Local SEO
The Google Business Profile audit every moving company should run this month
TL;DR
Most mover Google Business Profiles are roughly 60 to 70% complete. The unfilled 30 to 40% is where your local pack ranking is leaking. This post is the same 12-point audit we run for new clients, written so an operator can run it on their own profile in 10 to 30 minutes. Expect to surface 5 to 10 fixable issues, and expect those fixes to move the local pack within 30 to 60 days. The Google Business Profile is the single highest-leverage local SEO asset a moving company owns. Walk through the checklist, fix what you find, then come back next month.
The Google Business Profile is the single most powerful local SEO asset a mover has, and the cheapest one to fix. Unlike technical SEO, content, or off-page work, you do not need an agency or a developer to run a GBP audit. You need 30 minutes, a coffee, and a willingness to actually look at every section of your profile honestly.
Most mover profiles we audit come in around 60 to 70% complete. The unfilled fields are not aesthetic, they are ranking signals. Local SEO research from firms like Whitespark and BrightLocal has consistently shown for years that GBP completeness, primary category accuracy, and review velocity are among the strongest factors in the local pack. A profile that fills in the missing 30% routinely picks up positions inside 30 to 60 days.
This post is the audit checklist itself. Twelve points, in the order we run them. If you are short on time, the section below ("the 10-minute version") covers the four highest-leverage steps. Run the full audit if you want everything. If you are setting up a new profile from scratch, follow Google's official Business Profile guidelines first to make sure you are not breaking any naming or address rules.
1. Why a GBP audit moves the needle faster than almost anything else
Local pack rankings depend on a small number of strong signals. Proximity to the searcher is the largest one Google does not let you control. The remaining big factors are things you do control: the primary category, the completeness of the profile, the volume and recency of reviews, and the Name-Address-Phone consistency across the web.
On a regular SEO retainer, the technical and content work compounds slowly. GBP work moves the local pack faster because Google re-indexes the profile aggressively and weighs the changes within weeks, not months. A mover that adds 4 missing services, fills in 5 missing attributes, and lifts review acquisition from 1/month to 6/month will typically see local pack movement inside the next 60 days. The work is genuinely cheap to do, and the ROI is fast.
2. The full 12-point audit
Run these in order. The first four are the highest-leverage moves and are the same as the 10-minute version below. Steps 5 through 12 are the deeper completeness work that compounds over time.
1. Verify ownership and confirm the primary category
Open Google Business Profile, sign in with the account that owns your profile, and confirm three things: you have direct ownership (not just management), the business name matches your real legal or trading name, and the primary category is "Mover" for most moving companies. If you serve mostly long-distance or specialty work, "Moving company" or a more specific category may be a better primary fit. The primary category is the single strongest signal in the entire profile, so do not pick a category to "stand out", pick the one that most accurately describes what you do.
2. Add every relevant secondary category
Google lets you add multiple secondary categories. Most mover profiles use 2 or 3. They should be using 5 to 8. Real candidates: Moving company, Storage facility, Piano moving service, Truck rental agency (if applicable), Packing service, Commercial moving service, Junk removal service. Add every one that genuinely applies and remove any that do not. Misuse triggers profile suspensions.
3. Define your service area precisely
If you do not have a customer-facing storefront, you are a service-area business. Google lets you list up to 20 cities or ZIP codes you actively serve. List every metro you regularly move in or out of, no more. Listing markets you do not serve dilutes the proximity signal Google uses to decide which queries you appear for. Do not list all 50 states "just in case", that hurts you, not helps.
4. Lock down hours, including holidays and special hours
Regular hours need to be exact. Many mover profiles still show 9-5 even though they answer the phone until 8pm. If your dispatch line is open later than your office, set hours to match the phone. Then add special hours for every holiday for the next 12 months. A profile with current special hours is treated as actively maintained, and Google rewards that.
5. Photo audit (and the cadence that comes after)
Open the Photos tab. You should have at least one photo in each of the major categories: exterior, interior, at-work, team, products. Most mover profiles have zero in at-work or team. Add what you can today (a phone photo of a truck out front counts), and then commit to a weekly upload going forward. Volume matters less than velocity. A profile with 25 photos uploaded once outranks a profile with 80 photos uploaded three years ago. Google reads upload velocity as a signal that the business is real and active.
6. Review acquisition + response system
Two questions: how many reviews are you getting per month, and how many of them do you respond to? Industry research from BrightLocal's annual Local Consumer Review Survey consistently shows that consumers care about both recency and response rate, not just the absolute count. A mover with 42 reviews where the most recent is 6 weeks old is in worse shape than a mover with 22 reviews and 3 in the last month.
Set a target of 5 to 10 new reviews per month. Train your foremen to ask at hand-off. Send a follow-up text after every completed move with a direct review link. Respond to every single review within 48 hours, including the bad ones. The response is for the next visitor reading the profile, not for the reviewer.
7. Q&A ownership
The Questions & Answers section is the most-overlooked part of the profile. Anyone can ask a question and anyone can answer it, including your competitors. Seed it yourself. Add the 8 to 12 questions your customers most commonly ask (pricing, service area, insurance, deposit policy, what's included, scheduling), and answer each one in your own voice. Then monitor the section weekly and answer any new questions within 24 hours.
8. Post weekly, every week
GBP Posts (Updates, Offers, Events) appear in your knowledge panel and inside the local pack listing for some queries. They are not a confirmed direct ranking factor, but they correlate strongly with profiles that rank well, because consistent posting signals an active business. Post once a week. A short Update covering a recent move, a service highlight, or a seasonal note takes 5 minutes. Skipping months is what hurts.
9. Spell out every service
The Services section is one of the most under-filled fields on mover profiles. List every service: Local moving, Long-distance moving, Packing, Unpacking, Piano moving, Specialty item moving, Storage, Commercial moving, Junk removal, Last-minute moving. Add a 1-2 sentence description for each. Each filled-out service is another keyword Google understands you for.
10. Booking + contact verification
Confirm the phone number is correct, click-to-call works on mobile, and the website link goes to your homepage (not a third-party landing page). If you have a booking or quote-request URL, set it as your Booking link so it appears as a CTA inside the profile.
11. Attributes
Open the Attributes section. Mark every applicable attribute: insured, licensed, free estimates, online estimates, identifies as veteran-owned, identifies as Black-owned, identifies as women-owned, free Wi-Fi (warehouse), wheelchair-accessible entrance, and so on. Each attribute is another filter you can appear under when a customer narrows their search.
12. Performance baseline
Open the Performance tab. Note your current numbers for: direction-clicks, calls, website clicks, discovery searches vs direct searches, and the keywords customers used to find you. This is your baseline. Run the same check 60 days from now and you will see exactly which audit fixes moved the needle.
3. The 10-minute version (if that's all you have today)
If you genuinely cannot spare 30 minutes, do these four steps and come back next month for the rest:
- Fix the primary category. If it is not "Mover" (or your mover-specific equivalent), change it. Single biggest signal.
- Add 3 to 5 missing secondary categories. Look at what you actually do and add what's missing.
- Respond to every unanswered review. Even the old ones. 48-hour rule starts after this audit.
- Add the next 12 months of holiday hours. Takes 8 minutes, signals an actively-maintained profile.
That alone moves most mover profiles from ~60% to ~75% completeness, and these are the four highest-leverage signals in the system. The rest of the audit is gravy on top.
4. What to do with what you find
Most movers running this audit will surface 5 to 10 fixable issues. Tackle them in this order:
- Fix anything Google might suspend you for first. Wrong primary category, missing or fake address, name stuffing ("ABC Movers, Best Movers Atlanta"). These are existential.
- Fix the structural fields next. Categories, services list, service area, hours, attributes. These are one-time edits that compound for years.
- Set up the ongoing cadence work. Weekly photo upload, weekly post, monthly review acquisition target, daily Q&A monitoring. Schedule them as recurring tasks for whoever runs your office.
- Re-baseline performance in 60 days. Open the Performance tab and compare to your day-zero numbers. Most movers will see meaningful direction-click and call lift inside that window.
5. The full audit, in one place
The 12-point GBP audit
1. Verify ownership and primary category accuracy · 2. Add 5-8 secondary categories · 3. Define service area precisely (cities you actually serve) · 4. Lock down hours including holidays · 5. Photo audit + weekly upload cadence · 6. Review acquisition system + 48-hour response · 7. Seed and own the Q&A section · 8. Post weekly · 9. Spell out every service with description · 10. Verify booking + contact details · 11. Mark every applicable attribute · 12. Baseline performance metrics for 60-day re-check.
If you finish this audit and want a second pair of eyes, our SEO retainer includes an end-to-end GBP rebuild and ongoing weekly cadence as part of every package. Or get in touch and we will look at your current profile and tell you honestly which two or three fixes will move you fastest.
Frequently asked questions
How often should a moving company audit its Google Business Profile?
A full 12-point audit twice a year, with a 10-minute monthly check between full audits. Photo uploads, post cadence, review responses, and Q&A monitoring should be ongoing weekly habits, not audit-driven.
How long until GBP changes show up in the local pack?
For most movers, focused GBP cleanup work shows ranking movement within 30 to 60 days. Category and service-list changes propagate fastest. Review-driven movement is slower (3 to 6 months) because Google weights review velocity and recency over absolute count.
Should a mover have one GBP per service area or one for the whole metro?
One profile per physical address that is staffed during business hours. If you operate from a single warehouse and serve the whole metro from there, you get one profile with the service area defined. Movers who set up fake addresses for "additional" profiles get suspended, often without warning. The risk is not worth it.
How many photos should a mover have on the profile?
A complete profile has at least one photo in each major category (exterior, interior, at-work, team, products) and adds 4 to 8 new photos per month going forward. Volume matters less than velocity. A profile that gets two new real photos every week outranks a profile with 80 stock photos uploaded once.
What primary category should a moving company use?
For most movers: "Mover" (the main household-goods moving category). Long-distance specialists may use "Moving company" if it better reflects their primary business. Avoid using a less-relevant primary category to chase a different pack. The primary category is the strongest single ranking signal in the entire profile.
Do GBP posts actually affect rankings?
Posts are not a confirmed direct ranking factor in the way categories or proximity are. But they correlate strongly with profiles that rank well, because consistent posting signals an actively managed profile and improves engagement metrics that Google does measure. The honest framing: post weekly because it helps your prospects, and the ranking lift is a side effect.
What to do this week
Open your profile right now and run the 10-minute version. Fix the primary category, add the missing secondary categories, respond to every unanswered review, and add the next 12 months of holiday hours. That alone takes most mover profiles from "barely indexed" to "actively competing in the local pack."
Then schedule the full 30-minute audit for the end of the month, and the weekly cadence work (photos, posts, reviews) into your operations calendar. If you would rather have someone else do all of this on a recurring monthly basis, our SEO retainer covers it from day one. And if you want to know whether your local pack is winnable at all in your metro, get in touch and we will give you an honest read before you commit a dollar.