SEO & AI Visibility

5 Ways to Make Your Business More Visible Online

97% of consumers search online before choosing a local business. These 5 steps take less than a day and work immediately.

Por Kenneth Melchor12 January 20256 min de lecturaActualizado 28 February 2026
5 Ways to Make Your Business More Visible Online

97% of consumers search online before choosing a local business. That number comes from BrightLocal's annual survey, and it's been above 90% for five years running. If your business isn't easy to find online, you're invisible to virtually every potential customer in your area. Not some of them. Nearly all of them.

The good news: visibility isn't about budget. It's about doing 5 specific things well. Most of your competitors have done one or two of these, maybe. Almost none have done all five. Here's your checklist.

1. Claim and Complete Your Google Business Profile

This is the single most impactful free action any local business can take. When someone searches "dentist near me" or "Italian restaurant in [your neighbourhood]," Google shows a map pack — three businesses with their name, reviews, photos, and key details. That map pack gets 42% of all clicks on the results page.

Businesses with complete Google Business profiles are 70% more likely to attract location visits and 50% more likely to lead to a purchase, according to Google's own data.

What "complete" means:

Do this today: Go to business.google.com. If you haven't claimed your profile, claim it now. If you have, spend 20 minutes filling in every field you've left blank. Upload 5 new photos.

2. Make Your Business Information Consistent Everywhere

Your business name, address, and phone number (called NAP in marketing speak) need to be exactly identical on every platform where you appear. Not similar. Identical. "123 Main Street" and "123 Main St" are different in the eyes of search engines.

Why this matters: search engines and AI systems cross-reference your information across multiple sources. When your details match everywhere, it builds trust. When they conflict, it creates doubt — and doubt means lower rankings and fewer recommendations.

The platforms that matter most:

93% of consumers are frustrated by incorrect information on business listings, and 63% say they'd avoid a business because of it.

Do this today: Search your business name on Google. Open every listing that appears on the first 2 pages. Check that your name, address, phone number, and hours match exactly. Fix any discrepancies.

3. Create Content That Answers Real Questions

You don't need to become a blogger. You need to answer the questions your customers already ask you every day. Think about the last 10 phone calls or emails you received. What were people asking? Those questions are content.

Examples:

This kind of content does double duty. Google rewards pages that directly answer search queries — featured snippets and answer boxes appear in 19% of all search results, and the content that wins those positions is almost always a clear, direct answer to a specific question. AI systems like ChatGPT and Perplexity do the same — they pull from content that directly and clearly answers the question a user asked.

Do this today: Write answers to your 3 most frequently asked customer questions. Publish them on your website as a FAQ page or as individual blog posts. Keep each answer under 500 words. Be specific — include prices, timeframes, and real details.

4. Build a Review Strategy (Not Just a Hope)

Reviews aren't optional anymore. 93% of consumers read online reviews before making a purchase decision. And the impact on search rankings is measurable — Google has confirmed that review quantity, quality, and recency all factor into local search rankings.

The difference between businesses with 15 reviews and businesses with 100+ reviews is enormous — not just in perception, but in actual search visibility. Businesses in the top 3 of Google's local pack have an average of 47 reviews.

But here's what most businesses get wrong: they wait for reviews to happen organically. They don't. You need a system.

A simple review system that works:

  1. Identify the moment when a customer is happiest (right after a successful service, delivery, or purchase)
  2. At that moment, say: "I'm glad we could help. If you have a minute, a Google review would really help us out."
  3. Send them a direct link — Google Business Profile generates a short review URL you can copy and share
  4. Follow up with a WhatsApp or email containing the link within 24 hours
  5. Respond to every review — positive or negative — within 48 hours. This signals to Google and AI systems that you're engaged and responsive.

One dental practice we worked with went from 12 reviews to 89 reviews in 4 months using this exact process. Their Google Map Pack visibility tripled.

Do this today: Go to your Google Business Profile, find your review link (under "Ask for reviews"), and save it. Send it to your last 5 happy customers.

5. Make Sure AI Assistants Know About You

This is the step most businesses haven't taken yet — which means it's your biggest opportunity.

ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, and Gemini are handling millions of searches per day. When someone asks "recommend a good accountant in Barcelona" or "what's the best bakery near Notting Hill," these AI systems synthesise information from across the web. If they can't find clear, consistent, credible information about your business, they recommend someone else.

How to improve your AI visibility:

Do this today: Run the ChatGPT/Perplexity test above. Note what comes up. That's your baseline. Then implement one improvement from the list.

The Compound Effect

None of these steps is a magic bullet on its own. But together, they create a compound effect that builds over time. A complete Google Business Profile with 80+ reviews, consistent information across the web, content that answers real questions, and AI visibility — that combination puts you ahead of 90% of local businesses.

The most important thing is to start. Pick one of these five actions and do it today. Not next week. Not when you have time. Today. The businesses that consistently show up online are the ones that consistently show up in real life.

Online VisibilityGoogle BusinessReviewsLocal SEO

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