In 2026, “data drift” is the silent killer of local SEO. This occurs when directory feeds change hands, old APIs break, or a well-meaning employee updates the phone number on one site but not the others. Google cross-references your NAP details against the entire web to build a “confidence score”. If Google finds your business name abbreviated (e.g., “Bob’s LLC” instead of “Robert’s Limited Liability Company”) on different sites, it loses trust in who you are.
You need a three-step audit process. First, run a data scan. Use a NAP consistency checker tool (like BrightLocal or Moz Local) to scrape the web and highlight exactly where your data is wrong or missing. Pay special attention to address “standardization” (e.g., “Suite” vs “Ste”, “Street” vs “St.”). Second, prioritize by impact. Fix your Google Business Profile and major aggregators first. Google treats its own platform as the authoritative source, so inconsistencies here create ripple effects across your entire citation network. Third, implement a “Settled Data” policy. Choose one primary format for your name (exactly as it appears on legal paperwork) and never deviate. Do not change your address formatting across different directories. Use a ticketing system to ensure that every time you change your store hours, you manually update not just your front door, but your GBP, Apple Maps, and Bing Places immediately.

