You know customers are searching for “plumber near me” or “HVAC repair in Bel Air” — but when you Google your own business, you’re nowhere to be found.
Meanwhile, your competitors are showing up at the top of Google Maps. They’re getting the phone calls. They’re booking the jobs. And honestly? Some of them don’t even have better reviews or nicer websites than you do. They just got one thing right: their Google Business Profile.
Here’s the good news. Setting up and optimizing your Google Business Profile (it used to be called Google My Business) is completely free. You don’t need to be tech-savvy. And if you follow this guide, you can have it done in under an hour.
By the end of this article, you’ll have your Google Business Profile fully set up, verified, and optimized so local customers in Harford County can actually find you when they search.
And if you’d rather skip the DIY route and have experts handle everything for you, we offer done-for-you Google Business Profile optimization as part of our local SEO services — no long-term contracts, just real results.
What Is a Google Business Profile (And Why It Matters for Local Businesses)
Your Google Business Profile is the single most important tool for showing up when local customers search for your services on Google.
Here’s what it is: It’s the free business listing that shows up on Google Search and Google Maps when someone looks for a business like yours. It’s that box on the right side of the screen with your phone number, address, photos, hours, and reviews.
More importantly, it’s what puts you in the “local 3-pack” — those three businesses that show up at the very top of Google with a map when someone searches for a service.
For example, when someone in Bel Air searches “emergency plumber near me,” Google shows three plumbers at the top with a map. That’s the local pack. If you’re not in it, you’re invisible to most people searching for what you do.
Your Google Business Profile is how you get there. No profile? You don’t show up. Incomplete profile? You rank below competitors who took the time to fill theirs out.
If you’re a plumber, HVAC company, electrician, landscaper, restaurant, dentist, or any local service business in Harford County, this is how customers find you in 2025.
What You’ll Need Before You Start
Before you begin setup, gather these basic items so the process goes smoothly.
Here’s your checklist:
- [ ] A Google account (any Gmail address works)
- [ ] Your exact business name (as it appears on your sign, invoices, or legal paperwork)
- [ ] Your business address (or service area if you’re a mobile business)
- [ ] Your business phone number (preferably a local 410 or 443 area code)
- [ ] Your business category (like “HVAC Contractor,” “Plumber,” “Italian Restaurant,” or “Dentist”)
- [ ] Your business hours (including if you’re open 24/7 or offer emergency service)
- [ ] Your website URL (if you have one — don’t worry if you don’t)
- [ ] A few high-quality photos (your storefront, your team, your work, or your products)
Pro Tip: If you don’t have a website yet, don’t let that stop you. You can still set up your Google Business Profile today and add a website later. Or talk to us about a fast 5-page site that’s live in 10–14 business days.
Step 1 – Claim or Create Your Google Business Profile
First, check if your business already has a profile on Google. If it does, you’ll claim it. If not, you’ll create one from scratch.
Sometimes Google creates business listings automatically. Other times, a previous owner or employee set one up and forgot about it. Either way, you need to know if a profile already exists before you create a new one.
Here’s how to check:
- Open Google and search for your business name plus your city (like “Joe’s Plumbing Bel Air”)
- If a listing appears in the results with your business name, address, and phone number, it already exists
- If you see a button that says “Own this business?” or “Claim this business,” click it
- If nothing shows up, you’ll need to create a new profile
To get started:
- Go to business.google.com
- Sign in with your Google account
- Search for your business name
- If Google finds your business, click “Claim this business”
- If Google doesn’t find it, click “Add your business to Google”
Common Mistake: Don’t create a second listing if one already exists. Duplicate profiles confuse Google, hurt your rankings, and frustrate customers who don’t know which phone number to call.
Step 2 – Enter Your Business Information Accurately
Google will ask for your business name, address, category, and contact info. Fill these out exactly as they appear elsewhere online — on your website, your Facebook page, your invoices.
This is important. Google cross-checks your information with other sources online. If your address on Google says “123 Main St” but your website says “123 Main Street,” it creates confusion. Keep everything consistent.
Business Name
Use your real legal name or DBA name. Don’t add keywords or extra descriptions.
Wrong: “Joe’s Plumbing | Best Emergency Plumber in Bel Air MD”
Right: “Joe’s Plumbing”
Google will penalize you for keyword stuffing your business name. Just use the name customers know you by.
Address
If you have a physical location customers visit (like a restaurant, retail store, or dental office), enter your street address.
If you’re a service-area business — you go to customers’ homes or businesses instead of them coming to you — select “I deliver goods and services to my customers” and define your service area.
For example, if you’re an HVAC company based in Bel Air but you also serve Fallston, Forest Hill, Churchville, and Aberdeen, list those areas. This helps you show up in Google searches from people in those towns.
Phone Number
Use a local phone number if you have one. A 410 or 443 area code signals to Google (and customers) that you’re a local business.
Don’t use a call tracking number as your primary number at first. You can add it later as a secondary number. Google prefers real, stable phone numbers.
Business Category
This is one of the most important fields. Your primary category tells Google what your business does and determines what searches you show up for.
Choose the most specific, accurate category available. We’ll cover categories in more detail later, but here are some examples:
- HVAC company: “HVAC Contractor”
- Plumber: “Plumber”
- Italian restaurant: “Italian Restaurant”
- General dentist: “Dentist”
- Electrician: “Electrician”
You can add up to 9 additional categories later, but your primary category is the most important.
Common Mistake: Don’t use a PO Box or virtual office address unless that’s your actual business location. Google verifies addresses, and using a fake one can get your profile suspended.
Step 3 – Verify Your Google Business Profile
Google needs to confirm you’re the real business owner. This usually happens via a postcard mailed to your address, but sometimes you can verify by phone or email.
Your profile won’t show up in search results until it’s verified. So even though this step feels like a hassle, it’s necessary.
Here’s how it works:
- After you enter your business information, Google will ask you to choose a verification method
- Most businesses verify by postcard (it’s the default option)
- Google mails a postcard to your business address with a 5-digit verification code
- The postcard usually arrives in 5–7 business days
- Once you receive it, log back into business.google.com, click “Verify,” and enter the code
Some businesses are eligible for instant verification or phone/email verification, especially if you already have a verified website connected to Google Search Console. If you see those options, use them — they’re faster.
Pro Tip: Don’t make changes to your business name or address while waiting for your verification postcard. If Google sees the information changed, it may delay or cancel verification and send a new postcard.
Step 4 – Add Business Hours (Including Special Hours)
Accurate hours prevent frustrated customers from showing up when you’re closed — and they signal to Google that your profile is active and up to date.
This one’s straightforward, but people mess it up all the time.
Go to the “Hours” section in your profile and enter:
- Your regular business hours for each day of the week
- If you’re closed on certain days, mark those days as “Closed”
- If you’re open 24/7 (like an emergency plumber or towing service), select “Open 24 hours”
You can also add special hours for holidays. If you’re closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas, or New Year’s Day, update your profile so customers know.
And if you offer emergency services outside normal hours, add a note in your business description or create a special “Emergency Service” category.
Example: If you’re a plumber offering emergency services, you can mark your hours as “Open 24 hours” and add a note: “Emergency service available after hours — call anytime.”
Common Mistake: Letting your hours go out of date. If you change your schedule or close for a family emergency, update your Google Business Profile. Customers who show up to a closed business leave bad reviews.
Step 5 – Write a Business Description That Actually Helps Customers
Your business description (up to 750 characters) should clearly explain what you do, who you serve, and why someone should call you — not just stuff it with keywords.
Think of this as your elevator pitch. You’ve got a few sentences to tell potential customers what makes your business worth calling.
Write in plain English. Be specific. Mention your location and service area naturally. Talk about what makes you different — maybe you’re family-owned, you’ve been in business for 20 years, or you offer same-day service.
Here’s a simple template:
“[Business Name] is a [type of business] serving [city/region]. We specialize in [services], and we’ve been helping [target customer] since [year]. We’re known for [differentiator: fast response, honest pricing, quality work]. Call us for [specific service examples].”
Example for an HVAC company:
“Harford Heating & Air is a locally owned HVAC company serving Bel Air, Fallston, and Forest Hill. We specialize in furnace repair, AC installation, and emergency heating service. We’ve been helping Harford County homeowners stay comfortable since 2005. We’re known for honest pricing, same-day service, and technicians who show up on time.”
Example for a restaurant:
“Giovanni’s Italian Kitchen is a family-owned restaurant in Bel Air serving authentic Italian cuisine since 2010. We specialize in wood-fired pizza, homemade pasta, and fresh seafood. We offer dine-in, takeout, and catering for events. Reservations available — call us or book online.”
Common Mistake: Don’t write something like this: “Best plumber Bel Air MD affordable plumbing Harford County emergency plumber near me licensed insured plumbing services.”
That’s keyword stuffing, and Google penalizes it. Worse, it sounds robotic and turns off real customers.
Step 6 – Choose the Right Business Categories
Your primary category tells Google what your business does. Choose the most specific, accurate category available — it directly impacts what searches you show up for.
Categories matter more than most business owners realize. Pick the wrong one, and you’ll show up for searches that don’t match what you actually do. Pick the right one, and you’ll start appearing for the exact searches that bring in customers.
Google has hundreds of categories. Some are broad (like “Contractor”), and some are specific (like “HVAC Contractor” or “Drain Cleaning Service”).
Always choose the most specific category that matches your business.
Your primary category is the most important. You can add up to 9 secondary categories, but the primary one carries the most weight with Google.
Here are some examples by industry:
HVAC:
- Primary: “HVAC Contractor”
- Secondary: “Air Conditioning Contractor,” “Heating Contractor,” “Furnace Repair Service”
Plumber:
- Primary: “Plumber”
- Secondary: “Emergency Plumber,” “Drain Cleaning Service,” “Water Heater Installation Service”
Restaurant:
- Primary: “Italian Restaurant” (or whatever cuisine you serve)
- Secondary: “Pizza Restaurant,” “Catering Service,” “Takeout Restaurant”
Dentist:
- Primary: “Dentist”
- Secondary: “Cosmetic Dentist,” “Pediatric Dentist,” “Teeth Whitening Service”
Electrician:
- Primary: “Electrician”
- Secondary: “Electrical Installation Service,” “Lighting Contractor,” “Generator Installation Service”
Pro Tip: Don’t choose a category just because it’s popular. Choose what you actually do. If you’re a plumber, don’t select “General Contractor” unless you also do general contracting work. Google figures out if your category doesn’t match your services, and it hurts your rankings.
Step 7 – Add High-Quality Photos and Videos
Businesses with photos get more clicks, more calls, and more direction requests. Add photos of your team, your work, your storefront, and your service area.
Photos make your profile come alive. They show customers what to expect. They build trust. And according to Google, businesses with photos get 42% more requests for directions and 35% more clicks to their website.
Here’s what to upload:
Logo
Your business logo (square format works best)
Cover Photo
This is the main image people see first. Use a high-quality photo of your storefront, your team, or a hero shot that represents your business.
Interior/Exterior Photos
If you have a physical location, upload photos of the inside and outside. This helps customers recognize your building when they arrive.
Team Photos
Show your face. Customers want to know who they’re calling. A photo of you and your team builds trust.
Work Photos
If you’re a contractor, upload before-and-after photos of your projects. If you’re a restaurant, show your most popular dishes. If you’re a dentist, show your clean, modern office.
Service Area or Vehicle Photos
If you’re a mobile business (plumber, electrician, landscaper), upload photos of your work trucks with your logo.
Photo Specs:
- At least 720 pixels wide and 720 pixels tall
- JPG or PNG format
- Clear, well-lit, and in focus
Videos:
You can also upload short videos (30 seconds or less). Show a quick intro to your team, a time-lapse of a project, or a customer testimonial.
Example: If you’re a landscaper, upload photos of completed lawns, patios, flower beds, and seasonal plantings. If you’re a restaurant, show your dining room, your chef preparing a signature dish, and your most popular menu items.
Common Mistake: Don’t upload blurry photos from an old phone or generic stock images. Use real photos of your actual business. Customers can tell the difference.
Step 8 – Add Your Services and Products (If Applicable)
The “Services” section lets you list what you offer with descriptions and optional pricing. It helps customers understand what you do before they call.
This section isn’t required, but it’s worth filling out. It gives you another opportunity to show up in search results, and it helps customers decide if you’re the right fit before they pick up the phone.
Here’s how to add services:
- Go to your Google Business Profile dashboard
- Click “Services” or “Products” (depending on your business type)
- Click “Add a service”
- Enter the service name, a short description, and optional pricing
Example for a Plumber:
Service: Drain Cleaning
Description: We clear clogged drains using professional-grade equipment. Available for kitchen sinks, bathroom drains, floor drains, and main sewer lines.
Price: Starting at $150
Service: Water Heater Installation
Description: We install gas and electric water heaters. Same-day installation available in Harford County.
Price: Starting at $1,200
Service: Emergency Plumbing
Description: 24/7 emergency plumbing service for burst pipes, sewer backups, and flooding.
Price: Call for quote
Example for a Restaurant:
Product: Margherita Pizza
Description: Fresh mozzarella, tomato sauce, basil, and extra virgin olive oil on wood-fired crust.
Price: $14
Pro Tip: If your pricing varies, you can say “starting at $X” or “call for quote.” Transparency builds trust. Customers appreciate knowing what to expect before they call.
Step 9 – Set Up Messaging and Booking (Optional But Powerful)
Let customers text you directly from Google or book appointments online — both features can increase leads without extra work on your end.
Google offers two optional features that make it easier for customers to reach you:
Messaging
This lets customers send you a text message directly from your Google Business Profile. They click “Message,” type a question, and it goes straight to your phone.
It’s great for quick questions like “Are you open today?” or “Do you have availability this week?”
To turn it on:
- Download the Google Business Profile app on your phone
- Go to “Messages” and turn on messaging
- You’ll get a notification every time someone messages you
Booking
If you use an online scheduling tool (like Jobber, Calendly, Square Appointments, or Booksy), you can connect it to your Google Business Profile.
Customers can click “Book an appointment” and schedule directly from Google without calling you.
This works especially well for:
- Salons and barbers
- Dentists and healthcare practices
- Auto repair shops
- HVAC companies offering maintenance appointments
When to use these features:
- Messaging: Great for restaurants taking reservations, service businesses answering quick questions
- Booking: Ideal for any business that schedules appointments in advance
Step 10 – Publish Your First Google Post
Google Posts let you share updates, offers, or announcements directly on your profile. They keep your profile active and give you another way to communicate with customers.
Think of Google Posts like mini social media updates that appear on your Google Business Profile. They’re free, they’re easy, and they help keep your profile fresh.
Google offers four types of posts:
- Update – General announcements or news
- Offer – Promotions or discounts
- Event – Upcoming events (grand openings, classes, tastings)
- Product – Highlight a specific product or service
How to create a post:
- Go to your Google Business Profile dashboard
- Click “Create post”
- Choose a post type
- Add a photo (optional but recommended)
- Write a short headline and description (up to 1,500 characters)
- Add a call-to-action button (Call Now, Learn More, Book, Sign Up, etc.)
- Click “Publish”
Example Post for an HVAC Company:
Type: Offer
Headline: Fall HVAC Tune-Up Special – $99
Description: Get your furnace ready for winter. Our tune-up includes a full inspection, filter change, and safety check. Call today to schedule.
Button: Book Now
Photo: Technician working on a furnace
Example Post for a Restaurant:
Type: Update
Headline: New Winter Menu Now Available
Description: Try our new butternut squash ravioli, braised short ribs, and seasonal desserts. Reservations recommended for weekends.
Button: View Menu
Photo: A beautifully plated dish
How often should you post?
Posts expire after 7 days, so plan to post at least once a month. Weekly is even better. Regular posting signals to Google that your business is active.
Pro Tip: If you don’t have time to post regularly, our Google Business Profile optimization service includes weekly posts as part of the package.
How to Optimize Your Google Business Profile for Better Rankings
Setting up your profile is step one. To actually rank in the local 3-pack and get more calls, you need to optimize it.
Here’s the truth: Just having a Google Business Profile isn’t enough. Your competitors have one too. To show up above them, you need to go further.
Here’s a quick checklist of ongoing optimization tasks:
✅ Keep Your Information Accurate and Consistent
Make sure your business name, address, and phone number match your website, Facebook page, Yelp listing, and anywhere else you’re listed online. Google cross-checks this information. Inconsistencies hurt your rankings.
✅ Get More Google Reviews (And Respond to Them)
Reviews are one of the biggest ranking factors for local search. The more recent, positive reviews you have, the higher you rank.
Ask happy customers to leave reviews. Send them a direct link to your Google Business Profile review page. Make it easy.
And respond to every review — good and bad. Thank customers for positive reviews. Address concerns in negative reviews professionally. Google (and customers) notice when you engage.
✅ Add New Photos Regularly
Businesses that add fresh photos every month get more engagement. Upload new project photos, team photos, seasonal updates, or customer photos (with permission).
✅ Post Weekly Google Updates
Regular posts keep your profile active and give Google a signal that your business is engaged. Share promotions, news, tips, or seasonal offers.
✅ Use Your Primary Keyword Naturally
Include your main service and location naturally in your business description, services, and posts. For example, “furnace repair in Bel Air” or “emergency plumber serving Harford County.”
Don’t overdo it — just use natural language that customers would actually use.
✅ Build Local Citations
A citation is any mention of your business name, address, and phone number on another website. Get listed on Yelp, Facebook, Angi, HomeAdvisor, and local directories.
The more consistent citations you have, the more Google trusts your business information.
✅ Get Backlinks From Local Websites
If the Harford County Chamber of Commerce, a local news site, or a supplier website links to your site, it boosts your credibility with Google.
Join local business groups, sponsor community events, or get featured in local news to earn these links.
✅ Track Your Performance
Check your Google Business Profile Insights every month. You’ll see:
- How many people viewed your profile
- How many people called you
- How many requested directions
- How many clicked to your website
This data shows what’s working and where you can improve.
Common Google Business Profile Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them)
Even small mistakes can hurt your rankings or get your profile suspended. Here’s what to avoid.
❌ Keyword Stuffing Your Business Name
Wrong: “Joe’s Plumbing | Best Emergency Plumber Bel Air MD 24/7 Licensed Insured”
Right: “Joe’s Plumbing”
Google penalizes businesses that stuff keywords into their business name. Just use your real name.
❌ Using a PO Box or Virtual Address
If you don’t have a physical location customers visit, that’s fine — just mark yourself as a service-area business and hide your address.
But don’t use a fake address, a PO Box, or a virtual office address. Google will figure it out and may suspend your profile.
❌ Creating Duplicate Listings
If you already have a profile, don’t create a second one. Duplicates confuse Google and customers. They split your reviews and ranking power.
If you find a duplicate, report it to Google and request a merge.
❌ Ignoring Reviews (Or Buying Fake Ones)
Respond to every review. Ignoring them sends a signal that you don’t care about customer feedback.
And never, ever buy fake reviews. Google catches this and will penalize or suspend your profile.
❌ Using a Call Tracking Number as Your Primary Number
Call tracking numbers are fine as secondary numbers, but your primary number should be a stable, real phone number that matches what’s on your website and other listings.
❌ Choosing the Wrong Category
Be specific and accurate. Don’t pick “General Contractor” if you’re actually a plumber. Don’t pick “Restaurant” if you’re specifically an Italian restaurant.
The more specific your category, the better you’ll rank for the right searches.
❌ Letting Your Profile Go Stale
If you don’t update your hours, add new photos, or post regularly, Google sees your profile as inactive. Inactive profiles rank lower.
Treat your Google Business Profile like your storefront — keep it clean, current, and welcoming.
How Long Does It Take to Rank in the Google Local Pack?
You’ll see your profile appear in search results as soon as it’s verified, but ranking in the top 3 (“local pack”) typically takes 4–12 weeks — depending on competition and optimization.
Let’s set realistic expectations.
Once your profile is verified, it will show up in Google search results. If someone searches for your exact business name, they’ll find you.
But if you want to rank in the top 3 results (the “local pack”) when someone searches “plumber near me” or “HVAC repair Bel Air,” that takes time.
Here’s what impacts your timeline:
Competition: If you’re a plumber in Baltimore City competing with 200 other plumbers, it’ll take longer than if you’re a niche trade in a smaller town.
Optimization: Profiles that are 100% complete, have regular posts, and get new reviews every week rank faster than profiles that sit idle.
Reviews: The more positive reviews you have (and the more recent they are), the faster you’ll rank.
Citations and Links: If your business is listed consistently across the web and you have backlinks from local sites, you’ll rank faster.
Realistic Timeline:
- Week 1: Profile is live and showing up for branded searches
- Weeks 2–4: Starting to appear in “near me” searches occasionally
- Weeks 4–12: Moving up in rankings as you add reviews, posts, and photos
- 3+ months: Competing for top 3 spots if you’re actively optimizing
Some markets are faster. Some are slower. But if you follow this guide and stay consistent, you’ll see progress.
Pro Tip: If you want faster results and consistent ranking, our Google Business Profile optimization service handles all of this for you — reviews, posts, citations, and monthly reporting. No long-term contracts. You own everything.
DIY vs. Hiring a Local SEO Partner – What’s Right for You?
You can absolutely set up your Google Business Profile yourself using this guide. But ranking consistently and staying ahead of competitors takes ongoing work — and that’s where a local partner helps.
Let’s be honest about what it takes.
Setting up your profile? That’s a one-time thing, and you can do it yourself in an afternoon.
But staying ranked? That requires:
- Posting updates every week
- Asking for (and responding to) reviews regularly
- Keeping your information accurate across dozens of online directories
- Monitoring your competition and adjusting your strategy
- Tracking performance and knowing what to improve
That’s where most business owners get stuck. You’ve got a business to run. You don’t have time to babysit your Google profile every week.
DIY is great if:
- You have time to post weekly, monitor reviews, and track performance
- Your market isn’t too competitive
- You’re comfortable learning as you go
- You enjoy marketing (some people do!)
Hiring a local SEO partner makes sense if:
- You’d rather spend your time running your business, not managing marketing
- You want to rank faster and stay ranked
- You’ve been burned by big agencies before and want a local partner who actually knows Harford County
- You want someone to handle reviews, posts, citations, and reporting for you
- You want month-to-month service with no long-term contracts
Our approach:
We don’t lock you into 12-month contracts. You don’t get bounced between account reps. And we don’t send you dashboards full of jargon.
You get one dedicated contact who knows your business. We handle your Google Business Profile optimization, get you more reviews, post weekly updates, and send you plain-English reports tied to the metrics that matter: calls and leads.
And you own everything — your profile, your website, your content. If you ever want to take it over or switch providers, you can.
Learn more about our Google Business Profile optimization service →
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers to common questions about Google Business Profile setup and optimization.
Q: Is Google Business Profile really free?
A: Yes. Setting up and maintaining your profile is 100% free. You don’t pay Google anything.
Q: How long does verification take?
A: Usually 5–7 business days if you verify by postcard. Phone or email verification (if available) is instant.
Q: Can I set up a Google Business Profile if I work from home?
A: Yes. If you’re a service-area business (plumber, electrician, mobile detailer), you can hide your home address and just show your service area. Customers won’t see your street address.
Q: What if my business name is already taken?
A: If someone else claimed your business (a competitor, former owner, or Google created it automatically), you can request access through Google Business Profile support. You may need to prove you’re the owner with documentation.
Q: How many reviews do I need to rank?
A: More is better, but quality matters too. Aim for at least 10–20 recent, genuine reviews to start competing locally. Then keep getting new reviews every month.
Q: Can I manage my Google Business Profile from my phone?
A: Yes. Download the “Google Business Profile” app (formerly “Google My Business”) from the App Store or Google Play.
Q: What’s the difference between Google Business Profile and Google My Business?
A: They’re the same thing. Google rebranded “Google My Business” to “Google Business Profile” in 2021. Some people still use the old name.
Q: What happens if I get a bad review?
A: Respond professionally and try to make it right. If the review violates Google’s policies (fake, spam, offensive), you can report it. But don’t ignore it — a thoughtful response shows potential customers you care.
Q: Can I delete my Google Business Profile?
A: Yes, but you shouldn’t unless you’re closing your business. Deleting it means you won’t show up in local search at all.
Conclusion
Setting up your Google Business Profile is one of the most important things you can do to get found by local customers — and it’s free.
Here’s what you need to do:
- Go to business.google.com and claim or create your profile
- Fill out every section completely and accurately
- Verify your profile (wait for the postcard and enter the code)
- Add high-quality photos, services, and your first Google Post
- Ask happy customers to leave reviews and respond to every one
- Post updates regularly and keep your information current
If you follow this guide, you’ll have your profile live and optimized in under an hour.
But here’s the reality: Getting it set up is the easy part. Staying ranked in the top 3 — that takes ongoing work. Regular posts. New reviews. Fresh photos. Monitoring your competition. Tracking what’s working.
If you want help with that, we’re here.
We offer month-to-month Google Business Profile optimization services for Harford County businesses — no long-term contracts, no jargon, no rotating reps. Just real results.
Get Your Free Google Business Profile Audit →
We’ll show you exactly what’s holding your profile back and how to fix it.
Or if you’d rather do it yourself, you now have everything you need. Go set it up. Your next customer is searching for you right now.