How to Boost Google Maps and Google Search Rankings
Wanna boost your ππ€π€ππ‘π πππ₯π¨ and ππ€π€ππ‘π ππππ§ππ rankings!? It could boil down to the"ππππππππ πππππππππ" of your Google My Business (GMB) listing.
For instance, if youβre GMB listing isnβt readily appearing when you search its name verbatim (e.g. βJohn Doe Realtyβ) or even when your search phrase includes a location identifier (e.g. βJohn Doe Realty, Nashville, TNβ), it could be a product of poor location authority.
To test yours, conduct a search (Google Maps and/or Google Search) while physically standing inside the listingβs verified location (with location-tracking enabled on your search device). If itβll populate your GMB listing there but nowhere else, chances are, itβs the result of lousy βlocation authority.β
Hereβs how to improve your Google My Business location authority:
1. Claim/Verify your business listing. Hereβs details on how: bit.ly/Claim-GMB
2. Never-stop getting reviews!
(TIP β : whenever possible, focus on seller testimonials. Google searches in which the user is seeks out the real estate agent tend to be associated w/ βseller intent,β so itβd look good for there to be lots of past sellers bragging on you.)
3. Match-up your back-linked business citations across the web. In other words, make sure the name of your GMB listing, its address, its phone number, its URL, etc. are exactly the same (character for character) as on other popular websites, such as Yelp, Zillow, Facebook, and so on. The name part may be tough if usernames on social sites are unavailable, so just do your best.
4. Add photos galore: pics of you, your listings, your team, behind-the-scenes, etc.
(TIP β : check out tools like geoimgr.com which allows you to geo-tag your images before uploading to GMB. That way, as Google scans the contents of your business listing, trying to decipher whether itβs relevant to the searcherβs intent, it may see photos at tagged locations