Google Business Profile Audit

Local Citations Audit for Multi‑Location Businesses in Europe

NAP & Links Consistency

Table of Contents

What this audit covers

This local citations audit helps multi‑location brands fix NAP (name, address, phone) across Google Business Profile, Apple Business Connect, Bing Places, and the most useful national directories. The goal: one clean identity everywhere → fewer customer mistakes, fewer suspensions, better “near me” visibility.

Follow Google’s representation rules (real‑world name, correct address; no keyword stuffing) to stay compliant.

Get a Free Google Maps Audit (48h)


You’ll get a priority checklist + visibility snapshot. No account access required.

Canonical NAP for chains (your single source of truth)

Define one Canonical NAP and mirror it everywhere.
Field
What “good” looks like
Notes
Name
Real‑world brand as on signage
Don’t add keywords/cities (policy)
Address
Official street, number, unit
Use local format/diacritics; no PO Boxes
Phone
Local number with country code
Test click‑to‑call from mobile
URL
Store‑level landing page
Avoid generic homepage for stores

Tier‑1 Maps: Google, Apple, Bing — keep them in sync

  • Google Business Profile (GBP): keep NAP, hours (incl. holiday hours), categories, and pin accurate per location
  • Apple Business Connect (ABC): Apple’s free portal to manage how your locations appear across Apple Maps, Siri, Wallet. Mirror the same NAP/hours/photos.
  • Bing Places: claim/manage each store so NAP/hours match GBP. You can manage multiple locations under one account.

Tier‑2 Citations: trusted national directories (Nordics/EU)

Start with a short, high‑quality list (don’t buy bulk‑spam “500 listings” packs). Examples used in the Nordics:

  • Sweden: Eniro.se, Hitta.se (business/people + maps).
  • Norway: Gule Sider, 1881.no (large national databases).
  • Denmark: Krak.dk (national directory).
  • Finland: Fonecta (Finnish directory provider).
  • Hospitality vertical: Tripadvisor (claim/update your listing).

Tip: keep the exact Canonical NAP (spacing, diacritics, suite numbers) and the same store naming pattern everywhere.

Find & fix duplicates safely

Duplicates split reviews and confuse maps. For each platform:

  1. Search by name + address + phone to spot dupes/old locations.
  2. Merge or remove the extra listing with the platform’s standard process.
  3. Ensure your name follows Google’s representation guidelines to avoid policy flags.

Bulk & scale: store codes, CSV, location pages

  • Use Store code (unique ID) in GBP and your master sheet to map locations 1:1 and avoid mix‑ups in bulk edits.
  • Keep a CSV (location, store code, NAP, URL, hours, categories).
  • Each GBP “Website” should link to a store‑level page that repeats the same NAP (and ideally accepts UTM).
  • Mirror NAP/hours to Apple Business Connect and Bing Places after updating Google.

Optional: LocalBusiness schema on your site

On each store page, add structured data (e.g., LocalBusiness or a subtype) that matches your visible NAP. This doesn’t create citations, but it helps machines read your contact data consistently.

48‑Hour Fix Plan

Day 1 (90 min)

  • Finalise Canonical NAP and naming pattern.
  • Clean up GBP per store (address/pin, hours incl. holidays, phone, categories).
  • Add/update store‑level URLs in GBP.

Day 2 (90 min)

  • Mirror updates to Apple Business Connect and Bing Places.
  • Fix 5–10 priority national listings (per country) with exact NAP.
  • Sweep for duplicates and request merge/remove.
  • Save a change log (who/when/what) for each store.

After 2 weeks, spot‑check a sample of stores in each country; confirm NAP parity and that old addresses don’t appear.

Mini‑checklist

Task
Owner
Deadline
Status
Canonical NAP & naming pattern approved
GBP cleaned (NAP, hours, pin, categories)
Store‑level URLs set in GBP
Apple & Bing parity updated
Top national citations fixed (per country)
Duplicates merged/removed
Master sheet updated (store codes)
LocalBusiness schema added on store pages

FAQ

How many citations do we really need?
A short list of accurate listings beats hundreds of weak ones. Focus on GBP/Apple/Bing and a few trusted national directories per country.
Can we bulk-edit many Google locations?
Yes. Use bulk upload and store codes to keep locations aligned and avoid duplicates.
Should we translate our business name?
Use the real-world name on signage (policy). Don’t add keywords or cities unless they’re part of the legal/brand name.
Do directories help ranking?
They improve consistency and trust, which supports discovery and conversions. Start with Tier-1 maps, then add a few strong national directories (e.g., Eniro/Hitta, Gule Sider/1881, Krak, Fonecta).
What about hospitality?
For hotels, restaurants, attractions, keep Tripadvisor current (it’s a key vertical citation).

Related posts

  • NAP Consistency Audit — Fix Name, Address, Phone
  • UTM for GBP Buttons + GA4 Events
  • Google Maps Listing Health Check — Multi‑Location Retail

Get a Free Google Maps Audit (48h)


You’ll get a priority checklist + visibility snapshot. No account access required.

We never incentivize reviews. No gating.


Use your real‑world business name; avoid keyword stuffing.


We don’t request full account access; links/screens are enough. Manager access is optional.