The Google Local Pack shows three businesses. For a Swiss SME, being one of those three is the difference between visible and invisible. Here is how we win it for clients in Zurich, Basel and Bern.

Local SEO in Switzerland has specific dynamics: dense urban competition, high trilingual complexity (DE/FR/IT), and a consumer base that researches obsessively before buying. What works in Geneva rarely transfers one-to-one to Zurich. Here is the practical playbook we use for Swiss SMEs.

The three factors Google actually weighs

  1. Relevance. How well your Google Business Profile matches the query.
  2. Distance. How close the searcher is to your physical address.
  3. Prominence. How well-known your business is online, measured by reviews, citations, mentions and links.

You cannot control distance. You can heavily influence relevance and prominence. That is where 90 percent of the work happens.

Step 1: Google Business Profile optimisation

The GBP is not a directory listing. It is a mini-website Google displays directly. Complete it exhaustively:

  • Primary and secondary categories (secondary ones move rankings more than people realise)
  • Services list with 5-15 entries and a short description each
  • Products list for retailers
  • Attributes (wheelchair accessible, free Wi-Fi, dogs welcome — whatever applies)
  • Opening hours including holidays
  • Multiple high-quality photos: exterior, interior, team, work examples (Swiss audiences overindex on team photos)
  • Posts weekly. Google favours active profiles.
  • Q&A: seed 5-10 common questions, answer them publicly

Step 2: NAP consistency across 40+ directories

Name, Address, Phone. Google cross-checks your NAP across hundreds of directories. Any inconsistency weakens your local ranking because the algorithm is unsure which data is correct. We target:

  • local.ch, search.ch, tel.search.ch (the big three Swiss)
  • Gelbeseiten, Meinestadt, Yelp
  • Industry-specific directories (legal: anwalt24; medical: jameda, doctena; trades: Renovero)
  • Chamber of commerce, cantonal business registries
  • Apple Maps, Bing Places, Here WeGo

Step 3: Review generation system

Reviews are the biggest lever most SMEs ignore. Target metrics:

  • 4.5+ star average
  • 30+ total reviews
  • At least one new review per month
  • Response rate 100 percent (both positive and negative)

Tactics that work: a QR code at checkout, automated post-service SMS/email, a short link card in receipts. Tactics that do not: buying reviews (detected), asking friends (detected if from similar IPs), one-time push campaigns (unnatural pattern).

Step 4: Local content and landing pages

If you serve multiple Swiss cities, each needs its own dedicated landing page. Not a copy-pasted template with the city name swapped — a genuinely unique page with local references, testimonials from that region, directions, maps, nearby landmarks. Duplicate pages are filtered out by Google.

Step 5: Local link building

Local links are dramatically under-valued by most SEO advice. We target:

  • Chamber of commerce membership page
  • Industry association directories
  • Local news and event coverage
  • University and school partnerships
  • Charity and sponsorship pages

Five local links from a Zurich-based site move local rankings more than fifty DR-60 links from irrelevant domains.

What success looks like

We measure local SEO by four KPIs:

  • Direction requests (the clearest revenue proxy)
  • Phone calls from GBP
  • Website clicks from GBP
  • Local Pack ranking for 20-40 target queries

A healthy Swiss SME local SEO campaign moves all four by 80-300 percent in the first 6 months. The compounding effect in months 12-18 is usually larger than the initial lift. Local SEO rewards patience more than any other channel.