Skip to main content

Google Business Profile guidelines updated to include products

Retail businesses can now add in-store products to their Google Business Profile listings.

How it works. When customers search for a Business Profile they can find a products carousel (on the Maps mobile app), or a carousel and “Products” tab if they’re using Google Search.

With the “Products” tab, customers can: 

  • Click a featured product card to view the product details.
  • Click a product category to view an overview.
  • Click a product within a product category to view the product details.
  • Chat or call you to find out more, or click on the button leading to your website to order online.
  • Provide feedback in case there are copyright or legal issues.

How to add products. There are two ways to add products to your Business Profile.

To preview how products will appear to customers on Google Search, managers can click See it on Google about a minute or two after uploading.

Required guidelines. retailers and advertisers who want to add products to their Business Profiles must follow Shopping Ads policies.

Additionally, Google does not allow regulated products such as:

  • Alcohol
  • Tobacco
  • Gambling
  • Financial services
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Unapproved supplements
  • Health & medical devices

Read more. The new Products section was spotted on Twitter by Stefan Somborac. You can learn more about setting up products on your Google Business Profile here.

Why we care. Allowing shoppers to browse items and prices before walking into a store can help increase visits and sales from both new and returning customers. With the holiday shopping season fast approaching, retailers and advertisers who can add products to their Google Business Profiles, and want increased visibility, should do so as soon as possible.

The post Google Business Profile guidelines updated to include products appeared first on Search Engine Land.



from Search Engine Land https://ift.tt/u12yiVF

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Legit Reviews

The google review thing is insane I have gotten 2 legit verified reviews that i ask client to screenshot and observe goolge not post them, pretend like they never happened and when i sent them the image a policy message was sent . As I was browsing through the google forum a lot of ppl are getting hit with legit reviews being removed. While all this is going on i have observe a company go from 12 reviews to 65 reviews in a two month period with some stuff that dont make sense on some of them. Seems like a new business or profile is being limited while aged accounts can have a free for fall but who really knows. Still waiting for a resolution on a if any. submitted by /u/Ok-Bowl-6167 [link] [comments] from Search Engine Optimization: The Latest SEO News https://ift.tt/zkbfgDH

Local seo vs. natiowide seo?

I've done SEO for local businesses but I recently got my first client that sells an item nation wide. ​ Any suggestions for doing nationwide SEO? ​ I am used to making geopages for local towns. I was going to do the same with some input from the client about what cities or towns he would like to show up in? submitted by /u/Letmeinterviewyou [link] [comments] from Search Engine Optimization: The Latest SEO News http://bit.ly/2JHy0k0

7 SEO Lessons I've Learned in 2025 (So Far) - From Building a Competitor Analysis Tool

Hey r/SEO , I've been spending a lot of time lately building a competitor keyword research tool (more on that below!), and it's really forced me to dig deep into how SEO works today . Here are some of the key lessons I've learned – hopefully, they're helpful to you too: Keyword Gaps Are Gold: It's not enough to just know what keywords your competitors rank for. You need to know what they rank for that you don't . This is where the real opportunities lie. Focusing on these "gap" keywords has been a game-changer for my own site. (This is actually why I built the tool – to make finding these gaps easier). Relevance > Volume (Sometimes): High search volume is great, but relevance is even more important. A keyword with 100 searches per month that's perfectly aligned with your niche and audience is often more valuable than a keyword with 10,000 searches that's only tangentially related. I've seen much better results targeting tho...