If your local business isn’t showing up in the top 3 on Google Maps you’re losing calls every single day to businesses that aren’t necessarily better than you. They’re just more visible. This is how Google Maps ranking actually works — and what you can do about it.
When someone searches “plumber near me” or “dentist near me” they don’t scroll through websites. They look at the map pack — the three listings that appear at the top of the results page.
Those three businesses get approximately 90% of the calls from that search.
Everyone below position 3 is competing for the remaining 10%.
Your website, your social media, your years of experience — none of it matters if you’re not in that top 3. Customers call who they see first.
The top 3 positions capture the overwhelming majority of calls. Position 4 onwards is fighting over scraps.
Google uses several signals to decide who shows up in the top 3. Most local businesses get only one or two of these right. The businesses dominating your area are getting all of them right consistently.
Not just the number of reviews you have — how regularly new ones are coming in. A business with 50 reviews all from three years ago ranks lower than a business with 30 reviews collected consistently over the last six months.
Google interprets regular new reviews as a signal that the business is active, trusted, and serving customers right now.
Your GBP profile needs regular activity to signal to Google that you’re an active business. Photos of recent jobs, posts about services, updated business information. Most businesses set up their profile once and never touch it again.
This is the one most businesses have never heard of. When Google sees evidence that your business is physically completing jobs across your service area it builds what’s called local authority — trust that you genuinely serve the area you claim to serve.
The businesses ranking for “plumber in Leeds” aren’t just optimised for that keyword. They’ve given Google evidence of actual jobs completed in Leeds. Repeatedly. Over time.
Left: a profile that was set up once and forgotten. Right: a profile that signals consistent, active, local business to Google every week.
Google considers how close the business is to the searcher and how relevant the profile is to the specific search term. You can’t move your business address but you can significantly improve relevance through profile optimisation.
Your business name, address, and phone number needs to be identical everywhere it appears online. Inconsistencies confuse Google and lower your ranking. This is a small fix that has a measurable impact.
Here’s what most guides don’t tell you. These signals compound.
More geo-location signals lead to higher ranking. Higher ranking leads to more profile views. More profile views lead to more calls. More calls lead to more jobs. More jobs lead to more opportunities to collect reviews. More reviews lead to higher ranking.
Once the cycle starts it accelerates on its own. The problem is most businesses never start it.
The compounding cycle. Once it starts, it builds on itself. The businesses in the top 3 didn’t get there overnight — they started the cycle earlier than you.
If you search your main service keyword right now and look at the businesses ranking in the top 3 you’ll almost certainly see:
They’re not better at their trade than you. They’ve just built a more consistent presence on Google over time.
The good news is this gap is closeable. It doesn’t require a big budget. It requires consistency.
If you haven’t claimed your profile do that first at business.google.com. Once claimed fill in every section completely — services, service area, business hours, photos, business description.
After every completed job ask the customer directly for a Google review. Not a generic request — a specific ask with a direct link to your review page. Most customers who are happy will leave a review if you make it easy. Most businesses never ask.
Every job you complete is an opportunity to post a photo to your GBP. This signals activity, builds geo-location authority, and keeps your profile fresh. Two or three posts per week makes a measurable difference within 60–90 days.
Every job you complete in a different area of your service territory is an opportunity to show Google where you operate. The businesses doing this consistently — with geo-tagged photos and location-specific content — are the ones dominating the map pack.
One photo. Two sentences. Submit. That single action posts to your GBP with geo-coordinates, sends a review request, and builds your ranking signal.
Realistic timeline for a business starting from scratch or with a neglected profile:
The businesses that see the fastest results are the ones that treat this as a daily habit rather than a one-time project.
Free — instant results
Enter your business name and town. See your ranking, who’s beating you, and the exact gaps holding you back.
Free — no call required — results in seconds