You're invisible on Google Maps. Your competitor three streets away shows up first. The phone isn't ringing. This is fixable — and most of it you can do yourself in an afternoon, without paying an SEO agency a rupee.
In five years of doing local SEO for businesses in Lucknow and across India, I've seen the same four problems cause the majority of Maps invisibility. A gym that had been open for two years but showed up on page 3. A clinic with excellent reviews on Facebook but zero visibility on Maps. A restaurant that couldn't figure out why a newer competitor outranked them despite having fewer reviews. In every single case, the cause traced back to one or more of these four fixable mistakes.
Why Google Maps Rankings Matter More Than Your Website
For a local business — a clinic, restaurant, gym, contractor, tuition centre, salon, shop — a Google Maps ranking is more valuable than an organic search ranking. Here's why: when someone searches "physiotherapist near me" or "best restaurant in Hazratganj," the local 3-pack appears before any organic results. Before your website. Before anyone else's website.
The three businesses shown in that pack get the overwhelming majority of clicks from that search. If you're not in that pack, most people searching for exactly what you offer never see you at all — regardless of how good your website is or how long you've been in business.
The good news is that Google Maps rankings are far more tractable than organic rankings. You don't need years of content, thousands of backlinks, or a technical SEO specialist. The algorithm is fundamentally a legitimacy and relevance check — and most businesses fail it for simple, correctable reasons.
How Google Decides Who Shows Up
Google uses three factors to rank local businesses in Maps results. Understanding them makes the rest of this article obvious — every mistake we'll cover is a failure on one or more of these three dimensions.
Google reads your Business Profile to understand what you do, where you do it, and who you serve. An incomplete or vague profile is a relevance signal failure. If your description is two sentences and your category is generic, Google can't confidently match you to specific searches. Every field you fill in is another signal that helps Google understand your relevance to a given query.
You can't change where your business is located. But you can ensure your address is accurate, complete, and consistent everywhere it appears online. An incorrect pin location, an incomplete address, or a mismatch between your Maps address and your website address all create distance signal noise. Distance is also why a business in Gomtinagar won't outrank a business in Hazratganj for someone searching in Hazratganj — you compete in your radius, not citywide.
This is the factor most businesses fail, and it's the one with the most levers. Prominence is Google's measure of your reputation and presence across the web. It includes your review count, recency, and rating; the number of times your business is mentioned on other websites (citations); how complete and active your Business Profile is; and the overall quality of your online presence. More on how to build this below.
Mistake 1: Your Google Business Profile is Incomplete
This is the single most common issue I find. A business owner claims their Google Business Profile when they first hear about it, fills in the basic name and phone number, and never touches it again. The profile sits at 40% completion for years, quietly signalling to Google that this business is either new, inactive, or not particularly legitimate.
Here's what a genuinely complete profile looks like. If you're missing any of these, that's your first fix:
- Business name, category, and description. The category is critical — this is the primary relevance signal. Don't be vague. "Physiotherapy Clinic" is better than "Healthcare." "South Indian Restaurant" is better than "Restaurant." The description should mention your key services and your area naturally — not as keyword stuffing, but as actual useful information.
- Complete, accurate address with correct pin placement. Open Maps and confirm your pin is actually on your building — not across the street or around the corner. This sounds trivial. It's not. An off-by-100-metres pin is a distance signal error.
- Current business hours, including holiday/special hours. Profiles with accurate hours are more trusted. If a customer shows up and finds you closed when Maps said you were open, that's a negative experience Google eventually learns about.
- Phone number and website URL. These must match your website and every other directory listing exactly. See Mistake 3.
- At least 10 business photos. Interior, exterior, team, products, services — real photos, not stock images. Update them periodically. Profiles with recent photos signal an active business.
- Services or Products section filled in. This is a massively underused section. Every service you list is a relevance signal for searches containing those service names. A clinic that lists "knee pain treatment" in their services will rank better for that search than one that doesn't.
- Q&A section answered. Google lets anyone add questions to your profile. Monitor and answer these — unanswered questions from customers look bad and you lose control of your narrative.
Mistake 2: You Have No Review Strategy
Reviews are a direct ranking signal, a conversion signal, and a trust signal simultaneously. Most local businesses treat them as something that just happens passively, then wonder why their competitor with 200 reviews outranks them despite being newer and smaller.
Reviews don't just happen. Your most satisfied customers are the least likely to leave one without being asked — they're happy, they move on. Your most frustrated customers are the most likely to leave one unprompted. If you're not actively asking for reviews, your rating profile is systematically skewed negative.
Google's algorithm weighs review quantity, recency, average rating, and the presence of owner responses. A profile with 12 reviews where the last one was 14 months ago ranks worse than a profile with 35 reviews where the most recent was last week. Recency signals an active business. Quantity signals a business people actually use.
The simplest review strategy for a local business: after a positive interaction with a customer, send them a direct link to your Google review page. Don't bury it in an email — WhatsApp it to them, or hand them a physical card with a QR code. The conversion rate from a direct link is far higher than asking someone to "find us on Google." Make it a habit, not an afterthought.
Mistake 3: Your NAP is Inconsistent Across the Web
NAP stands for Name, Address, Phone — the three core pieces of business identity information. Google cross-references your NAP across every online directory, citation, and mention of your business. Inconsistencies create confusion about which version of your business is the authoritative one, and Google responds by trusting your profile less.
Common NAP inconsistency patterns I find repeatedly when auditing local business profiles in Lucknow:
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Business name abbreviations and variations
"Dr. Arvind Clinic" vs "Dr Arvind's Clinic" vs "Arvind Medical Clinic" — all three exist across different directories because the owner used whatever name felt natural when registering. Pick one canonical version and use it identically everywhere.
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Address format inconsistencies
India's address formats are genuinely non-standardised — "Plot 12, Sector 7" vs "12/7" vs "12, Sector-7" can all refer to the same location. Decide on one format and enforce it. The Maps address is your canonical version — everything else should match it exactly.
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Landline vs mobile vs both
Some directories list a landline you stopped using two years ago. Others list your current mobile. Some list both in different orders. Google treats each distinct number as a potential signal that this might be a different business entirely. Settle on one primary number and purge the rest.
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Old address still live after a move
You moved premises 18 months ago, updated your Maps profile and your website, and forgot that JustDial, Sulekha, IndiaMART, and your Facebook page still have the old address. Google finds all of them. Your distance signals are now split across two locations, and neither is getting full credit.
The audit process: Google your exact business name along with your phone number, and separately with your address. Go through every result on the first two pages and note any inconsistencies. Then correct them one by one — log in to each directory and update. This takes two or three hours and it directly improves your Maps prominence score.
Mistake 4: Your Only Online Presence is Your Google Business Profile
Google's prominence score is heavily influenced by how many times your business is mentioned accurately on other credible websites. These mentions — even if they're just your name, address, and phone number in a directory listing — are called citations. A business with 40 consistent citations across relevant directories signals to Google that it's a real, established, widely-known entity. A business with only its Maps profile is essentially an unverified claim.
For Indian local businesses, the high-value citation sources to prioritise are:
Still the most authoritative Indian local directory in Google's eyes. A complete, verified JustDial listing with consistent NAP is one of the highest-value citations available to an Indian local business. If you haven't claimed and optimised yours, do this first after your Maps profile.
Broadly used and well-indexed. Add consistent listings with full contact details, category-accurate descriptions, and a link to your website where the platform allows it. Both have verified business sections — claim yours.
Despite being a social network, a Facebook Business Page with accurate NAP, business hours, and at least some activity is a strong citation signal. Google indexes Facebook pages and treats them as high-authority sources. Your Facebook address must match your Maps address exactly.
A clinic should be listed on Practo. A lawyer on Vakilsearch. A hotel on TripAdvisor. A restaurant on Zomato and Swiggy. These category-specific directories carry extra relevance weight because they signal to Google that not only does your business exist, but it's recognised as belonging to a specific industry. Find the two or three most authoritative directories for your category and make sure you're on them.
Your website should display your exact business name, address, and phone number — ideally in the footer on every page — in text (not an image), formatted identically to your Maps profile. This is often called a "NAP citation on your own site" and it's a basic trust signal that many small business websites are missing.
Want Us to Audit Your Maps Presence?
We'll check your profile completeness, NAP consistency across 20+ directories, citation count, and review velocity — and tell you exactly what to fix, in order of impact. Free, no obligation.
Fix It This Week — A Prioritised Plan
You don't need to do everything at once. Here's the order of operations that gets you the most ranking improvement in the least time. Each item builds on the previous one.
Most businesses that implement these five steps consistently see meaningful Maps ranking improvement within 4–8 weeks. The timeline varies by how competitive your category and area are — a restaurant in central Lucknow will take longer than a specialist service in a less contested niche. But the direction is always the same: more completeness, more consistency, more citations, more reviews.
Bottom Line
Google Maps is not a lottery. It's an algorithm that rewards businesses that have done the basic work of presenting themselves accurately and consistently to Google and to the web. Most businesses haven't done that work — not because it's hard, but because nobody told them it needed to be done.
The clinic we mentioned in the Core Web Vitals article? We also fixed their Maps presence as part of the same engagement. Within six weeks of completing their profile, auditing their NAP, and building eight citations, they moved from position #7 to position #2 in their local Maps pack. No paid ads. No new content. Just fixing what was broken.
If you've read this article and identified three or more of these mistakes in your own profile, you now know exactly what to do. The work is straightforward — it's the knowing where to look that was the missing piece.
If you'd rather have someone audit it properly, identify every specific issue, and tell you exactly what to fix in order of impact — that's something we do for free, no strings attached. The form is below.