Google Business Profile for Tradies: The Local Marketing Asset You Cannot Ignore
If you are short on ideas for advertising, start here. Google Business Profile is one of the most underused growth assets in trade businesses. It helps you appear in local searches, builds trust fast, and supports almost every other channel on the site.
Why this matters more than most tradies realise
Visibility
Show up when locals are already looking
This is one of the few channels that catches high-intent demand without paying for every click.
Trust
Reviews and photos do a lot of selling
Prospects compare you before they call. A strong profile helps you win that comparison.
Compounding
It supports every other channel
Ads, referrals, and social all convert better when the profile behind the business looks strong.
How to set up the profile properly
1
Fill out every core field
Correct business name, phone, service areas, category, hours, website, and services.
2
Add real job photos consistently
The profile should look like a working business, not a blank directory listing.
3
Build a review engine
Ask after every good job. Use a direct link and keep the ask simple.
4
Add updates and service posts
You do not need daily content, but a dead profile is a wasted asset.
5
Tie it into your wider lead system
Good profile, fast answering, and quote follow-up should all work together.
The common profile mistakes
Leaving half the profile empty and expecting it to compete.
Using low-trust photos or no recent proof at all.
Never asking for reviews even though they are one of the clearest conversion levers.
Do not treat this as a one-channel game.
The best results usually come from stacking the basics properly: trust layer, fast response, reactivation, then paid scale once the business can handle it.
Back to Lead Generation →Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. For many local trade businesses it is one of the highest-return marketing assets available.
Make it part of the close-out process and send a direct review link right after a successful job.
Not always, but it should usually be built before you lean hard into paid traffic.