Insurance Broker

Google Renames 'Google My Business' Platform to ‘Google Business Profile’

UPDATED ON
December 16, 2022
Abbey Dean
Abbey Dean
— Written By
Print Friendly and PDF

If you closely follow the Mployer Advisor blog or attended our recent webinar extolling the benefits of harnessing a Google My Business profile, it will come as little surprise that this piece of rebranding news from Google caught our attention.

Yesterday, Google announced in a statement that the company’s Google My Business platform will be known as Google Business Profile going forward. Google attributes the name change to a desire to “keep things simple.”

In 2022, the company will also retire the Google My Business app altogether “so merchants can take advantage of the upgraded experience on Search and Maps.”

Google recommended that small business manage their profiles directly on Search or Maps prior to the transition. For more details on how employers can easily claim and verify their Google Business Profile directly on Search and Maps, here’s an explainer.

The tech giant also noted, “The existing Google My Business web experience will transition to primarily support larger businesses with multiple locations . . we’ll share more details on these changes in the months ahead.”

With the name change announcement, Google also said that new features would roll out, including a Performance Planner designed to help businesses more easily decide how much to invest around important events or in driving certain business goals.

As Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Land rightfully noted, this is not the first time Google’s local business platform rebranded. Before Google My Business, the platform was called Google Places, before that Google + Local and so on.

More to come as we see what other features or long-term plans Google plans to roll out.

Looking for more exclusive content? Check out what’s trending on the Mployer Advisor blog, and be sure to catch the latest episode of This Week in Benefits.

Want more insights on how your employee benefitscompare to companies in your region, industry, and similaremployer size?
Download Your Custom Benefits Report Now

Next Up

Legal/Compliance Roundup - April 2024
‍Each month, Mployer Advisor collects and presents some of the most relevant and most pressing recent changes in law, compliance, and policy in areas related to employee benefits, health care, and human resources. 
The Market Employment Summary for April 2024
Each month, Mployer Advisor breaks down the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ most recent State Employment and Unemployment Summary to highlight some employment trends across various markets. This is an overview of April’s report. 
Employee Compensation Cost Breakdown - Wages, Salaries & Employee Benefits by Industry and Occupation
The average US employee costs their employer about $45.42 per hour in total compensation expenses with a little more than 30% of that expense going toward employee benefits and perks.