Section E
1) Description
After years of absence, the business description field has returned and is an excellent place to highlight that specific location. Descriptions can be up to 750 characters in length.
Pro Tip: Do call out desirable aspects of your business in the description, but don’t use it to announce sales or promotions, as that’s a violation of the guidelines.
Controllable?
Yes.
2) People Also Search For
This section typically shows brand competitors, chosen by Google. If clicked on, the user is taken to a local finder-type view of these competing businesses, accompanied by a map.
Controllable?
No.
3) Feedback
This link supports suggested public edits of the Google business profile, which Google can accept or reject.
Controllable?
Partly: brands can’t control what edits the public suggests. Brands can use this feature to suggest edits, too, but there are typically better ways to do so.
4) More About toggle
This arrow, when toggled, will expand the Google business profile to provide even more features, or collapse it to show fewer.
Controllable?
No.
Other Google business profile elements not pictured above
There are well over a dozen other features you may see on your listings, depending on your industry. Hotel listings, for example, have a very unique feature set. Here are just a few of the additional features you may encounter:
1) Categories
All business listings have categories, but most chosen categories aren’t publicly displayed. You select your categories when you create your business listing and can add more later, as needed.
Your primary category is the most important category, and it’s critical that you choose properly. The categories you choose will not only contribute to Google’s determination of which searches to display your business for, but will also determine which Google Business Profile features (like attributes, bookings, etc.) are available for you to use. There are thousands of categories to choose from.
In researching which categories to choose, look at the primary category (typically displayed under the business name on local pack/local finder listings) your top competitors are using for the top searches you’re targeting. A free Chrome store extension called GMB Spy will help you easily surface all the categories a competitor is using, which is very helpful because they are typically hidden from view. You can also use a free tool like this one from PlePer to consider how all available categories might be applicable to the search phrases you most want to rank for. Just be certain that you never add categories that don’t relate to your business, as it can confuse Google.
Controllable?
Yes.
2) Price summary
This is meant to be an overview of general pricing.
Controllable?
Partly: this is both an owner and crowdsourced element.
3) Menu links
A somewhat complex feature, these can link to third-party menus, or can be generated directly by the owner in the GBP dashboard for some businesses.
Controllable?
Partly: the owner can control the menu URL and content, in some cases.
4) Critic reviews
These are chosen by Google, and stem from “professional” review platforms.
Controllable?
No.
5) Popular times
This information is drawn from users who have opted into Google Location History. It’s meant to help users plan visits. It’s conceivable that this could be utilized as a ranking factor.
Controllable?
No.
6) Booking
The optional Reserve With Google program enables qualifying businesses to take bookings.
Controllable?
Yes.
7) Ads
This controversial element found on some Google business profiles consists of content like paid ads from entities like Doordash or Groupon, designed to steer traffic away from your business to a third party.
Controllable?
No.
8) Local business URLs
There are a variety of additional URLs that can either be added to the GBP dashboard or stem from third parties. These URLs can represent menus, ordering, booking, reservations, and product searches.
Controllable?
Partly: the owner can add some additional URLs, but some come from third parties.
9) Google Messaging
Located in your dashboard and installed from Google Play or the Google Apps Store, this function lets customers direct message you.
Controllable?
Yes.
10) Profiles
Google can show social media links to platforms like Twitter and Linkedin.
Controllable?
Not directly controllable, but can be influenced by these practices.
11) Place Topics and Review Attributes
Place topics are tags Google applies to a business from an aggregate of words associated with the business. Review attributes are tags chosen by users at the time they review.
Controllable?
No.
Google Maps