Google Business Profile setup checklist for an Auckland small business
Educational guide for Auckland and NZ small businesses. Related: web design Auckland

Google Business Profile Setup & Optimisation

If you serve customers in Auckland (or anywhere in New Zealand), your Google Business Profile (GBP) is one of the fastest ways to improve local visibility on Google Search and Maps. This page is a practical, step-by-step guide you can follow without tools, plugins, or jargon.

Before you start
If your business is home-based or you travel to customers, you can hide your address and use a service area instead. If you’re a storefront, make sure your signage and address match exactly what customers see.

Part 1: Setup fundamentals (do these once)

1) Claim or create the profile priority

Search your business name on Google. If a profile exists, claim it. If not, create one using a Google account you control long term.

OwnershipAccess controlAvoid duplicates

2) Verify properly

Complete verification (video, phone, email, or postcard depending on Google). Use real signage, real location cues, and consistent business details.

VerificationTrust

3) Lock down NAP consistency

NAP = Name, Address, Phone. Make it identical across your website, invoices, and directories. Small mismatches can cause ranking and trust issues.

NameAddressPhone

4) Choose the right primary category

Your primary category is one of the strongest signals. Pick what you actually are, not what you also do. Add secondary categories only when they truly apply.

CategoriesRelevance

5) Add hours, service areas, and attributes

Set accurate hours (including public holidays if you can). Add service areas (suburbs or regions) and relevant attributes customers care about.

HoursService areasAttributes

6) Link the correct pages

Use a website link that matches the service in the profile. If you have multiple services, point to the most relevant page (not always the homepage).

Website linkConversions

Part 2: Optimisation (the work that compounds)

Build relevance

  • Services: list your core services using customer language (what people search).
  • Description: write a clear “who you help + where + what you do” description. Keep it factual.
  • Products (if relevant): add key products with prices or ranges when you can.
  • Landing pages: match GBP intent with the right website page.

Build trust

  • Photos: upload real photos regularly (front, team, work, vehicles, tools, inside).
  • Reviews: ask consistently, reply to every review, and use specifics in replies.
  • Q&A: seed common questions yourself, then answer them clearly.
  • Messaging/calls: only enable if you can respond quickly.

Posts: what to publish (and how often)

Publish simple updates: offer, before/after, new service, seasonal reminders. Aim for weekly if possible, fortnightly if you’re busy.

ConsistencyLocal signals

Photos: what “good” looks like

Clear, real, recent. Avoid stock photos. Add location cues when it makes sense (job sites, suburbs, recognisable areas).

Real proofRecency

Reviews: ask without being awkward

Ask right after a good outcome. Send one link. Make it easy. Don’t “gate” reviews or offer incentives.

ReputationConversion

Spam and bad edits: protect your listing

Use owner-level access for you only. Add managers sparingly. Monitor edits, hours changes, and suspicious category updates.

SecurityAccuracy

Part 3: Measure what matters

GBP metrics to watch

  • Searches: what terms triggered your listing (brand vs non-brand).
  • Actions: calls, website clicks, direction requests, messages.
  • Photo performance: which photos attract views.
  • Best times: when customers call or message.

Tracking tip (simple but powerful)

Add UTM tracking to your GBP website link so you can see GBP traffic in analytics. If you’re using GA4, it will show up as a source/medium like google / organic with your campaign name.

Example URL format (edit to match your site):

https://www.yourdomain.co.nz/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=gbp

Common mistakes that hold Auckland businesses back

Duplicate listings

Two profiles for the same business splits reviews, confuses Google, and can tank visibility. Claim and merge or remove duplicates.

Wrong category

If your primary category is wrong, you’ll attract the wrong searches. Fix category before you worry about anything else.

Stock photos and vague content

Generic photos and generic descriptions rarely convert. Real photos and specific services do.

Want a second set of eyes?
If you want help improving your wider online presence, start here: website design Auckland Contact Kiwi Web Design
This page is educational. Any links above are for readers who want more context.

GBP optimisation schedule (what to do, and how often)

Task How often Why it matters Effort
Check categories, hours, and contact details Monthly Stops ranking drops caused by incorrect info or unexpected edits Low
Add new photos (real work, team, location cues) Weekly or fortnightly Builds trust and freshness signals for local searches Low
Publish a post (update, offer, seasonal reminder) Weekly Creates steady activity and improves engagement Low
Request and respond to reviews Ongoing Reviews are a major conversion lever and a trust signal Medium
Add and refine services Quarterly Improves relevance for non-brand searches in Auckland suburbs Medium
Review Insights and improve tracking (UTMs) Monthly Shows which actions drive calls and site visits, so you don’t guess Medium

Google Business Profile FAQs

Do I need a shop address to appear on Google Maps?
No. If you’re a service-area business (you travel to customers), you can hide your address and set service areas instead.
What’s the single most important optimisation step?
Your primary category. If it’s wrong, you’ll struggle to rank for the searches that matter.
How many photos should I add?
Start with 10 to 20 real photos, then add a few regularly. Recency matters more than having hundreds.
Should I use keywords in my business name?
Only use your real-world business name. Adding extra keywords can lead to edits, suspensions, or trust issues.
How do I track leads coming from my Google Business Profile?
Add UTM tracking to your website link and review Insights for calls, clicks, and direction requests. If you also want your website performing well, see web design Auckland.
What if someone suggests edits to my profile that are wrong?
Review edits quickly, keep owner access tight, and update your website and other listings so Google sees consistent business details.
Can you help me fix a messy profile or duplicates?
Yes, but this guide is educational. If you want help untangling duplicates or improving your online setup, use the contact page: https://www.kiwiwebdesign.co.nz/website-designer-auckland/.
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