Which platform gives your business more visibility and why should you care?
Google Business Profile and Bing Places are local listing platforms that allow businesses to appear in map results and on search engine interfaces. These profiles feed important details such as contact information, services, hours and location into Google and Microsoft search products. While both increase local visibility, they operate within different ecosystems, and their reach, integration and value vary significantly.
Here's What We Have Covered In This Article
What are Bing Places and Google Business Profile?
Both platforms serve the same fundamental purpose: giving search engines structured data about your business so that it can be presented clearly to users searching in your area. However, their usage and integration differ in key ways.
Google Business Profile (GBP):
- Tied into Google Search, Google Maps, and AI Overviews
- Dominates mobile search and map-based discovery
- Feeds directly into local packs and knowledge panels
- Highly visible on both branded and category-based searches
- Supports direct customer actions such as calls, bookings and reviews
Bing Places:
- Integrated into Bing Search and Bing Maps
- Linked to Microsoft services including Copilot, Edge and Outlook integrations
- Less visible on mobile search but present on Windows-based ecosystem
- Primarily leveraged on desktop and embedded Microsoft tools
- Also feeds some third-party voice assistants and browser search bars
It is easy to assume Bing Places is a minor player, but its reach is often underestimated. Many businesses neglect Bing because of its smaller overall user share, yet for specific demographics and device types, it can remain relevant.
Ultimately, Google Business Profile delivers broader exposure, but treating both as interchangeable misses the unique roles each plays in the customer search process.
Pro Tip: Use analytics from both dashboards to track platform-specific impressions and decide whether dual management is justified.
Where do your listings actually show up?
Search visibility is not limited to a single page of results. Listings can appear across a range of formats, especially as AI-driven results become more common.
Google Business Profile visibility includes:
- Local map packs at the top of search results
- Branded panels on the right of desktop search queries
- Business previews within Google Maps searches
- Inline answers in AI Overviews and summary boxes on mobile
- Voice response results through Google Assistant
Bing Places visibility includes:
- Sidebar business panels in Bing desktop results
- Bing Maps searches from desktop and Office-integrated devices
- Results presented through Microsoft Copilot for business questions
- Appearance in certain AI tools integrated with Bing APIs
- Results on devices where Bing is the default engine (e.g. Some Windows machines)
A search like “plumber near me” on Google will almost certainly return a three-pack of business listings drawn from Google Business Profiles, often with direct links to call or visit. The same search on Bing will show fewer immediate options but may present a full sidebar profile if the business is listed.
What this means is that customers may find you in quite different ways depending on their default device, app or AI assistant. Coverage across platforms improves the chances of being seen and selected.
Pro Tip: If you import your Google Business Profile data into Bing Places, verify that all fields remain accurate as formatting may shift.






