The short answer: claim the profile, set Disability services and support organisation as your primary category, use service areas (not a hidden home address), add every service in plain English, upload ten real photos, then run a 30-minute monthly routine of posts, review replies and Q&A. Field-by-field detail below.
When a parent searches “disability support near me” or a coordinator checks who services Penrith, the map results appear above every website. Those results are powered entirely by Google Business Profiles, they are free, and most providers have either never claimed theirs or abandoned it after setup. A complete profile routinely outranks providers ten times larger.
Your real trading name, nothing else. “Sunrise Support Services” is correct; “Sunrise Support Services | NDIS Provider Sydney” is keyword stuffing that Google suspends profiles for.
Primary: Disability services and support organisation for most providers. Add every genuinely relevant secondary: home help service agency, aged care, occupational therapist, physiotherapist, depending on your services. Categories are the strongest ranking signal on the profile.
If participants visit your premises, show the address. If you deliver supports in homes and the community, hide the address and set service areas instead: list the suburbs and regions you genuinely cover. Never use a residential address as a fake office.
Add each service as its own item with a plain-English description: supported independent living, community access, support coordination, therapy supports. Mirror the words participants use, not your internal jargon.
750 characters: who you support, where, what you offer, how you are managed (plan, self, agency), and your response promise. There is a copy-paste template in our getting clients guide.
Ten or more real photos: your team, your vehicles, your premises, activities (with consent). Real beats polished; stock photos are detectable and quietly erode trust.
Once the profile is humming, the next multiplier is ranking your website alongside it: that is NDIS SEO, and the two reinforce each other.
Category choice is one of the biggest levers in the map pack, and most providers get it wrong. Set your primary category to the one that best matches your core service, then add accurate secondary categories.
Pick only categories you genuinely serve, because Google matches your profile to searches partly on category. The wrong primary category is a common reason a real, well-reviewed provider never appears for “near me” searches.
Reviews are the strongest trust and ranking signal a profile has, and 98 percent of people read them before choosing a local service. Build a steady, compliant flow rather than a one-off burst.
Our free resources include review-request scripts you can copy.
A great profile is necessary but not sufficient. Three things outside the profile decide how high it ranks: consistent citations (your name, address and phone identical across directories), genuine pages on your website for the suburbs and services you deliver, and local relevance signals like reviews that mention locations and services. Treat the profile as the centre of a wider local SEO effort, not a standalone task.
A free growth plan shows you what to do, in what order, for your provider type and region. You keep it either way.
For most providers the primary category is Disability services and support organisation, with genuinely relevant secondaries added such as occupational therapist or home help service agency. Categories are the strongest ranking signal on the profile.
Show the address only if participants visit your premises. Home and community based providers should hide the address and set honest service areas covering the suburbs they genuinely service.
Make the ask part of your process: after a positive milestone, send the direct review link by SMS with no pressure. Reply to every review. Never incentivise reviews; it breaches Google’s rules and invites Code of Conduct scrutiny.
Sources & further reading: Google Business Profile · NDIS SEO services · How to get more NDIS clients
A specialist reviews your visibility against the providers competing in your catchment, and sends a written growth plan within two business days. You keep it either way.