Course → Module 10: Measuring, Diagnosing, and Maintaining
Session 8 of 10

Entity infrastructure that is not maintained reverts to invisible within six to twelve months. Citations drift. Schema breaks during CMS updates. GBP listings get modified by user suggestions. Competitors build their entity signals while yours stagnate. Maintenance is not optional. It is the difference between a one-time project and a durable competitive advantage.

The Three Maintenance Cycles

graph LR subgraph Weekly["Weekly (15 min)"] W1["Check GBP
Insights"] W2["Respond to
all reviews"] W3["Check for GBP
suggested edits"] end subgraph Monthly["Monthly (1 hour)"] M1["Audit top 10
citations for NAP"] M2["Run AI
visibility test"] M3["Check GSC
Enhancements"] M4["Review branded
query volume"] end subgraph Quarterly["Quarterly (3 hours)"] Q1["Full citation
audit (top 20)"] Q2["Content pruning
review"] Q3["Competitor entity
comparison"] Q4["Schema validation
all pages"] Q5["Update entity
scorecard"] end

Weekly Tasks (15 Minutes)

Task What to Do Why It Matters
GBP Insights review Check views, searches, actions in GBP dashboard Early warning of visibility changes
Review responses Respond to every new review within 48 hours Engagement signal, entity activity confirmation
Suggested edits check Review and reject any incorrect user-suggested changes Prevents unauthorized entity data modification

Weekly tasks are lightweight but critical. The review response task alone takes minutes per review but signals active entity engagement to Google. Missing a week is not catastrophic. Missing a month creates a visible gap in your activity signals.

Monthly Tasks (1 Hour)

Task What to Do Why It Matters
Top 10 citation audit Verify NAP accuracy on your 10 most important listings Catches citation drift before it fragments your entity
AI visibility test Run 5 queries across 3 AI platforms, record results Tracks whether entity infrastructure is translating to AI visibility
GSC Enhancements check Review schema errors and warnings Catches schema breakage before rich results disappear
Branded query review Check branded search volume trend in GSC Measures entity awareness growth or decline

Monthly tasks catch slow degradation. A citation that drifts in March will not cause visible damage until May or June. Monthly checks catch the drift before the damage compounds.

Quarterly Tasks (3 Hours)

Task What to Do Why It Matters
Full citation audit Verify NAP accuracy on all 20+ citations Comprehensive consistency check
Content pruning review Identify thin, outdated, or off-topic content Prevents topical authority dilution
Competitor entity comparison Audit top 3 competitors' entity infrastructure Identifies where competitors have surpassed you
Schema validation Run Rich Results Test on all schema-enabled pages Catches silent schema breakage
Entity scorecard update Re-measure all 7 metrics from Session 10.1 Tracks overall entity visibility trend

The Calendar Template

Block specific times in your actual calendar. Entity maintenance that is not scheduled does not happen.

Day/Week Task Duration Owner
Every Monday morning Weekly GBP check + review responses 15 minutes Assign to team member
First Monday of each month Monthly entity diagnostic 1 hour Assign to team member
First week of Jan, Apr, Jul, Oct Quarterly deep dive 3 hours Assign to team member

Delegation

Entity maintenance does not require senior expertise for every task. Weekly GBP checks and review responses can be delegated to any team member with GBP access. Monthly citation checks require attention to detail but not technical knowledge. Quarterly tasks (schema validation, competitor analysis) benefit from someone with SEO awareness.

The critical requirement is consistency, not expertise. A junior team member who checks citations monthly on schedule is more valuable to your entity infrastructure than an expert who does a thorough audit once and never follows up.

Further Reading

Assignment

Create your entity infrastructure maintenance calendar:

  1. List all weekly, monthly, and quarterly tasks from the tables above.
  2. For each task, assign a specific person responsible.
  3. Block the actual calendar time: 15 minutes weekly, 1 hour monthly, 3 hours quarterly.
  4. Create a simple tracking spreadsheet: date, task completed, findings, actions taken.
  5. Schedule the first quarterly deep dive for the next available quarter start.