether a buyer clicks your profile over the next one. Open with what you do, where you do it, and what makes you different — in that order. Naturally include the two or three search phrases you want to rank for, but write for the buyer, not the algorithm.

A short template that works for UK small businesses:

Description template [Business name] is a [category] in [town], serving [primary service area] since [year]. We specialise in [top 2–3 services], with most of our work coming from [type of customer]. [One sentence about what makes you different — speed, price, family-run, accreditations]. Open [hours summary] — book online or call [phone].

6. Photos: the rule UK businesses keep breaking

Profiles with 100+ photos get roughly 520% more calls than profiles with fewer than 10 (Google internal data, cited by Whitespark 2025). But the rule everyone breaks is this: add one new photo a week, every week. Google rewards freshness, not bulk.

The photos that actually convert UK buyers:

Avoid stock photos. Google's image classifier can usually tell, and it dilutes the local signal.

7. Google Posts (the free billboard nobody uses)

Posts are short updates that appear inside your profile. They expire after 7 days (except Events and Offers, which run until their end date). Almost no UK small business uses them — which means the ones that do get an outsized visibility bump.

Post once a week. Useful formats:

8. Reviews: how many you need to rank in the UK

BrightLocal's 2025 UK ranking study found that businesses in the top 3 of the local pack averaged 89 Google reviews with a 4.6 average. In competitive UK cities (London, Manchester, Birmingham), the number rises to 200+.

Two things matter more than the total: velocity (a steady drip of new reviews each month) and response rate (Google has openly stated that replying to reviews helps rank). Reply to every single one, positive and negative, within 24 hours. Use the customer's name. Mention the service they bought. Keep replies under 60 words.

How to actually ask: send a one-line SMS the same day the customer leaves. "Hi [name], thanks for popping in. If you've got 30 seconds, a Google review would mean the world to us: [short link]." Reply rates on same-day SMS asks sit around 30–40% in UK trades and hospitality, versus 6% for email-only.

9. Q&A and Messaging

The Questions & Answers section is public and editable by anyone — including your competitors. Get in first: post the ten most common questions buyers ask you, then answer them yourself. "Do you do same-day appointments?" "Is parking free?" "Do you take card?" Keywords answered here surface in search snippets.

Turn on Messaging only if you can answer within an hour. Google publicly down-ranks profiles that take too long to reply. If you can't staff it, leave it off — or set up an AI chatbot that handles the common questions and pings you for the rest.

10. How to track if it's actually working

Google's built-in Performance tab gives you the basics: searches, calls, direction requests, website clicks. Watch these monthly numbers:

MetricWhat "healthy" looks like (UK small business)
Direct searches (people typing your name)Growing month-on-month
Discovery searches ("near me" type)Should outgrow direct searches within 90 days of optimisation
Calls10–40 per month for a typical local business
Direction requests5–25 per month for a physical premises
Reviews per month3–10 new reviews, consistently

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