Our Editorial Mission
Local search is a battlefield. You fight for three spots in the Map Pack. We built GMB Boosting Services to cut through the noise of outdated SEO forums.
Our mission is simple. We test local ranking tactics, document the friction, and publish exactly what works today. We refuse to publish theory. If a tactic gets a profile suspended, we call it out immediately.
We know the exact weight of a suspended listing. It stops phone calls. It kills foot traffic. It costs you money. We write every guide with that operational reality in mind.
Real testing. Zero shortcuts. Actual results.
How We Choose Topics
Topic selection starts in the trenches. We look at the exact problems local business owners face right now. A sudden drop in phone calls. A wave of fake competitor reviews. A suspended Google Business Profile.
We monitor search data, but we prioritize the actual friction points our team encounters during client audits. If we spend three hours fixing a specific verification loop, we write a guide about it. We ignore generic marketing fluff.
You need high-resolution answers to specific map ranking problems. We actively reject topics that do not serve local business owners directly. You will not find generic posts about the history of search engines here.
We focus entirely on the mechanics of local visibility. We cover citation building, review management, profile optimization, and penalty recovery. Nothing else makes the cut.
Research and Fact-Checking Standards
Bad advice ruins businesses. We refuse to publish unverified claims. Before we recommend a profile optimization technique, we test it across multiple live locations.
We track the grid movements using tools like Local Falcon or BrightLocal. We read Google’s actual API documentation and merchant guidelines. We verify every claim against primary data.
We test citation consistency across data aggregators like Data Axle and Foursquare. If a strategy relies on a loophole, we explicitly warn you about the suspension risk. We do not guess.
We measure.
Corrections Policy
The algorithm shifts constantly. A tactic that worked in January triggers a penalty in October. When we make a mistake or a guide becomes outdated, we fix it fast.
You deserve accurate intelligence. If you spot an error in our local SEO guides, email our editorial team at [email protected]. We review all correction requests within 48 hours.
If we verify the error, we update the page immediately. We add a visible correction note at the bottom of the article detailing what changed and when. Transparency builds trust.
Affiliate and Commercial Relationships
We sell GMB optimization services. We also use affiliate links for local SEO software we trust. If you click a link for a rank tracker or citation builder and buy it, we earn a commission.
This financial reality never dictates our recommendations. We reject sponsorships from tools that fail our internal audits. We rejected four different review management platforms last year because their API integration was unstable.
We only recommend the exact software stack we use for our own clients. We pay for these tools with our own money. If a tool degrades in quality, we remove our recommendation.
Editorial Independence
Our editorial team operates with total autonomy. Software vendors cannot pay for a positive review. Clients cannot dictate our content strategy.
We maintain a strict firewall between our service delivery and our publishing arm. If a popular local SEO tool introduces a terrible feature, we will publish a critique. We do not accept guest posts from link builders.
We protect our editorial independence fiercely. We write the content ourselves based on our daily operations. Your trust is our only real asset.
We will not trade it for a quick sponsorship check.
Content Updates
Google updates its local search guidelines without warning. A guide written two years ago is a liability today. Stale SEO content is dangerous.
We audit our core GMB ranking guides every 90 days. We check for deprecated features, new profile attributes, and shifted ranking weights. We test our old assumptions against new data.
During these updates, we change the date at the top of the post. We delete outdated screenshots. We replace dead links.
We keep our content sharp, accurate, and ready for deployment.
