Official statement
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Google confirms that the appearance of the Maps block in search results is not solely dependent on the keywords entered, but also on observed user behavior. Specifically, if Google detects that a query generates clicks to Maps, it will display the block more consistently. For local SEOs, this means that optimizing your Google Business Profile is not enough — you must also understand how users interact with the results to anticipate the presence or absence of the local pack.
What you need to understand
What exactly does "examined user behavior" mean?
Google analyzes the actual interactions of internet users with search results to decide whether or not to display the Maps block. If for a given query, a significant proportion of users click on Maps or interact with local listings, the algorithm concludes: this query deserves priority local treatment.
The engine does not simply detect geolocated keywords ("plumber Paris"). It observes whether users exhibit a behavioral interest in nearby results, even on seemingly non-local queries. This is a continuously learning machine signal.
How does this statement change our approach to local SEO?
Historically, it was assumed that certain keywords systematically triggered the local pack ("restaurant", "hairdresser", etc.). Google tells us here that the display is not static: it adapts based on actual usage.
If your sector generates few Maps clicks for a given query, the block may disappear in favor of classic organic results. Conversely, a query initially non-local can switch to local if user behavior indicates it. The algorithm reacts to patterns of interaction, not just fixed rules.
What metrics does Google use to measure this behavior?
Google never details its precise metrics, but we can infer several signals: click-through rate on the local pack, time spent on Maps after clicking, queries reformulated with geographic modifiers, and interactions with listings (calls, directions).
The algorithm likely aggregates these signals over user cohorts to avoid individual biases. A query tested by millions of users offers a robust behavioral signal. This is machine learning applied to local search intent.
- The display of Maps is not determined solely by the query — the observed user behavior weighs heavily in the algorithmic decision.
- A query can switch between local and organic display according to the evolution of click patterns over time.
- Aggregated behavioral signals (Maps clicks, listing interactions, reformulations) continuously feed the algorithm's learning.
- Classic local optimization remains necessary but no longer guarantees visibility on its own if behavioral intent is not detected.
- Google continuously tests Maps vs organic display to maximize measured user satisfaction.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. For several years, we've seen unexplained fluctuations in the display of the local pack for certain queries. The same search can show Maps one day, then disappear the following week without changes in organic results or local listings.
What Google confirms here is that these variations are not bugs, but rather a reflection of continuous behavioral learning. Local SEOs tracking their Maps positions know that stability no longer exists — the display becomes contextual and adaptive. [To be verified] remains the actual scope of this signal: Google never quantifies its relative weight against other local ranking criteria.
What biases does this approach introduce into the results?
Let's be honest: a system based on user behavior creates a reinforcement effect. If Maps doesn't appear initially, users can't click on it, so the behavioral signal remains weak, and thus Maps continues not to display. It's a self-referential cycle.
For new niches or emerging queries, the algorithm lacks behavioral data. It must then test the Maps display to gather signal — but how long before a critical mass of data is achieved? Google doesn't say. Small local players may be penalized by this learning delay.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Some queries remain forced local regardless of behavior: "restaurant near me", "emergency pharmacy", any search with explicit geographic modifier. The local intent is so evident that Google shortcuts the behavioral analysis.
Conversely, pure informational queries ("history of Paris", "tarte tatin recipe") will never trigger Maps, even if some users click on local results. There are intent thresholds below which behavioral signals are insufficient. But these thresholds? Completely opaque.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you optimize to trigger the Maps display for your target queries?
First step: identify strategic queries where Maps appears intermittently. Use a local rank tracking tool to measure the frequency of the pack display. If Maps appears less than 50% of the time, it's a signal that user behavior isn't local enough.
Then, work on strengthening signals of local intent: optimize your Google Business Profile to maximize clicks (attractive photos, recent reviews, regular posts), encourage interactions (calls, direction requests) from the profile, and create content that generates searches with geographic modifiers. The more your brand generates local behavior, the more Google will associate your queries with Maps.
What should be avoided to maintain Maps visibility?
Classic mistake: neglecting user experience on the Google Business Profile. If your profile generates clicks but zero interactions (no calls, no direction requests, immediate bounce), Google interprets this as a negative signal. Your profile does not meet local intent.
Another trap: targeting too broad queries without geographic anchoring. "Marketing consultant" has no reason to trigger Maps if users are primarily seeking online expertise, not a physical appointment. Focus on queries where local intent is at least latent.
How to measure the impact of this behavioral variable?
Unfortunately, Google does not provide any direct metrics on the weight of user behavior in Maps display. You must cross-reference multiple sources: Google Business Profile Insights (clicks, calls, directions), Search Console (impressions/clicks on local queries), and third-party local rank tracking tools.
Pay particular attention to temporal variations: a sudden drop in Maps visibility without changes in your profile or those of your competitors likely indicates a behavioral shift on the query. Analyze whether a competitor has changed their engagement strategy or if an external event has altered search intent.
- Audit the frequency of Maps display for your top 20 local queries with a dedicated tracking tool.
- Optimize your Google Business Profile to maximize measurable interactions (calls, directions, site clicks).
- Create local content that encourages searches with geographic modifiers related to your brand.
- Analyze click patterns in Search Console to identify underutilized local potential queries.
- Test local awareness campaigns (reviews, citations, local PR) to strengthen geographic behavioral signals.
- Monitor monthly Maps display variations to detect behavioral shifts on your queries.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le comportement utilisateur peut-il faire disparaître le pack Maps même sur une requête locale évidente ?
Comment Google mesure-t-il le comportement utilisateur sans violer la confidentialité ?
Une fiche Google Business Profile bien optimisée suffit-elle à garantir l'affichage Maps ?
Les variations d'affichage Maps sont-elles liées à la localisation de l'utilisateur ?
Peut-on manipuler le comportement utilisateur pour forcer l'affichage Maps ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h12 · published on 09/08/2019
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