Spearleaf · Position Zero Playbook v10 · 2026-06-16 Start here Changelog
Reference

"Ben Fisher: Protecting Your Google Business Profile (Suspensions, Moves, and Reinstatement)"

Ben Fisher of Steady Demand on why Google Business Profiles get suspended, how to move a location safely, and the evidence kit that gets a listing reinstated fast.

On this page

On Day 3, Ben Fisher of Steady Demand delivered a practical walkthrough of keeping a Google Business Profile (GBP) alive: why listings get suspended, how to move a location without losing it, the danger of virtual office addresses, a step-by-step reinstatement process, and the standing "evidence kit" every business should keep on hand before trouble strikes. His core message is that suspensions are survivable and often resolved within 24 hours, but only when the documentation is ready in advance. Terry hosted, introduced Ben, and ran a giveaway during the session.

Main takeaways

  1. Only 4% of businesses are ready with documentation when suspended, and that number has not moved in 5-6 years. Across close to 10,000 reinstatements, Steady Demand consistently finds only 4 in 100 businesses have their licenses, bills, and registrations ready. Being unprepared turns a 24-72 hour outage into one lasting months, because some documents (like a utility bill) require a full statement cycle of at least 15 days to obtain.

  2. The newer appeal tool gives you only 60 minutes to upload evidence once you start. Miss the window and you get denied, then must go through a secondary appeal. The fix is to gather and zip all documents before clicking Submit.

  3. Virtual offices (Regus, DaVinci, UPS Store) are a named guideline violation and a top suspension trigger. "Everyone else is doing it" is not a defense. If a client is in a virtual office, start the move process now rather than waiting for the inevitable suspension.

  4. Move locations within the same zip code to avoid verification. A move inside the same exact zip code typically skips verification and carries very low suspension risk. Changing the zip code is a different story. Before moving, update Secretary of State, BBB, and citations so Google trusts the move.

  5. PII (a human face) in a verification video triggers an immediate stop and denial or suspension. Google will not watch anything showing personally identifiable information; a face reflected in a glass door is enough. License plates, oddly, are acceptable and even encouraged because they help confirm location.

  6. Keep a standing "body of evidence." Business registration, business license, tax certificate (a "silver bullet"), utility or cell phone bill in the company name, certificate of insurance, lease or deed, BBB profile, exterior signage photos, and a location video walkthrough. Google evaluates documents together as a body of evidence per entity.

  7. Use an agency account with a clean email to protect a portfolio. One bad-actor email, or an Ads or Workspace violation tied to a profile, can cascade and suspend an entire network of listings. An agency account itself gives no extra authority, but a domain on Google Workspace does pass trust into the dashboard.

  8. Do not panic, do not spam Google support, and do not file duplicate appeals. Multiple appeals clog the system and Google keeps the original case. After submitting, be patient. If denied at secondary appeal, escalate to the GBP Help Community with only your Profile ID and Case ID (never personal information).

Key points

Speaker background

Why listings get suspended

Numbers and named facts

Moving a location

The appeal and reinstatement process

PII and video verification

Documents to always have ready ("body of evidence")

Doctored documents

Agency accounts, emails, and portfolio protection

Agency dashboard (Q&A with Terry)

Branded email versus Gmail (Q&A with Terry)

Self-removal as a manager (Q&A)

Slides

Slides (9) Slide 1 Slide 2 Slide 3 Slide 4 Slide 5 Slide 6 Slide 7 Slide 8 Slide 9

Source

Synthesized from the Day 3 conference recording of Ben Fisher's session and the accompanying deck (gbp-guide-v2-1, "Protecting Your Google Business Profile Listing," Ben Fisher / Steady Demand). The moderator name "Terry" comes from the session notes and is not stated verbatim in the recording.