I run a small drain cleaning and plumbing repair shop with two vans, a storage unit, and a phone that rings at the worst possible times. My Google Business Profile has brought me frozen pipe calls, weekend sump pump jobs, and plenty of odd questions from people who were standing in front of a leak while searching on their phones. I have learned that small updates beat big bursts of attention. I treat the profile like a front counter that never closes.
Keep the Basics Tight Before Chasing Fancy Ideas
The first thing I check is boring, but it saves me from messy calls. My name, address area, phone number, hours, and service categories need to match the way I actually work. A customer last winter called because another plumber showed open until 9 p.m., but the number went straight to voicemail. I do not want that kind of gap on my own profile.
I update holiday hours as soon as I know them, even if it feels early. Around Thanksgiving, I usually change three separate days because my shop closes early, opens for emergencies, and then returns to normal. That little detail has saved me from several angry calls from people who thought I was ignoring them. Accuracy feels small until it prevents a bad review.
Categories deserve more care than most owners give them. I list plumbing service as the main category because that is what pays my bills, then I use related services only where they fit. I do not stuff every possible term into the profile because it makes the business look scattered. A tight profile tells the right person that I can handle the problem in front of them.
Show Real Work, Real Hours, and Real Limits
Photos sell quietly. I post pictures of clean pipe repairs, labeled shutoff valves, a packed van shelf, and before-and-after shots where the mess is understandable. I avoid anything that makes a customer’s home too recognizable. A photo from a crawl space can still tell the story without showing someone’s private details.
I learned this from a roofing contractor I know who got more calls after showing simple job progress instead of polished finished shots. He once shared a resource on Google Business Profile Tips with me after we talked about why some trades show up better than others. I liked that it focused on the plain work of keeping a profile useful. That kind of thinking fits service businesses because customers want proof before they call.
I also say what I do not do. If someone needs septic tank pumping, I would rather they find the right company than call me and get annoyed. I mention drain cleaning, water heater swaps, small leak repairs, and emergency shutoff help because those are the jobs I can price and schedule cleanly. Clear limits make the phone calls shorter.
Use Posts Like a Shop Notice, Not a Billboard
I post updates the way I would write a note on the shop door. If heavy rain is coming, I remind people to check basement floor drains and sump pump discharge lines. If the first freeze is close, I mention hose bibs and cabinet doors under sinks. Those posts take about 10 minutes, and they give people a reason to call before the damage gets worse.
A post does not need to sound clever. One of my better ones was about a simple shutoff valve that a customer could not find during a leak. I wrote about labeling the main shutoff with a tag, then added a photo of the kind I keep in my van. That small tip brought in two calls from homeowners who wanted me to check old valves.
I do not post just to fill space. A stale discount from six months ago makes the business feel unattended. I would rather post twice a month with something useful than publish thin updates every few days. People can tell when a business is talking just to talk.
Answer Questions Before They Turn Into Bad Calls
The question section can save a lot of back-and-forth. I answer common things in plain language, such as whether I give rough price ranges, which towns I cover, and what counts as an emergency call. I do not promise exact prices before seeing the job because old pipes can hide surprises. A customer last spring understood that better after I explained why a simple clog can turn into a line repair.
I also use the service descriptions for details that matter during a real call. For drain cleaning, I mention sinks, tubs, floor drains, and main lines because people use different words for the same trouble. For water heaters, I mention replacement and basic troubleshooting, but I do not pretend every unit can be fixed cheaply. Honest wording filters out some bad-fit calls.
Reviews need steady attention too. I ask after jobs where the customer seems relieved, not while they are stressed or counting cash. My usual line is simple: if the work helped, a short review makes it easier for nearby people to find us. I never write the review for them.
Watch the Calls and Adjust the Profile
I pay attention to the calls that come from the profile because they tell me what people thought they saw. If three callers in one week ask whether I install dishwashers, I check whether my wording suggested that by accident. If people from outside my service area keep calling, I tighten the towns listed in the profile. The profile is never finished.
I keep a small notebook in the van for repeated questions. It has notes like “ask about cleanout access,” “explain after-hours fee sooner,” and “photo of sump discharge needed.” Once a month, I turn a few of those notes into profile updates. That rhythm works better for me than waiting until business gets slow.
I also compare busy seasons against what the profile shows. In summer, I highlight outdoor spigot repairs and laundry drain problems because those calls pick up in my area. In January, I focus on frozen lines, old shutoffs, and water heater issues. A profile should reflect what customers are dealing with now, not what I wrote three years ago.
The best profile advice I can give is to make it match the business someone will actually reach on the phone. Use fresh photos, clear services, honest hours, and answers that reduce confusion before the first call. I have never needed my profile to sound bigger than my shop. I need it to help the right customer feel safe enough to call.
