How Medical Practices & Practitioners Should Set Up Google My Business

It’s common for multiple medical practitioners to work at a single location, so columnist Will Scott advises how to set up Google My Business so each practitioner is his or her own “brand.”

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Businesses filled with multiple front-facing professionals and departments, like law firms and hospitals or medical practices, might struggle at times to understand the best way to handle how customers view them online.

This gets especially tricky when trying to manage Google Plus pages properly, as there are many guidelines and best practice solutions that one should adhere to when using the Google My Business product.

The Basics: Page Types

Before doing anything in Google My Business, it’s important to first make sure that we have a foundation of understanding to build upon.

There are essentially three types of Google Plus pages. Before delving into each page, it is worth noting that there was once a time in Google’s history when there were business pages that were purely local and had no social aspects to them. These days, however, all pages are “Plus” pages, which makes them all intrinsically socially capable.

Google’s support documentation.)

Creating Local Business Pages For The Medical Industry

Now we’ll start going through how to handle the sticky situation of multiple business entities at a single location, which is often the case in the medical industry. The following information all comes from Google’s guidelines for Google My Business.

If a practitioner is the sole public-facing practitioner at a location and represents a branded organization, then there shouldn’t be separate pages for the practice and the practitioner.

There should just be one local Google Plus page that represents both the branded business and the sole practitioner, with the name in the format of [brand/company]: [practitioner name].

Of course, one in this circumstance could simply choose to represent one over the other (either the brand or the practitioner) — but again, if you wanted both represented, it would have to be encompassed in a single local business page.

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If a practitioner is one of many public-facing practitioners at a location, then there should be a single local page with the practice or brand name, and a local page for each practitioner who wishes to have one. The practitioner pages, however, should be titled with their name online and CANNOT contain the business or practice name in their page name.

The previously mentioned algorithm that detects and flags/removes duplicate pages has category-based exceptions for pages in the medical and legal industries due to the nature of these businesses. However, it will flag and/or remove any pages that do not follow these particular guidelines, because a page that has the same name, address, and phone number as another is considered a duplicate regardless of its category.

Here is how individual practitioners should label their individual local business pages:

Good Vs Bad Google + Pages for The Medical Industry

If you ever question how you should be handling your particular use-case scenario, it’s best to read thoroughly through the Google My Business Guidelines and its examples.