Google Business Profile for dealerships: step-by-step guide.
When someone searches Google for "dealership near me" or "used cars [your city]", a map appears with three highlighted results. Being in that top 3 is probably the most profitable marketing action you can take, and it's free. The tool is called Google Business Profile (formerly Google My Business). This guide covers how to configure it properly and, above all, how to keep it active.
Why it matters so much
Plus, a well-configured profile also appears when someone searches for your name directly, occupying the entire right side of results with your photos, hours, reviews and links. It's your most-seen digital business card.
Step 1 · Create or claim your profile
Go to google.com/business with your Google account. Two possible scenarios:
Your business already appears on Google. Search for your company name + city. If it appears, click "Is this your business?" and follow the verification process. Google will send you a postcard with a code to your physical address, or allow verification by phone/video.
It doesn't appear. Create the profile from scratch. Give it the exact name (as on your sign), primary category (Car dealership / Car rental agency / Used car dealer), address, phone and website.
Verify the profile even if the postcard takes time. Only verified profiles appear in the top 3 of the map.
Step 2 · Fill out everything
Google rewards complete profiles. Filling every field improves your organic ranking, even if many people don't look at it. These are the fields you must complete:
Primary category + secondary
The primary is the most important (choose what best describes your business). Then add up to 9 relevant secondary ones: "Used car dealer", "Auto repair shop", "Transport service", etc.
Hours
Real, not aspirational. If you open from 9 to 13:30 and 16:30 to 20:00, put that. If you open Saturday morning, put it. If you don't close at midday (more and more dealerships do continuous hours), mark it that way.
Attributes
Options like "Identified as LGBTQ+ friendly", "Wheelchair accessible", "Accepts cards". Mark all that apply. These are filters users can apply in searches.
Services
Here you can list each specific service with name, description and price. For a dealership: "Free valuation", "Ownership transfer management", "Tailored financing", etc.
Links
Website, menu (catalogue), appointment booking. All that Google offers for your category.
Step 3 · Photos, photos and more photos
This is the differential factor. Profiles with more than 20 photos get triple the clicks of those with 5. Google wants users to see what your business looks like before going.
Types of photos you should upload:
- Exterior: dealership façade from several angles, sign, vehicle yard
- Interior: reception area, counter, waiting area if you have one
- Team: staff photos at work (if they agree to appear)
- Product: cars in the yard, individual photos of the best ones
- Behind the scenes: car delivery, happy customer, mechanics
Update photos every 2–4 weeks. Google detects active accounts and rewards them.
Step 4 · Reviews: the pillar
Quantity and quality of reviews is the number one factor to rank in the local top 3. And this is where most dealerships fail: they have 3 reviews from 4 years ago.
How to ask for reviews without seeming pushy
The ideal moment: right after delivering a car to a happy customer. Not a week later on WhatsApp.
The message that works: "Hugo, if you're happy with the service, would you help us by leaving a review on Google? I'll send you the direct link. It really helps us as a small business.". Send the pre-formatted link (Google generates it from your profile).
What to do with negative reviews
Reply ALWAYS, publicly, politely, without getting defensive. A good response to a negative review convinces future visitors more than 10 positive reviews. Standard response template:
"Hi [name], we're really sorry your experience wasn't what you expected. We'd like to understand exactly what happened to improve it. If you can, write to us at [email] or call [phone]. We want to fix it."
How to respond to positive ones
Brief and personal, using the customer's name. "Thanks, Maria! We're really happy you're enjoying your new Fiesta. Regards from the team at [Name]." Future customers read this and it conveys closeness.
Step 5 · Publish weekly posts
Google Business Profile allows you to publish posts that appear on your profile for 7 days. Most dealerships don't use them. It's a free opportunity.
Ideas for posts you can schedule every week:
- Featured car: photo + price + link to the vehicle page on your website
- Delivered: happy customer with their new car (with permission)
- Offer or promotion: special financing, limited-time discount
- Event: open day, model launch
- Tip: "What to check before buying a used car"
One post per week is enough. Quality over quantity.
Step 6 · The questions section
Unknown but powerful. Any user can ask questions on your profile. You can answer them and, most importantly, you can ask yourself questions and answer them. This works as a public FAQ that appears whenever someone views your profile.
Questions you should self-answer:
- "Do you accept cars as part payment?" — Yes, free valuation
- "Do you offer financing?" — Yes, with several providers
- "Can I see the car at the weekend?" — Saturday morning, by appointment
- "What documents do you need?" — ID and driving license
Step 7 · Direct messages
Activate messaging from Google Maps. Many users prefer messaging to calling. Commitment: respond in under 24 hours (Google penalises if you take longer).
Mistakes that kill your ranking
What not to do ever:
- Change address without reason. Every change resets part of your reputation.
- Use aggressive keywords in the name. "[City] Dealership Cheap Used Cars" gets you banned. The name must be real.
- Pay for fake reviews. Google detects them better every day. Penalty: profile removal.
- Leave hours outdated. Holidays, vacations, special summer hours. Keep them current.
How to measure if it's working
Google Business Profile gives you free statistics. Every month check:
| Metric | Where to see it | What to look for |
|---|---|---|
| Searches | Insights → Searches | Growing month over month |
| Views | Insights → How they find your profile | Direct vs discovery |
| Actions | Insights → Actions | Calls, website, directions |
| Reviews | Reviews | +2–4 new per month |
The most important long-term metric: calls from the profile. These are hot leads, people who search and call directly.
7-day kickoff plan
- Day 1: Claim or create the profile
- Day 2: Fill out all fields (description, services, attributes)
- Day 3: Upload 20 varied photos
- Day 4: Activate messaging and answer first questions
- Day 5: Create 5 questions with their answers
- Day 6: Publish your first featured-car post
- Day 7: Send the review link to the last 5 happy customers
In a week you can go from invisible to competitive. And from there, 20 minutes of weekly maintenance gives you brutal return. It's the most underrated digital lever in the sector.
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