Course → Module 4: Google Business Profile
Session 7 of 7

Most businesses stop optimizing their Google Business Profile after filling in the basic information, uploading a few photos, and collecting some reviews. They ignore three powerful sections that sit right inside the profile: Questions & Answers, Services, and Products. These sections are structured data fields that feed directly into your entity profile and search features. Ignoring them leaves entity data on the table.

The Underused GBP Sections

Section What It Does Entity Signal Visibility Usage Rate (est.)
Q&A Public questions and answers about your business, visible on your profile Entity FAQ data, keyword associations, customer intent signals Visible on profile in Search and Maps. May appear in "People also ask." Under 20% of businesses actively manage it
Services Structured list of services with descriptions and optional pricing Direct entity offering classification, service-entity associations Displayed in a dedicated "Services" tab on mobile and desktop profiles Under 30% of eligible businesses use it
Products Structured product catalog with images, descriptions, and pricing Product-entity associations, offering breadth signal Displayed in a "Products" carousel on the profile Under 25% of eligible businesses use it

Questions & Answers: Pre-Seeding Your Entity FAQ

The Q&A section on GBP is public and open. Anyone with a Google account can ask a question, and anyone can answer. This is a problem if you leave it unmanaged: competitors, disgruntled people, or random users can post misleading questions and answers on your profile.

The solution is pre-seeding. Google allows business owners to ask and answer their own questions. This is not against any policy. Google explicitly supports it. Pre-seeding means you control the narrative.

flowchart TD A["Identify Top 10
Customer Questions"] --> B["Write Q&A Pairs
(Entity-Focused)"] B --> C["Post Questions
from Owner Account"] C --> D["Answer Questions
from Business Account"] D --> E["Upvote Your
Own Answers"] E --> F["Monitor Weekly
for New Questions"] F --> G{"New question
from public?"} G -->|Yes| H["Answer within
24 hours"] G -->|No| I["Continue
monitoring"] H --> F I --> F style A fill:#222221,stroke:#c8a882,color:#ede9e3 style B fill:#222221,stroke:#c8a882,color:#ede9e3 style D fill:#222221,stroke:#6b8f71,color:#ede9e3 style F fill:#222221,stroke:#6b8f71,color:#ede9e3 style H fill:#222221,stroke:#c47a5a,color:#ede9e3

What to Pre-Seed

Choose questions that accomplish two things: answer real customer queries AND reinforce entity attributes. Here are examples by category:

Write 10-15 Q&A pairs. Post them over a two-week period (not all at once). Upvote your own answers to push them to the top of the thread.

Services Section

The Services section lets you create a structured list of what your business offers. This is not a free-text field. Google provides a semi-structured format: service categories, individual services within those categories, and optional descriptions and pricing.

From an entity perspective, the Services section does something important: it explicitly declares what your entity provides, in a structured format Google can parse. This is functionally similar to schema.org Service markup, but hosted on Google's own platform.

Structuring Your Services

Field Guidelines Entity Impact
Service Category Use Google's suggested categories when available. Create custom categories only when necessary. Groups services into entity offering clusters
Service Name Clear, descriptive names. "Process Engineering Design" not "Our Special Design Package" Direct keyword-entity association
Description 2-3 sentences. What the service is, who it is for, what the outcome is. No promotional language. Contextual entity understanding
Price Optional. If your pricing is standardized, include it. If it varies, use "Free estimate" or leave blank. Commercial entity signal

List every distinct service you offer. Do not merge services to keep the list short. Google uses each individual service entry as a separate entity attribute. Five detailed services give Google more to work with than two vague ones.

Products Section

The Products section creates a visual catalog on your GBP. Each product entry includes an image, name, description, price, and a link. For businesses that sell physical products, this is straightforward. For service businesses, you can use this section to showcase service packages, published materials, or signature offerings.

Product entries appear in a carousel format on your profile. Google may also display them in product-related searches. Each entry creates a product-entity association in Google's system.

Product Entry Best Practices

Q&A, Services, and Products are not secondary features. They are structured data fields within Google's own system. Every entry you create is a direct, first-party declaration to Google about what your entity offers, answers, and provides. The businesses that use them have richer entity profiles than those that do not.

Putting It All Together: The Complete GBP

After completing this module, your Google Business Profile should have:

This is a fully optimized entity declaration. Not a business listing. Not a directory entry. An entity declaration in Google's most trusted first-party system.

Further Reading

Assignment

  1. Write 10 Q&A pairs for your GBP. Each question should address a real customer query and each answer should reinforce an entity attribute. Post them over the next two weeks.
  2. Create your Services section. List every distinct service with a clear name, 2-3 sentence description, and pricing where applicable.
  3. Add at least five Product entries (physical products or service packages). Include photos, descriptions, prices, and links to your website.
  4. Take a final screenshot of your complete GBP profile. Compare it to the baseline screenshot from Session 4.1. Document every improvement.
  5. Set a monthly calendar reminder to review and update your Q&A, Services, and Products sections.