With so many businesses serving their patrons from curb-side, parking lot, and back door deliveries to open field and parking lot seating – businesses have had to find creative ways to conduct business.

This author has personally experienced these, and with them, failures and successes of each.

Image of Google Pl

Success fills me with pride for the business owner (and sometimes my car smells like spicy pad thai), but failure can be frustrating since it often feels unavoidable – at least in my experience. The most frequent issue I see is navigation. Whether it’s missing or fallen directions or pick-up notes printed on 8″x11″ paper taped to a door (meant to be read from the curb), getting traffic to the business’s front door can be a real challenge.

Simply by using Map Plus Codes (MPC), however, could have prevented most of these direction errors.

MPCs allow a business to maintain their regular map address, while simultaneously use a separate map link for a non-address or alternate-address location for directing traffic for things like a back-door, side-street, or adjacent lot as a customer pick-up location. Or any of the examples below…

  • Adjacent lot pick-up locations
  • Auto race park check-in & first-aid stations (like Lime Rock)
  • COVID testing entrance
  • Emergency stations & shelter check-ins
  • Drive-up food pantry entrances
  • Farmer & food market booths
  • Food trucks & vending carts
  • Group meeting location
  • Information booths (like at parks)
  • Mobile blood-donation stops
  • Parking lot dining or pick-up locations
  • Showers at an outdoor concert (just sayin’)
  • Side-street pickup locations
  • Temporary municipal or emergency outposts, structures, or buildings
  • Tour operator ticket booths
  • Trade show booths
  • VIP & special needs entrances
  • Water dock-side businesses like SailTime

Creating these Map Plus Codes (MPC) is super easy using Google Maps in just a few steps. I’ve outlined three-scenarios which should cover most needs.

Scenario 1 – when you are physically at the location (mobile) – useful for when you arrive at a destination and need to generate a map code

  1. Open Google Maps and make certain your location settings are ON
  2. Press and hold your finger on the area of the map you will be until a map pin appears
  3. Click on the address or where it says, “Dropped Pin” and scroll to the bottom of the page where you see the five blue dots, like this ⇒map-plus-code-icon.jpg
  4. The first string of numbers and letters is the code!
Illustration how to find a Google Maps Plus Code
Scenario 3 – directions for PC use

Scenario 2 – to pre-generate an MPC from a (mobile) map view – use this format to generate a map code in advance of arriving at the location

  1. Open Google Maps and make certain your location settings are ON
  2. Search for the location near your interest
  3. Press and hold your finger on the area of the map you will be until a map pin appears
  4. Click on the address or where it says, “Dropped Pin” and scroll to the bottom of the page where you see the five blue dots.
  5. Same as above – the first string of numbers and letters is the code

Scenario 3 – if using a PC (see illustration below)

  1. Like scenario two, but click and hold your cursor on the map until a pin appears
  2. Click on the latitude/longitude coordinates in the address bar that opens open at the bottom of the page
  3. Your MPC appears in the left within the information bar next to

Whichever situation best fits your needs, just use these as you would a regular address in text (e.g., RMP4+CQ) or as a clickable link – the latter requiring no instruction, simply clicking on it will open the default map for your customer.

Originally published here.