We have posted a number of times regarding Google+ Local Pages (which is now Google My Business) and why businesses, especially small/local businesses, need to claim their pages. In particular, it has been our contention that Google+ Local Pages are essentially acting as your new landing page to your business, fulfilling many customer needs for critical information without them coming to your site. They are acting as your splash page.
Recent improvements in the metrics reporting within the Google My Business system have given us further insight into the critical need for businesses to claim their Page as well as keep it up to date and promote it.
For this example we've selected one business, a 1-location popular restaurant in a major city. For clarity, "clicks" in this graph represents: "Clicks to your website: Number of clicks to your business's website from local search results in Google Maps, Search, and Maps for Mobile" That leaves a lot of possibility for variance as there are so many facets to Google Search and where your information is displayed, but unfortunately that's the definition we're provided with.
Worth noting: this business is NOT active in Google+ beyond having a Google+ Local Page created, and some basic auto-posting from their blog. They have less than 100 followers and almost 0 engagement on their posts.
Over the last 30 days, the business's information was displayed:
- 43,217 times in search views (this is what we'll be focusing on)
- 28 post views
- 11 profile views
- (totaling 43,256 views)
- 7350 clicks to the website
- 1240 clicks for driving instructions
- 770 phone calls
- (totaling 9360 clicks)
- The website received a total of 23,722 sessions
- Google Search resulted in 14,221 of those sessions
- The website was viewed in Google for 23,463 impressions (via Webmaster Tools)
- From all of Google Search, the website recorded 7,506 clicks
- Google Organic Search accounted for 60% of all traffic to the website
(* this is either an 84% bonus or 184% bonus, depending on whether GMB search views include regular search or not, but their description would seem to indicate that it does not, hence 184%)