I Optimized My GBP.Couldn't Prove It Mattered.
I was staring at a Google Business Profile with more photos, better reviews, and solid engagement metrics. But when I looked at my actual revenue that month, I couldn't draw a straight line between the two. The problem wasn't the optimization—it was that I had no system to track which customers came from GBP versus organic search versus direct traffic.
The fix isn't complicated, but it requires thinking backward from the sale. Google's conversion tracking setup lets you tag customers who call, message, or visit your location through GBP specifically. But most people set it up and never check it. What I found is that you need a second layer: a simple spreadsheet or CRM field that marks "source: GBP" when someone converts. That way, three months later, you're not guessing.
The real insight is this—GBP optimization moves slowly. You won't see ROI in 30 days. But if you don't track it from day one, you'll never know if it was worth the effort. Our approach to local business visibility starts with the tracking system before we touch the profile itself.
Worth trying: Set up a conversion tracking UTM parameter (utm_source=gbp) for any links you add to your GBP, and tag one CRM field as "GBP lead" for the next 60 days. This gives you a baseline to compare against your optimization effort.
