NAP Consistency & Citations: The Boring Thing That Ranks You

It’s not glamorous, but consistent business information across the web is one of the most reliable ways to climb in local search. Here’s what ‘NAP’ and ‘citations’ mean, and why they quietly decide who ranks.
What NAP and citations are
NAP stands for Name, Address, Phone — the core facts about your business. A citation is any place online that lists those facts: directories, maps, review sites, your website. Together they’re the reference data search engines use to trust who and where you are.
Why consistency matters
When your NAP is identical everywhere, search engines are confident about your business and rank you higher. When it’s inconsistent — an old phone here, a wrong suite number there — that confidence drops. Google’s official local-ranking guidance lists complete, accurate information as a core local ranking factor for exactly this reason.
Where to fix it first
Start with the highest-authority listings: Google Business Profile, Apple Maps, Bing Places, Facebook, and the major review sites. Then work down to industry and local directories. The goal is a single, identical NAP everywhere it appears.
Keep it from drifting
The hard part isn’t fixing citations once — it’s keeping them consistent as you move, change hours, or update a number. Bird Local’s listings integrations (and BrandingSignal) distribute and monitor your information so it stays consistent automatically. Pair it with our Google Business Profile checklist.
Sources & further reading
- Harvard Business School research — Reviews, Reputation, and Revenue.
- Northwestern University’s Spiegel Research Center — How Online Reviews Influence Sales.
- the U.S. Federal Trade Commission — Consumer Reviews and Testimonials Rule.
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