If you run a business in Kenya, you’ve probably noticed something interesting: many businesses appear on Google Search and Google Maps even without a website. Google often shows local businesses directly in search results before showing websites.
That visibility comes from a Google Business Profile (GBP), formerly called Google My Business. The good news is that you don’t need a website to appear there.
In fact, many Kenyan businesses get calls, walk-ins, and customers directly from Google Maps alone. A properly optimized Google Business Profile can help customers find you online.
And the best part? It’s free.
This guide covers everything: what Google Business Profile is, how it connects to Google Search and Google Maps, how to set it up step by step, and how to optimise it so you rank above competitors - with or without a website.
If you would rather have it done for you, Write2Rank offers a one-time Google Business Profile setup and optimisation service in Kenya for KES 10,000 - call 0791 300 174 to get started.
Google Business Profile is a free business listing created by Google that helps your business appear in:
Your profile can display:
So instead of needing a full website, customers can often contact you directly from Google itself.
You may know it by its old name: Google My Business, or GMB. Google officially rebranded it to Google Business Profile in 2022, but both names refer to the same thing. Throughout this guide, we use both interchangeably because many Kenyans still search using the older name.
This is one of the most misunderstood things about Google Business Profile: it is not just a Maps tool. A complete, verified profile appears in three distinct places across Google:
When someone opens Google Maps and searches for a business type or service near them, your profile appears as a pin with your name, rating, and category.
Customers can get directions, call you, or view your full profile directly from Maps.
This is the section that appears on a standard Google Search results page, usually at the top, showing a mini map and three business listings with ratings, addresses, and hours.
Appearing in the Local Pack is one of the most valuable positions in local SEO because it sits above the regular organic search results.
When someone in Nairobi searches "accountant near me" or "event planner Westlands," the Local Pack is what they see first.
When someone searches your business name directly on Google, a rich panel appears on the right side of the screen (or at the top on mobile) showing your photos, hours, reviews, services, location, and contact details. This is your business's full profile in Google Search, and it appears without a website.
These three are not separate tools - they are one connected system, all managed from a single Google Business Profile. A customer searching on Google Search and another browsing Google Maps can both find you from the same profile, fully set up once.
When your profile is complete and optimised, it feeds accurate information into all three simultaneously. That means more visibility, more touchpoints, and more ways for customers to find and contact you, none of which require a website.
Local search in Kenya is not a future trend. It is already how your customers find businesses.
Almost half of all Google searches globally carry local intent, someone looking for something nearby. Of those searches, the vast majority begin on a mobile device. In Kenya, where mobile internet penetration is high, and many customers search while on the move, this is especially relevant.
Businesses with complete Google Business Profiles are 2.7 times more likely to be considered reputable by potential customers. The catch is, customers are 70% more likely to visit a business with a fully optimised profile. Verified profiles generate up to four times more website visits than unverified ones.
Here is what a well-managed profile can do for your business:
No, a website helps, but it’s not required for local visibility.
This is one of the most common misconceptions among small business owners in Kenya.
Google Business Profile works independently of a website. You can:
A customer can search your business name on Google, see your full profile - photos, hours, services, reviews, location - and call you directly, without a website ever loading. That is the power of a complete Google Business Profile.
That said, if you do have a website, linking it to your profile strengthens your overall SEO and helps Google understand your business more fully. But the absence of a website is not a barrier to being found on Google Search or Google Maps.
Follow the following steps:
Visit business.google.com and sign in with a Google account. Use a business email if you have one, or a personal Gmail if not.
Type your business name exactly as you want it to appear. Do not add keywords to your business name (for example, "Nairobi Best Salon") - this violates Google's guidelines and can get your profile suspended.
This is one of the most important decisions you will make. Your primary category tells Google what your business does and when to show it in search results.
Be specific - "Hair Salon" is better than "Beauty," and "Accountant" is better than "Financial Services."
You can add up to nine secondary categories later to cover additional services.
If customers come to your physical premises, add your address. If you serve customers at their location (like a plumber or delivery service), set a service area instead, you can specify towns, counties, or a radius.
If you operate from home and prefer not to display your address publicly, you can hide it while still appearing in local search results for your service area.
Add a Kenyan phone number starting with +254. This is how most of your local customers will reach you directly from Google Maps.
If you have a website, add it here. If not, leave it blank; your profile still works.
Verification proves to Google that your business is legitimate. In Kenya, the most common verification methods currently are:
The old postcard method (where Google mailed a physical card to your address) is largely being phased out in Kenya due to postal delivery challenges.
Do not skip verification. An unverified profile has lower visibility and cannot access key features.
Once verified, fill in every section:
Once your Google Business Profile is verified and complete, your business automatically becomes eligible to appear across Google Search and Google Maps. There is no separate registration for either.
What determines whether you appear prominently, in the Local Pack on Search, on Maps, or in the Knowledge Panel comes down to three factors Google uses to rank local results:
How well your profile matches what someone is searching for. A complete profile with accurate categories, service descriptions, and keyword-rich content ranks higher than a bare-bones one.
This applies equally to Search and Maps results.
How close your business is to the person searching, or to the location they specified.
You cannot control your physical location, but you can control your service area settings to make sure Google knows exactly where you operate.
How well-known and trusted your business is, based on reviews, photo activity, post frequency, and overall profile completeness.
This is where most Kenyan businesses have the most room to improve, and where a well-managed profile pulls significantly ahead of competitors.
Setting up a profile is the first step. Businesses that rank at the top of Google Search and Google Maps do the following:
NAP stands for Name, Address, and Phone number.
Google cross-references this information across the web. If your profile says one thing and your Facebook page or website says another, it creates inconsistency that lowers your ranking.
Ensure that your business name, address, and phone number are consistent everywhere they appear online.
Reviews are one of the most powerful ranking factors in local search. Businesses with more reviews and higher ratings consistently outrank those without.
In Kenya, the most effective way to get reviews is simply to ask. After completing a job or a sale, send a WhatsApp message with a direct link to your Google review page. Make it easy.
When you receive a review - positive or negative - respond to it. A business that responds to reviews signals to Google that it is active and engaged, which improves ranking. It also builds trust with potential customers reading those responses.
One practical note: encourage customers to be specific in their reviews. "Great service" is fine. "Best electrician in South B for quick residential rewiring" is far better - both for your ranking and for converting future customers.
Google Business Profile allows you to publish posts - short updates, offers, announcements, or new services. Profiles that post regularly appear more frequently in top local results. Aim for at least one post per week. Keep them short, specific, and relevant to what your customers are searching for.
The average verified profile has fewer than one photo, which means adding even a handful puts you ahead of most competitors.
Profiles with more photos consistently see higher clicks, calls, and direction requests. Add new photos regularly rather than uploading everything at once.
Google allows anyone to ask questions on your profile. Answer them yourself before customers have to ask.
Add the most common questions your customers have - about pricing, services, location, and payment methods - and answer them clearly.
This also adds keyword-rich content to your profile.
Avoid the following mistakes:
Understanding how a customer actually uses Google Search and Google Maps helps you optimise for the right moments.
Most local searches in Kenya happen on mobile, often while someone is already out or planning a visit. They search a general term - "pharmacy near me," "event planner Nairobi," "electrician Kiambu" - and Google returns the Local Pack: a section at the top of the search results page showing a mini map and three business listings with ratings, addresses, and contact details.
Appearing in the Local Pack is the primary goal of local SEO, because it sits above all organic search results and captures the highest-intent customers.
If a customer already knows your business name and searches it directly, they see your Knowledge Panel - a full, rich display of your profile on the right side of the screen on desktop, or at the top on mobile.
This shows your photos, hours, reviews, services, and a direct call button. It is often the last thing a customer checks before deciding to contact you.
On Google Maps, customers browse visually - zooming into a neighbourhood, searching a category, and comparing the businesses that appear as pins.
Your rating, photo, and proximity all influence whether they click on you over a competitor.
Across all three entry points, customers typically make their decision based on the same three things: the star rating, the number of reviews, and the photos.
A business with 4.5 stars and 30 reviews will almost always be chosen over one with 4.8 stars and 2 reviews, because volume signals trustworthiness.
Some customers click the call button directly without visiting a profile at all. Others check hours, read a few reviews, and get directions. This is why a complete, active Google Business Profile can generate real customers across Google Search and Maps entirely on its own.
There’s no exact timeline for ranking on Google Search or Google Maps. Some businesses start seeing visibility within a few weeks, while others in highly competitive industries may take several months to gain traction.
It largely depends on factors such as your competition, the quality and completeness of your profile, the number of reviews you receive, your location, and how active your business is online.
Businesses in Nairobi, for example, often face more competition than those in smaller towns, which means consistency becomes even more important. Profiles that are regularly updated, actively collecting reviews, and consistently engaging with customers tend to perform much better over time.
Eventually, yes.
A website gives you:
But if you’re starting out, a Google Business Profile is one of the fastest and most affordable ways to establish an online presence.
For many small businesses in Kenya, it’s the first step toward digital visibility.
Setting up a profile takes time to do properly. Optimising it to rank on Google Search and Google Maps takes strategy.
Write2Rank offers a done-for-you Google Business Profile setup and optimisation service for businesses in Kenya, including:
If you want to show up where your customers are searching on Google - without building a website - talk to our team or call us on 0791 300 174.
No, a website is optional. Your profile can generate calls, direction requests, and customer enquiries entirely on its own.
Video verification is typically reviewed within a few days. Phone and email verification are instant. The old postcard method could take weeks and is largely being replaced.
Yes, you can hide your home address while still setting a service area and appearing in local search results.
Ask directly after completing a job. Share your Google review link via WhatsApp. Make it a standard part of how you follow up with customers.
You can flag reviews that violate Google's policies for removal. For all others, respond professionally - potential customers read how you handle negative feedback as much as they read the review itself.
Yes, creating and managing a Google Business Profile is completely free.
At a minimum, keep your hours and contact details current. Beyond that, aim to post at least once a week and add new photos regularly.
Write2Rank is a Nairobi-based SEO, AI SEO and content agency helping Kenyan businesses rank on Google and attract the right customers online.