Our Editorial Mission
We built More Maps Visibility to solve a specific problem. Local businesses bleed revenue because they cannot crack the map pack. We publish tactical, tested, operational local SEO strategies. No theory. No fluff. Just what works right now in the local search results.
Our commitment is to the practitioner and the business owner. We do not publish generic advice. We publish blueprints.
You need to know exactly how to structure your Google Business Profile. You need to understand how review velocity impacts your proximity radius. We provide the high-resolution details required to execute these campaigns successfully. We cut through the noise of SEO forums and deliver actionable truth.
How We Choose Topics
We look at the friction points. We monitor the Google Business Profile API changes. We track ranking fluctuations across hundreds of client locations.
When an HVAC contractor in Phoenix loses map pack visibility after a core update, we investigate. We pull the data. We test the variables. We publish the findings.
We cover proximity limits, citation indexing failures, and review filtering bugs. We answer the specific questions our agency clients ask us every week. If a topic does not directly impact local visibility, we ignore it. We refuse to waste your time on vanity metrics.
Research and Fact-Checking Standards
Local SEO is plagued by myths. We rely on data. Before we publish a claim about review velocity or primary category weighting, we test it.
We run grid trackers. We measure the radius drop-off. We cross-reference our findings with official Google documentation and live SERP analysis. We do not guess. We do not parrot forum rumors.
Every technical claim goes through our internal review process. If we cannot prove a tactic works across multiple geographic markets, it does not make the cut. We verify product claims directly with software vendors or published third-party tests before including them in any recommendation.
Three years of testing. Zero shortcuts. Real results.
Corrections Policy
We make mistakes. Google shifts the local algorithm overnight. When a published strategy stops working, we fix the content.
If you spot an error regarding a GBP feature or a broken local ranking tactic, email us at [email protected]. We review all claims within 48 hours. If a correction is necessary, we update the page immediately.
We add a dated correction note at the bottom of the affected article. Transparency builds trust. Hiding mistakes destroys it. We own our errors and correct them publicly.
Affiliate and Commercial Relationships
We recommend tools. We use rank trackers, citation builders, and review management software. Sometimes we earn a commission if you buy through our links.
This never dictates our coverage. We have rejected lucrative partnerships with software vendors because their tools failed our internal audits. We only recommend platforms we deploy for our own clients.
The editorial team does not see affiliate revenue data. The separation is absolute. If a tool breaks NAP consistency across directories, we will tell you to avoid it, regardless of the payout.
Editorial Independence
Nobody buys a positive review here. No agency, software company, or directory network can dictate our editorial calendar.
We do not accept sponsored guest posts. We do not sell link insertions. Our editorial team operates with total autonomy.
We write what the data tells us to write. If a popular local SEO tool introduces a bug that hurts your map pack rankings, we will report it. The truth comes first. Your business relies on accurate information, and we refuse to compromise our integrity for a quick payout.
Content Updates
Local search moves fast. A guide to Google Business Profile categories from two years ago is dangerous today.
We audit our core guides every 90 days. We check for deprecated features, new Q&A guidelines, and shifting proximity signals. When Google rolls out a local algorithm update, we revisit our affected content.
We stamp the exact date of the last technical review at the top of every page. Stale advice costs businesses money. We refuse to leave it on the site.