What the Map Pack actually is (and why it beats page one)
Search "plumber near me" or "roofer Roanoke" on your phone and look at the top of the screen. Before the blue links — before the ads, even — you'll see a little map and three business listings with stars, hours, and a call button. That's the Google Map Pack, also called the local pack or the three-pack. It's the most valuable piece of real estate in local search, and most Virginia business owners have no idea how it's ranked.
Here's why it matters so much. The Map Pack sits above the traditional organic results. On a phone it often fills the entire first screen. People tap a listing and either call you or pull up directions — they never scroll to the classic website links below. If you want to rank in the Map Pack, you're competing for three slots, not ten. Brutal, but winnable, because it's a different game than regular SEO.
The other thing to understand: the Map Pack is hyper-local. A contractor in Salem and one in Vinton, ten minutes apart, can see completely different three-packs for the same search. Google is answering one question — "who's near this person, right now, who can actually do this?" That's good news for a smaller VA business. You don't have to outrank the whole state. You have to win your patch of it. Our full local SEO approach is built entirely around winning that patch.
The three things Google ranks on: relevance, distance, prominence
Google is unusually open about how the local pack works. Rankings come down to three factors, and every tactic in this guide feeds one of them.
- Relevance — how well your business matches what someone searched. If someone types "emergency HVAC repair" and your profile just says "heating company," you're less relevant than the shop that lists emergency repair as an actual service. Your categories, services, and description all feed this.
- Distance — how far you are from the searcher, or from the town they named. You can't move your shop, but you can control which towns you're genuinely associated with online, which shapes where you surface.
- Prominence — how well-known and trusted your business is. Reviews, citations, links, and your website's overall authority all roll into this. It's the factor you have the most long-term leverage over.
Here's the part most agencies won't tell you: you have almost no control over distance, some control over relevance, and enormous control over prominence. So the businesses that win the Map Pack in Virginia usually aren't the closest ones — they're the ones who've done the boring, consistent work of building prominence while their competitors coasted on a half-finished profile. That's the whole game, and it's very learnable.
Your Google Business Profile is the foundation — set it up right
You can't rank in the Map Pack without a Google Business Profile — the free listing formerly called Google My Business. And a profile that exists is not the same as a profile that's optimized. Most VA businesses claim theirs, fill in three fields, and never touch it again. That leaves the whole thing on the table.
Work through this, in order:
- Claim and verify it. Unverified profiles don't rank. Verification is usually by video, phone, or postcard.
- Pick the most specific primary category. "Roofing contractor" beats "contractor." Your primary category is one of the strongest relevance signals there is. Then add every secondary category that genuinely applies.
- List every service and product with real descriptions. This is free keyword real estate — a "gutter cleaning" service entry helps you show up for "gutter cleaning near me."
- Fill in hours, service area, and attributes completely. If you drive to the customer, set a service-area business and list the actual Virginia towns you cover.
- Add real photos of your work, your crew, your trucks. Profiles with genuine photos get more clicks, and engagement feeds prominence.
- Post regularly. Google Posts — offers, updates, jobs you just wrapped — signal an active, real business.
One warning: your business name field has to be your actual business name. Stuffing it with "Roanoke Emergency Plumber" violates Google's guidelines and gets listings suspended. Play it straight.
NAP consistency and citations — the boring work that wins
NAP stands for Name, Address, Phone. A citation is any place online that mentions those details — directories, your Chamber of Commerce, Yelp, Angi, Facebook, industry sites. Google cross-references these to decide whether your business is real and where it sits. Inconsistent NAP is one of the most common reasons a legitimate VA business can't rank in the Map Pack.
The problem is almost always small and sneaky. "Suite 4" on one listing, "Ste 4" on another. An old phone number floating on a directory from 2019. "Rd" versus "Road." To you those look identical. To Google's matching, they can read as different businesses, which splits your prominence across duplicate entries.
Pick one exact format for your name, address, and phone — down to the punctuation — and use that identical version everywhere, forever.
The winning move is unglamorous: build accurate citations on the sites that matter (Google, Bing Places, Apple Maps, Facebook, the big industry directories, and reputable Virginia-local ones like your regional Chamber), then clean up or claim every stale or duplicate listing already out there. It's tedious. It's also exactly the work most of your competitors will never bother to do — which is precisely why it works. Consistent citations are a core piece of our local SEO engagements.
Reviews: the prominence signal you earn one customer at a time
Reviews do double duty. They're a genuine ranking factor for the Map Pack, and they're the thing that makes someone choose you over the other two businesses in the three-pack. A listing with a wall of recent 4.8-star reviews gets tapped; a listing with three old ones gets skipped, even if it ranks.
What actually moves the needle:
- Steady flow beats a big burst. A handful of reviews trickling in month after month reads as natural. A pile of them in one afternoon looks bought, and Google notices.
- Recency matters. Reviews from this month carry more weight than a wall of five-year-old ones. You have to keep earning them.
- Keywords in reviews help. When a customer writes "they regraded my driveway in Christiansburg," that's a relevance signal you couldn't buy.
- Respond to every one — the good and the rough. Replies show Google an engaged business and show prospects you're paying attention.
The practical system: ask every happy customer at the moment they're happiest — job just finished, problem just solved — and make it one tap. A short text with your Google review link converts far better than "you can leave us a review sometime." Never buy reviews or offer discounts for them; both violate Google's policies and put your whole profile at risk. Earn them honestly and the Map Pack rewards you for it. And straight talk on our end: Webb Flow is a new studio, so we won't promise you some review count. We'll build you the system that earns them.
Your website still matters — localize it for Virginia
People assume the Map Pack is all Google Business Profile and no website. Not true. Google looks at the site linked from your profile to confirm relevance and authority, and your organic rankings and Map Pack rankings reinforce each other. A weak or generic website caps how high you can climb.
What to do:
- Build a real page for each service and each town you serve. A "Deck Building in Blacksburg" page will out-rank a single "Services" page that crams every service and every city together. This is the biggest on-site lever for local.
- Put your NAP in the footer of every page, matching your citations exactly, and embed a Google Map on your contact page.
- Add LocalBusiness schema — structured data that spells out your name, location, hours, and service area in a format search engines read directly.
- Reference real Virginia context — the counties you cover, seasonal demand (ice-dam season in the mountains, storm season in Hampton Roads), local landmarks. Generic "we serve your area" copy convinces no one and ranks for nothing.
- Make it fast and genuinely usable on a phone. Most "near me" searches happen on mobile, and a slow site quietly bleeds the calls your ranking earned you.
Done right, your website and your profile pull in the same direction. That combined signal is what separates the businesses stuck on page two from the three sitting in the pack.
How long it takes — and what to actually track
Let's be straight, because plenty of agencies aren't: nobody can promise you a Map Pack ranking or a #1 spot, and anyone who does is either lying or about to get your listing suspended. Google's local algorithm doesn't run on guarantees. What we can tell you is how it typically plays out.
A fresh or newly-optimized profile in a low-competition Virginia town might start surfacing within a few weeks. A competitive market — Richmond, NoVA, Virginia Beach — usually takes a few months of consistent work before you're holding a top-three slot. Prominence compounds; it doesn't switch on.
| Signal to track | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Map Pack position for your key searches | Whether you're actually in the three-pack, by town |
| Profile calls, direction requests, clicks | Real business action, straight from Google's insights |
| Review count and recency | Your prominence trend over time |
| Website calls and form fills | Whether rankings turn into paying customers |
Track the actions — calls and direction requests — not just the ranking. A #2 spot that generates twenty calls a week beats a #1 that generates nothing but bragging rights. If you'd rather have someone run this whole system for your business, that's exactly what our local SEO work is for.