You’ve been in business for decades. You have hundreds of reviews and a near-perfect rating. By every logical measure, you should be dominating local search. And yet a competitor with a fraction of your history and a fraction of your reviews is sitting above you in the Google Map Pack. Here’s what’s actually happening.
Tenure Doesn’t Matter to Google. Signals Do.
Google doesn’t reward loyalty. It doesn’t care that you’ve been in business for 40 years or that you’ve earned 295 reviews over that time. What it cares about is what you’re doing right now, and whether your online presence is sending clear, consistent, current signals.
A newer competitor with 29 reviews but strong recent activity can absolutely outrank a legacy business that’s coasting on its history. We see this constantly. The businesses that rank aren’t always the best or the longest established. They’re the ones actively working their online presence.
Problem 1: Not Responding to Reviews
This business had 295 reviews and responded to none of them.
Google explicitly recommends responding to every review, positive or negative, in their Google Business Profile Playbook. This isn’t a soft suggestion. It’s a documented best practice that affects how Google evaluates your engagement and trustworthiness.
When you respond to reviews, you signal to Google that your business is active and that you care about your customers. When you don’t, you leave a dead zone of unanswered feedback that tells Google your profile is essentially unattended.
The competitor outranking them? Almost certainly more responsive. That gap compounds over time.
Responding to reviews also has a direct impact on potential customers. Someone choosing between two businesses will notice that one owner takes the time to reply and the other doesn’t. That’s a conversion decision, not just an SEO one.
Problem 2: Inconsistent Title Tags and H1 Tags Across the Site
Beyond the GBP, the website had significant structural SEO problems.
Some pages were missing title tags entirely. Some were missing meta descriptions. And several pages had between four and eight H1 tags on a single page.
Each of these is a trust signal failure. Here’s why it matters.
The title tag is how Google understands what a page is about before it even fully crawls it. A missing title tag means Google has to guess. It will, but it won’t guess in your favor.
The H1 tag is the primary headline on the page. There should be exactly one per page. When a page has four, five, or eight H1 tags, Google sees a page without a clear focus. It doesn’t know which one to weight. So it weights none of them properly.
For a business with a large website, this kind of inconsistency is common. Pages get added over time by different people using different methods, and nobody does a full audit to make sure every page is structurally sound. The result is a site that looks professional on the surface but sends mixed signals underneath.
The Fix Is a Full-Page Audit
Go through every page on your website and confirm three things: there is exactly one title tag that includes what you do, where you do it, and who you are. There is exactly one H1 tag. And there is a meta description.
That’s it. No advanced SEO tricks. Just consistency applied across every page.
For the GBP side, start responding to reviews today. Work backward through your existing reviews and respond to as many as you can. Then build a habit of responding within 24 to 48 hours of every new review coming in.
A business with 295 reviews and 40 years of history that starts doing these things has enormous potential. The foundation is already there. The signals just need to catch up.
If you want us to audit your website and GBP and show you exactly where the gaps are, we offer free local SEO reviews for businesses in the Orlando and Central Florida area. Drop your business name and location and we’ll take a look.
DropShadow Agency is a marketing agency based in Orlando, FL helping local businesses get found online.