Most SEO advice is written for service businesses trying to rank nationally for competitive keywords. Cafe SEO is almost entirely different. The overwhelming majority of your potential customers are searching within a half-mile to two-mile radius, and they want to make a decision in the next few minutes.
That changes everything about your strategy. You are not trying to outrank a major media outlet or build a content library. You are trying to appear in Google's Map Pack — the three local business listings that appear above the organic results — when someone nearby searches 'coffee shop near me,' 'espresso bar open now,' or 'best cafe in [neighborhood name].'
Google decides who appears in the Map Pack based on three signals:
- Relevance: Does your business profile match what the person is searching for?
- Proximity: How physically close is your cafe to the searcher?
- Prominence: Does Google see enough signals — reviews, citations, website authority — to trust that your cafe is a real, active, well-regarded business?
You cannot control proximity. But you have significant control over relevance and prominence, and that is where local SEO work actually lives.
The practical implication: a well-optimized GBP with strong reviews and consistent citations will regularly outrank a cafe that has a better-designed website but has neglected its local signals. Google prioritizes the signals closest to the searcher's immediate intent.