Google Maps Lead Generation: 100 London Yoga Studio Leads Pulled With Margo
Google Maps lead generation works best when the list includes more than business names. For this campaign, we used Margo to find 100 London yoga studio leads from Google Maps and export the contact data: emails, verified-email status, phone numbers, websites, social profiles, and Maps links. The headline finding was simple: all 100 exported leads had an email and website, while 66 had a Margo-verified email address.
That makes the list useful for a real local-business outreach campaign. A web designer, SEO consultant, or wellness marketing agency could use it to inspect each studio's website, booking flow, local search presence, and social activity before writing a pitch.
Campaign Setup
The target was narrow on purpose: yoga studios in London.
In Margo, we selected:
- Source: Google Maps
- Business type: Yoga Studios
- Country: United Kingdom
- City: London
- Number of leads: 100
What The Export Included
The exported CSV included the fields that matter for local business prospecting:
| Export field | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Business name | Identifies the prospect |
| Primary outreach channel | |
| Email Verified | Helps prioritise safer first sends |
| Phone | Backup channel and qualification signal |
| Address | Territory planning and localisation |
| Website | Research surface for web, SEO, and booking-flow offers |
| Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn | Social research and presence signals |
| Google Maps URL | Source record and local listing reference |
| Contact score | Quick quality signal for the record |
The Results
The search returned 100 leads.
The strongest result was email coverage. Every exported lead had an email address. More importantly, 66 of the 100 emails were marked as verified. That split is useful because a serious outbound operator should not treat every email the same way. The verified set can become the first send segment. The remaining 34 can be reviewed manually, enriched, or contacted through another route if the business looks valuable enough.
Phone coverage came in at 82%. That gives the list a second channel. For local business sales, phone data is still useful, especially when the lead has a strong website fit or obvious commercial value. It also helps with manual qualification before an agency spends time writing a tailored pitch.
Website coverage was 100%. For this specific campaign, that was the most valuable part of the export. A yoga studio's website can reveal booking friction, outdated design, missing conversion paths, slow pages, weak testimonials, poor mobile layout, unclear pricing, or inconsistent local SEO. Those are the details that turn a cold email from "we help wellness brands grow" into something specific enough to earn a reply.
Social coverage was broad but not universal. 82 leads had at least one social profile. Instagram appeared on 76 records, Facebook on 64, and LinkedIn on 18. That is the pattern you would expect from a wellness category: Instagram matters much more than LinkedIn for day-to-day customer acquisition, while LinkedIn tends to show up only for larger, more professionalised, or founder-led businesses.
The most useful takeaway is the difference between email availability and send readiness. Finding 100 email addresses is helpful. Knowing which 66 are verified is more useful. It lets the campaign start with a cleaner first batch and keeps the rest of the list available for review instead of throwing every address into the same sequence.
How To Use A List Like This
A practical workflow would look like this:
- Export the full list.
- Segment verified emails from unverified emails.
- Scan websites for obvious outreach angles.
- Prioritise studios with both a verified email and a clear website improvement opportunity.
- Write a short first email that references one real observation.
- Use phone or social data only for high-fit accounts that deserve manual follow-up.
The data does not write the pitch. It gives you enough context to avoid a lazy one.
Campaign Funnel Estimate
If the operator sent to all 100 contacts, a simple benchmark model might look like this:
| Stage | Count |
|---|---|
| Total leads | 100 |
| Emailed | 100 |
| Opens at 30% | 30 |
| Replies at 5% | 5 |
| Calls booked at 2% | 2 |
| Meetings held at 1% | 1 |
What Margo Did In This Run
All of this was pulled using Margo, which aggregates local business data including emails, phone numbers, websites, social profiles, and Google Maps links. The full search and export took a few minutes at margoleads.io.
For agencies and sales teams, the point is speed plus structure. You can search a niche, export a usable list, segment by contact quality, and start researching accounts without manually copying data from Google Maps, websites, and social profiles.
Want to run a similar search for your target market? Start free at margoleads.io.
FAQ
What is Google Maps lead generation?
Google Maps lead generation is the process of finding local businesses from Google Maps and turning them into a prospecting list with business names, websites, emails, phone numbers, addresses, and profile links.
Can Margo find verified emails for local businesses?
Yes. In this campaign, Margo exported 100 London yoga studio leads and marked 66 emails as verified. Coverage varies by category and location.
Is a 100-lead campaign enough for outbound?
It can be enough for a focused test. In this run, 100 leads produced 66 verified-email records, which is enough to test one narrow offer before expanding the campaign.
Should I email every lead immediately?
No. Prioritise verified emails first, then review unverified records manually. Use the website, phone, and social fields to decide which accounts deserve extra research.
What kind of agency could use this list?
Web design, SEO, booking-system, paid search, and wellness marketing agencies could all use a yoga studio list like this, as long as the pitch is tied to a specific visible business improvement.

