Local SEO

Google Business Profile Optimisation for Adelaide Businesses

Joel Spear8 min read

Why Your Google Business Profile Matters More Than Your Website

Here is a statistic that should get your attention: for local searches (think "plumber near me," "best cafe Adelaide," or "dentist Norwood"), your Google Business Profile appears before any website in the search results. In many cases, customers make their decision — call, get directions, or move on — without ever visiting your website. Your Google Business Profile (GBP) is effectively your shopfront on the internet. When someone searches for your type of business in Adelaide, Google displays a map pack with three businesses. Those three spots get the majority of clicks. If you are not in the top three, you are invisible to a huge portion of potential customers. The good news is that GBP optimisation is not complicated. Google rewards businesses that provide complete, accurate, and regularly updated profiles. Most Adelaide businesses have barely touched their profiles beyond the initial setup, which means a little effort here goes a very long way. We have seen Adelaide businesses double their monthly calls and direction requests within 60 days of properly optimising their Google Business Profile. No paid advertising, no website changes — just making the most of a free tool that Google gives every business.

Getting the Basics Right: Information, Categories, and Attributes

Start with the fundamentals. Verify your business if you have not already — unverified profiles are severely limited in visibility. Then audit every piece of information on your profile for accuracy and completeness. Your business name should be your actual business name. Do not stuff keywords into it (for example, "Joe's Plumbing - Best Plumber Adelaide" is against Google's guidelines and can get your profile suspended). Just use your registered business name. Your primary category is the most important ranking factor for your GBP. Choose the most specific category that accurately describes your business. If you are a pizza restaurant, select "Pizza Restaurant" rather than just "Restaurant." Google offers hundreds of categories — take the time to find the best match. You can also add secondary categories to capture additional search terms. Your business description should be a clear, keyword-rich summary of what you do and who you serve. You have 750 characters — use them well. Mention your location (Adelaide, specific suburbs you serve), your key services, and what differentiates you. Do not use this space for promotions or sales language; Google prefers informative descriptions. Attributes are the specific features and qualities of your business — things like "Wheelchair accessible," "Free Wi-Fi," "LGBTQ+ friendly," "Women-owned," and dozens more. Go through every available attribute and select all that apply. These help Google match your business to relevant searches and help customers make decisions. Service area: if you serve customers at their location (like tradies or mobile businesses), set your service area to cover the specific Adelaide suburbs or regions you serve. Be specific rather than broad — covering all of Adelaide looks less credible than listing the five to ten suburbs you actually service.

Photos and Videos: The Visual Advantage

Businesses with more than 100 photos on their Google Business Profile receive 520 per cent more calls and 2,717 per cent more direction requests than the average business. Those are not typos — the impact of visual content on GBP performance is extraordinary. Start by adding high-quality photos in every category Google allows: exterior (so people can recognise your shopfront), interior (so they know what to expect), team photos (builds trust and human connection), product photos (showing what you sell or the results of your work), and photos of your work in action. For Adelaide businesses, include photos that show recognisable local context. If your cafe is on Prospect Road, include a shot that shows the street. If you are a builder who completed a renovation in Burnside, include a photo that captures the character of the neighbourhood. Local visual context helps both Google and potential customers connect your business to their area. Add new photos regularly — at least two to three per week. Google favours profiles that are actively updated, and fresh photos signal that your business is active and thriving. Make it a habit to take photos during every customer interaction, every job completion, and every new product arrival. Video is increasingly important on GBP. You can upload videos up to 30 seconds long, and they appear prominently in your profile. A short video walkthrough of your business, a time-lapse of a job in progress, or a quick message from the owner all work well. One critical point: photo quality matters. Blurry, dark, or poorly framed photos do more harm than good. Clean your phone lens, shoot in good lighting, and take a moment to compose the shot properly. You do not need a professional photographer for every image, but you do need to meet a minimum quality standard.

Reviews: The Ranking Factor You Can Actually Influence

Reviews are the second most important ranking factor for Google Business Profiles, and they are the factor you have the most direct influence over. Businesses with more reviews, higher average ratings, and recent reviews rank higher and convert more searchers into customers. Your review strategy should focus on three things: volume, recency, and quality. Volume: aim for significantly more reviews than your competitors. If the top-ranking plumber in your area has 80 reviews, you need to be working toward 100 or more. Every happy customer is a potential review. The businesses that dominate local search are the ones that systematically ask for reviews after every positive interaction. Recency: Google values fresh reviews. A business with 200 reviews but none in the last three months looks stagnant. Aim for at least two to four new reviews per week. Create a system that makes review requests a standard part of your post-service or post-purchase process. Quality: longer, more detailed reviews carry more weight than "Great service, 5 stars." When asking for reviews, gently encourage customers to mention specific details — what service they received, what they appreciated, and the outcome. Reviews that contain keywords relevant to your business (for example, "bathroom renovation," "emergency plumber," "wedding cake") help Google understand what you do and match you to relevant searches. Respond to every review — positive and negative. For positive reviews, a brief, personalised thank-you shows that you value your customers. For negative reviews, respond professionally, acknowledge the concern, and offer to resolve it offline. How you handle negative reviews tells potential customers everything they need to know about your business. Never buy fake reviews or offer incentives for reviews. Google is increasingly sophisticated at detecting fake reviews and will penalise your profile if they find them. Build your review profile authentically through genuine customer satisfaction.

Google Posts, Q&A, and Ongoing Optimisation

Google Posts are a chronically underused feature that gives you a way to publish content directly to your GBP. Think of them as social media posts that appear in Google Search results. You can publish updates, offers, events, and product highlights. Post at least once per week. Share your weekly specials, upcoming events, seasonal offerings, or business updates. Include a strong image, a clear description, and a call-to-action button (Call, Book, Learn More, etc.). Google Posts expire after seven days, so regular posting is essential. The Q&A section is another opportunity most businesses ignore. You can proactively add and answer common questions about your business. Think about the questions customers ask you most often — your opening hours, whether you offer a specific service, your pricing structure — and add them to your Q&A. This provides useful information to potential customers and gives Google more content to index. Ongoing optimisation means regularly updating your profile with fresh photos, new posts, accurate business information (especially opening hours during public holidays), and responding to reviews promptly. Google rewards active profiles with higher visibility. Track your GBP performance through the Insights dashboard. Pay attention to the number of calls, direction requests, and website clicks your profile generates each month. These are high-intent actions from people actively looking for your services, and they should trend upward as your optimisation efforts take effect. For Adelaide businesses in competitive categories — hospitality, trades, health and beauty, professional services — a well-optimised Google Business Profile can be the difference between being found and being invisible. It is free, it is effective, and it is one of the highest-return marketing activities available to any local business.

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