A Practical Checklist For Improving How Your Business Gets Found, Understood, Trusted, And Recommended.
Use this checklist to review the core signals that affect local visibility across Google, Google Maps, AI search, directories, reviews, your website, and local discovery channels. You do not need to be technical. Work through each section one step at a time and mark what is complete, unclear, missing, or needs improvement.
Do This In Order
Open your website, your Google Business Profile, and a document where you can take notes. For each item below, mark it as complete, needs improvement, missing, or unsure. If you are unsure, that is still useful because it shows where your visibility foundation may not be clear.
Check What Customers See
Search your business name, main services, and city. Look at your website, Google profile, reviews, and the competitors appearing around you.
Write Down Every Gap
Do not fix things yet. First, collect what is missing, inconsistent, outdated, unclear, weak, or different from competitors.
Prioritize The Foundation
Start with business information, website structure, GBP, citations, reviews, and tracking before chasing random tactics.
Give each section a score from 0 to 3. Use 0 for missing, 1 for weak, 2 for mostly complete, and 3 for strong. Any section below 2 should be reviewed before expanding into more content, ads, or campaigns.
Checklist Sections
Work from top to bottom, or jump to the area you already know is weak.
Business Identity Signals
Search platforms need to understand exactly who your business is, what it does, where it operates, and how customers can contact you. This is the foundation for every other signal.
Check your website, Google Business Profile, major directories, invoices, social profiles, and email signature. Do not use slightly different names unless they are intentional and consistent.
Look for old phone numbers, outdated addresses, duplicate listings, tracking numbers used incorrectly, or old domains that could confuse customers and search platforms.
A customer should be able to understand what type of business you are within a few seconds. Avoid vague descriptions that could apply to many industries.
Make a list of your main revenue-driving services. Confirm each one is visible on your website and reflected in your Google Business Profile where appropriate.
Instead of saying “we serve the surrounding area,” list the primary cities, suburbs, neighborhoods, or regions that matter to your business.
Google Business Profile Signals
Your Google Business Profile is often the first thing customers see in Maps and local search. It needs to be complete, current, and aligned with what your website says.
Search your main service and look at the categories used by the businesses ranking well. Your primary category should match what you most want to be found for.
Add only categories that accurately describe what you provide. Do not add unrelated categories just because competitors use them.
Review the services section. Add your major services, use plain language, and make sure the terms match what customers actually search.
Add current photos of work, team, location, vehicles, equipment, finished projects, or customer-facing proof. Remove outdated or low-quality images if possible.
For many businesses, the homepage is fine. For location-specific profiles or service-specific profiles, a more relevant landing page may make more sense.
Incorrect hours or contact details create customer frustration and can weaken trust. Check them monthly.
Website Structure Signals
Your website should make your business easy to understand. A thin website can make a strong business look unclear, incomplete, or less trustworthy than competitors.
Within the first screen, a visitor should understand your business type, main services, location or service area, and the next step to contact you.
If a service matters to revenue, it usually deserves its own page. Do not hide important services in one short paragraph on the homepage.
Your homepage should link to service pages. Service pages should link to relevant location pages, resources, FAQs, and contact options where helpful.
Make sure phone, contact page, booking options, service area, and business details are visible without forcing visitors to hunt.
Open your site on your phone. Check buttons, forms, text size, navigation, phone links, and page speed. Most local searchers are not patient.
Service Page Signals
Service pages help search platforms and customers understand exactly what you offer. Each important service page should answer the questions a real buyer would ask before calling.
A non-expert should understand what the service is, when they need it, what problems it solves, and what happens next.
This helps match the page to real customer searches, not just industry terminology.
Customers want to know what happens after they call, request a quote, book, or submit a form. Reduce uncertainty.
Add reviews, examples, project photos, credentials, guarantees, FAQs, or reasons your business is qualified to provide the service.
Use a phone number, form, booking link, quote request, consultation button, or other CTA that matches how customers actually buy.
Location And Service Area Signals
Search platforms need evidence that your business is relevant to the places you want to be found. Location signals should be specific, accurate, and useful to customers.
List the city, region, neighborhoods, suburbs, or service area that matters. Do not rely on vague wording.
Each location page should include local context, service relevance, proof, FAQs, nearby areas, and a reason the page exists beyond swapping city names.
Do not claim every city if you cannot serve them well. Start with priority markets, then expand when the foundation is stronger.
Mention nearby communities, landmarks, corridors, or neighborhoods only when they help customers understand where you operate.
Citation Consistency
Citations are mentions of your business information on directories, maps, platforms, and business listings. Consistency helps reinforce trust.
Check major platforms such as Google, Apple Maps, Bing, Yelp, Facebook, industry directories, and local directories.
Search your business name plus old addresses or old phone numbers. Make a list of listings that need correction.
Depending on your industry, this may include trade directories, franchise directories, home service platforms, professional associations, or local chamber listings.
Directory profiles should not use outdated, generic, or incomplete descriptions that conflict with your website.
Review Signals
Reviews help customers and search platforms evaluate trust. Volume matters, but so do recency, quality, relevance, and response behavior.
Do not wait until reviews become a problem. Build a simple review request process after successful jobs, appointments, or customer milestones.
Customers often write naturally when prompted well. Ask for honest feedback about the service they received, not generic praise.
Thank positive reviewers and respond calmly to negative reviews. Your responses are visible to future customers.
Compare your review count, average rating, recency, and review quality against the businesses ranking ahead of you.
Schema Signals
Schema is structured data that helps search platforms understand your business, pages, services, FAQs, reviews, and location information more clearly.
This should reflect your business name, website, address if applicable, phone, logo, social profiles, and business type.
Service schema, FAQ schema, breadcrumb schema, and webpage schema can help clarify page purpose and relationships.
Do not mark up claims, reviews, services, or locations that are not actually visible or supported on the page.
Use a structured data testing tool or ask your web team to check for errors, missing required fields, or markup that does not match the page.
Tracking Signals
Visibility only matters if you can understand what it creates. Tracking helps you see which channels, pages, and actions are producing opportunities.
At minimum, track form submissions, phone clicks, booking clicks, and important contact actions.
GBP calls, direction requests, website clicks, and messages should be reviewed separately from website conversions when possible.
Test them yourself. Submit a form, click the phone number, check confirmation emails, and confirm the lead reaches the right person.
More leads are not always better. Track whether inquiries are relevant, serviceable, profitable, and coming from the markets you want.
AI Visibility Signals
AI search tools need clear, consistent, well-supported information to summarize and recommend a business. If your business is unclear across the web, AI systems may miss or misrepresent you.
AI tools pull from patterns of information. Make the basics obvious on your homepage, service pages, location pages, about page, and contact page.
Explain problems, process, eligibility, common questions, pricing factors if relevant, and what customers should expect.
AI systems may compare information from your website, GBP, directories, social profiles, reviews, and other references.
Add FAQs, resources, comparison pages, service explanations, and location-specific guidance that helps a real person make a decision.
Turn The Checklist Into A Fix List
Once you complete the checklist, group your notes into three buckets: missing, inconsistent, and underbuilt. Start with the issues that affect business identity, Google Business Profile, website structure, and conversion tracking before moving into lower-priority improvements.
Keep Building Context
Use these pages to understand how the checklist fits into the larger Firm IQ visibility foundation.
Want Firm IQ To Review This For Your Business?
Request an Atlas Gap Analysis and Firm IQ will compare how your business is currently being found against the competitors showing up ahead of you, then identify the visibility gaps, market coverage opportunities, and recommendation signals Google and AI may be missing.