


Vincent is the founder and director of Rubix Studios, with over 20 years of experience in branding, marketing, film, photography, and web development. He is a certified partner with industry leaders including Google, Microsoft, AWS, and HubSpot. Vincent also serves as a member of the Maribyrnong City Council Business and Innovation Board and is undertaking an Executive MBA at RMIT University.
Local search remains one of the most effective ways for businesses to attract and convert customers. Nearly half of all Google searches have local intent, and a significant percentage of local mobile searches lead to in-person transactions within a day. This behaviour reflects a clear shift toward immediate, location-driven decision-making. However, while many businesses maintain a Google Business Profile and attempt to collect reviews, few consistently rank in the top map results—often referred to as the Local Pack.
This underperformance is not typically due to lack of effort, but rather a misunderstanding of how local SEO functions today. Ranking in 2025 depends on real-world engagement, consistent online signals, and verifiable trust—not outdated tactics or keyword stuffing.

Google's algorithm for local results is built on proximity, relevance, and prominence. Proximity determines how close your business is to the searcher. Relevance reflects how well your business matches the user’s intent. Prominence measures how authoritative and trusted your business appears online.
To improve visibility, businesses must ensure that:
Many historical techniques used in local SEO no longer work and may now be counterproductive. These include excessive map pin creation, mass embedding of location maps, purchasing fake engagement, or using artificial direction requests to boost location activity. Google’s evolving algorithm now prioritises measurable and organic signals—rewarding legitimate customer interactions and penalising manipulation.
While proximity remains a fundamental input, Google increasingly evaluates whether businesses demonstrate active, localised user engagement. Businesses that attract physical visits, direction requests, or check-ins send clear proximity signals to Google.
To enhance proximity relevance:

Relevance is determined by how well a business’s listed services, categories, and online content align with user queries. Profiles should reflect precise service categories, relevant local keywords, and clear service area content.
To improve relevance:
Prominence reflects a business’s credibility. It is shaped by review volume and frequency, brand mentions, and consistency across digital assets.
Effective methods to build prominence include:
Local SEO requires structured testing. Using rank-tracking tools and geo-grid heatmaps can clarify which efforts are producing visibility improvements. For example, testing changes on one location page before applying them across all service areas enables focused, evidence-based refinement.
Track metrics such as:

Search behaviour is shifting. AI-driven algorithms now prioritise user intent and contextual signals. As voice and visual search gain traction, businesses must ensure listings are not only keyword-optimised but conversationally structured.
Additionally, platforms like Apple Maps and Bing Places influence mobile search, meaning businesses must extend beyond Google.
A modern local SEO strategy includes:
For organisations not seeing progress, a full local SEO audit can identify structural gaps, misalignments, or missing signals. A tailored strategy based on market conditions and service areas provides more predictable outcomes.
For assistance with auditing, refining or scaling your local SEO strategy, contact our team for a consultation.
Vincent is the founder and director of Rubix Studios, with over 20 years of experience in branding, marketing, film, photography, and web development. He is a certified partner with industry leaders including Google, Microsoft, AWS, and HubSpot. Vincent also serves as a member of the Maribyrnong City Council Business and Innovation Board and is undertaking an Executive MBA at RMIT University.