What a Google Business Profile actually is
A Google Business Profile (GBP) — formerly called Google My Business — is the listing that appears in Google Search and Google Maps when someone looks for a local business. It shows your name, address, phone number, hours, reviews, and photos in a tidy panel alongside search results.
It's one of the most valuable free tools a local business can use. Done well, it puts you in front of people who are actively searching for what you offer, right in your city or neighborhood. But it has real limits — and understanding those limits is what makes the difference between a business that's occasionally found online and one that consistently wins customers there.
What a Google Business Profile does well
Give credit where it's due. A well-maintained GBP genuinely earns you customers — particularly for searches that include a location or a "near me" qualifier. Here's where it performs:
- Local map pack visibility. When someone searches "plumber in Austin" or "AC repair near me," Google shows a map with three local listings at the top of the page. A strong GBP is how you get into that pack.
- Reviews front and center. Your star rating and review count appear directly in search results, before anyone clicks anything. For service businesses, this is often the first trust signal a customer sees.
- Direct contact without a click. Your phone number, hours, and directions are visible right in the listing. Some customers will call you without ever visiting your website.
- Google Posts and updates. You can publish short updates, offers, and announcements that appear in your listing — useful for promotions or seasonal messaging.
- Q&A and messaging. Customers can ask questions directly in your listing, and you can respond publicly — another trust signal that most businesses underuse.
Where a Google Business Profile falls short
Here's what a GBP cannot do — and why those gaps matter for your business:
- You don't own it. Google controls your listing. They can suspend it, change how it displays, or change what information they pull from other sources. You're a tenant, not a landlord.
- It can't tell your full story. A listing gives you a handful of photos, a short description, and a list of services. There's no room for the "why us," your team, your process, detailed pricing, or the kind of content that earns trust from someone who's comparing three options.
- It's nearly invisible outside local searches. If someone searches "how much does a commercial cleaning contract cost in Texas" or "what questions should I ask a landscaper," your GBP doesn't appear. Those are the searches where a real website — with useful, specific content — can rank.
- No conversion tools. A GBP has a "call" button and a "website" link, but no quote forms, no service-page CTAs, no booking flows, and no way to build a lead funnel. The listing gets someone's attention; the website converts it.
- Competitors sit right next to you. In the map pack, your business appears next to two competitors. There's no extra space to differentiate. A website is where you earn the click after they've seen all three.
The key distinction: a Google Business Profile helps people find you. A website helps them choose you. Both matter — but they're doing different jobs.
Side-by-side: what each platform does
| Capability | Google Business Profile | Your own website |
|---|---|---|
| Appear in local map pack | Yes — this is its main job | Supports it, but doesn't replace it |
| Rank for non-local searches | No | Yes — service pages, FAQs, guides |
| Tell your full brand story | Very limited | Yes — as much detail as you need |
| Collect and display reviews | Yes | Can embed or pull in reviews |
| Quote forms and lead capture | No | Yes |
| You own it completely | No — Google controls it | Yes |
| Custom design and branding | No | Yes |
| Works when referrals look you up | Partially | Yes — and makes the yes decision easier |
The referral problem most owners overlook
Many service businesses get most of their work through referrals — and that's great. But here's the part that gets missed: when someone is referred to you, the first thing they do is look you up online.
If all they find is a sparse Google listing, no website, and a handful of photos, the referral doesn't automatically convert. There's doubt. They keep looking. Maybe they check a competitor while they're at it.
A clean, professional website closes that gap. It validates the referral, shows what you do in detail, and makes it easy to act — whether that's calling, filling out a form, or sending a message. It's the difference between "I heard they're good" and "I can see they're good."
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The good news: you don't have to choose between them. They're designed to work in tandem, and each one makes the other more effective.
- Your GBP links to your website. When someone finds your listing and wants to learn more, that "website" button goes somewhere — and it should go somewhere good. A strong website means that click converts instead of bouncing.
- Your website helps your GBP rank. Google uses signals from your website — consistent name, address, and phone number (NAP); relevant content about your services; local keyword signals — to evaluate how well your GBP should rank in local results.
- Service pages expand your search footprint. A page on your site specifically about, say, "roof repair in Round Rock" can rank for searches your GBP can't touch — expanding the total number of people who find you.
- Reviews on your site back up your GBP reviews. Embedding Google reviews on your website, or adding a testimonials section, means visitors see that social proof even if they came in through a non-map search.
When is a GBP alone actually enough?
To be fair: there are businesses for which a GBP covers most of the bases. If you're a one-person handyman who books out months in advance purely through repeat customers and word of mouth — and you have no interest in growing beyond that — you can probably get by without a formal website.
But that scenario is rarer than it sounds. Most service businesses want to grow, need to replace customers who churn, operate in competitive markets, or serve clients who will Google them before saying yes. In any of those situations, a GBP alone creates a real ceiling on how many customers can find and choose you.
The question isn't whether a website would help — it almost certainly would. The question is whether the return is worth the investment. At $250 to set up and $50 a month, for most businesses the math is clear.
What to do right now
If you don't have a Google Business Profile, set one up today — it's free and takes about 30 minutes. Make sure your name, address, phone, and hours are accurate, upload real photos, and start collecting reviews from happy customers.
If you don't have a website, or your current site is outdated, underpowered, or invisible in search, that's the next step. A focused, fast, well-built website works alongside your GBP — not instead of it — and gives you the full online presence that turns searches into customers.
Common questions
Is a Google Business Profile enough for a local service business?
A Google Business Profile is a valuable tool for showing up in local map results and collecting reviews, but it isn't a replacement for a website. You don't control what information Google shows, you can't tell your full story, and you're invisible to anyone searching outside your immediate area or for terms that don't trigger the local pack.
What can a website do that a Google Business Profile cannot?
A website lets you own your brand completely — your story, your services, your pricing, your photos, your calls to action. It can rank for dozens of search terms beyond "near me" searches, convert visitors with a clear quote form or click-to-call button, and build trust with testimonials, credentials, and detailed service pages. A GBP listing can only do a fraction of that.
Do I need a website if I already get most customers from referrals?
Yes. Even referral-based businesses lose deals when the referred customer checks online and finds no website — or finds one that looks outdated. A clean, professional website validates the referral and makes the yes decision easier. It's also your fallback when referrals slow down.
How does a Google Business Profile and a website work together?
They complement each other. Your Google Business Profile helps you appear in the local map pack and collect reviews. Your website gives Google more content to index, provides a destination for people who click through, and lets you rank for service-specific and location-specific searches that the GBP alone won't reach.
How much does it cost to get a website that works alongside a Google listing?
Turnkey Web builds professional small business websites for a flat $250 setup fee and $50 per month, which covers hosting, management, and unlimited updates. Most local businesses recoup that with a single new customer. The site is live within 7 days, built to support your Google listing and rank for relevant local searches.
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