The short version: one is a tool, the other is a strategy
Your Google Business Profile (GBP) is a single asset — a free listing you claim and fill out. It's the thing that can appear in Google Maps and in the "map pack," those three businesses with pins that sit above the regular search results. It holds your name, address, phone number, hours, service area, photos, reviews, and posts.
Local SEO is the entire strategy for getting found in a specific place. Your GBP is one part of it. Local SEO also covers your website's location pages, the way your business is listed across the web, your review profile, the links pointing to your site, and the technical health of your pages. When people ask about GBP vs local SEO, they're really asking whether the free listing is enough on its own. In a competitive market, it usually isn't.
Think of it as a truck and a route. Your GBP is the truck — a specific, visible thing that shows up and does the work. Local SEO is knowing which roads to take, keeping the truck maintained, and beating the other trucks to the job. A great truck parked in the wrong place still loses. That's the difference, and it's why owners who "already have a Google listing" can't figure out why the phone isn't ringing. The listing exists. The system around it doesn't.
What your Google Business Profile actually does
Your GBP is free and it works hard, so it deserves real attention. When someone in Roanoke searches "gutter cleaning near me," or a homeowner in Hillsville looks up "electrician," Google often shows a map with three businesses before it shows a single website. That map pack is fed almost entirely by Google Business Profiles.
A well-run GBP does a handful of specific jobs:
- Puts you on the map — literally. It's how you appear in Google Maps and the local pack.
- Answers the buying questions fast. Hours, phone number, service area, whether you're open right now, and what past customers said.
- Collects and displays reviews, one of the loudest trust signals a local shopper reads before they ever click through to your site.
- Drives direct actions — calls, direction requests, website clicks, and messages — often without the searcher visiting your website at all.
For a lot of Virginia service businesses, the GBP is the single highest-converting thing they own, because a homeowner with a leaking roof wants to call someone now, not read a blog. But a profile that's claimed and half-filled won't rank on its own. Google chooses which three profiles make the pack using three factors it names openly: relevance, distance, and prominence. Distance you can't control. Relevance and prominence you build — mostly with work that lives outside the profile itself. That's where local SEO comes in.
What local SEO covers that GBP alone can't
If your GBP is the storefront, local SEO is everything that drives traffic to it and everything that makes Google trust it enough to rank it. Here's what sits outside the profile:
- Your website's local content. Dedicated pages for the towns and services you cover — a real page for "deck building in Galax" instead of one generic page trying to rank everywhere at once.
- Citations. Consistent listings of your business name, address, and phone number across directories and data aggregators. When those disagree, Google trusts you less.
- Reviews as a system, not an accident — a repeatable way to ask happy customers and respond to every one that comes in.
- Backlinks from other credible sites, including local ones like a chamber of commerce, a supplier, or a trade association.
- On-page and technical SEO — page speed, mobile layout, page titles, and schema markup that tells Google exactly what you do and where you do it.
None of these live inside your Google Business Profile. They're the relevance and prominence signals Google weighs when it decides who wins the map pack and who ranks in the regular results below it. This is the core answer to GBP vs local SEO: the profile is where you show up, and local SEO is the work that earns the right to show up. Run one without the other and you leave the bigger half of the opportunity on the table.
Why the map pack and the organic results are two different fights
Search almost any local service and you'll see two separate battlefields on one page. Up top: the map pack — three GBP listings with pins on a map. Below it: the classic blue links, websites ranking organically. A lot of owners don't realize these are ranked by overlapping but distinct signals, and that you can win one while losing the other.
The map pack leans heavily on your Google Business Profile, your proximity to the searcher, and your review profile. The organic results below lean on your website — its content, its links, its technical health. A business in Wytheville might sit in the map pack for "HVAC repair" and still be invisible in the organic results because its website has one thin page and no local content. Another might rank well organically but neglect its GBP so badly it never cracks the pack. Same trade, opposite problems.
You want both. The map pack captures the "call now" buyer with an emergency. The organic results capture the researcher comparing options, reading about the job, and deciding who to trust — often a bigger ticket that takes a few days to close. Local SEO fights both fights at once, and the work compounds: better content earns links, links build prominence, prominence lifts the GBP, and reviews feed both sides. Treat your Google listing as the finish line and you only ever compete for half the traffic on the page.
A real example: two Virginia contractors, same town
Picture two roofers in the same county. Both claimed their Google Business Profile years ago. Both filled in hours and a phone number. On paper, identical.
The first stops there. The profile sits mostly static — a few old photos, a handful of reviews that trickled in on their own, no posts, no responses to the reviews they do have. The website is a single page listing services, with no mention of the specific towns served. When a homeowner three towns over searches, this roofer is too far and too faint to make the pack, and the website never surfaces organically because no page targets that town or that job.
The second treats the GBP as one gear in a machine. Reviews get requested after every completed job and answered within a day. The website has a clear page for each service in each town covered, so "metal roof replacement in Floyd" has a page built to rank for it. Business listings match across the web, down to the phone number format. A local supplier links back. New job photos go up regularly.
Over time, they stop competing at all. The second roofer holds both the map pack and the top organic spots; the first is left wondering why a competitor with the same truck and the same crew is getting the calls. Nothing about the trade changed. The difference was GBP vs local SEO understood correctly — one ran a listing, the other ran a strategy.
How to know which one you actually need first
For most Virginia businesses reading this, the honest answer is you need both — but there's a sensible order, and it depends on where you're starting.
Start with the GBP if your listing is unclaimed, half-empty, or carrying wrong information — a bad phone number, outdated hours, the wrong service area. This is the fastest, cheapest win in local search. Claim it, verify it, fill every field, add real photos, set your service area honestly, and build a habit of requesting reviews after each job. This work often moves the needle in the map pack before you spend a dollar on anything bigger.
Move into full local SEO when the profile is solid but you're still losing to competitors, when you serve multiple towns and need a page built for each, or when you want to show up in the organic results and not just the map. That's where a real local SEO plan — content, citations, reviews, links, and technical fixes — earns its keep. It's slower than a GBP tune-up, and it's what builds a lead position a competitor can't knock you out of overnight.
The mistake to avoid is treating the two as interchangeable, or assuming that finishing one means you're done. If you're not sure where you stand, that's worth a straight look before you spend on either — tell us about your business and we'll tell you what your search picture actually looks like.