Since its inception in 2008, David Mihm has been running the Local Search Ranking Factors survey. It is the go-to resource for helping businesses and digital marketers understand what drives local search results and what they should focus on to increase their rankings. This year, David is focusing on his new company, Tidings, a genius service that automatically generates perfectly branded newsletters by pulling in the content from your Facebook page and leading content sources in your industry. While he will certainly still be connected to the local search industry, he’s spending less time on local search research, and has passed the reins to me to run the survey.
David is one of the smartest, nicest, most honest, and most generous people you will ever meet. In so many ways, he has helped direct and shape my career into what it is today. He has mentored me and promoted me by giving me my first speaking opportunities at Local U events, collaborated with me on research projects, and recommended me as a speaker at important industry conferences. And now, he has passed on one of the most important resources in our industry into my care. I am extremely grateful.
Thank you, David, for all that you have done for me personally, and for the local search industry. I am sure I speak for all who know you personally and those that know you through your work in this space; we wish you great success with your new venture!
I’m excited to dig into the results, so without further ado, read below for my observations, or:
Click here for the full results!
Shifting priorities
Here are the results of the thematic factors in 2017, compared to 2015:
Thematic Factors |
2015 |
2017 |
Change |
---|---|---|---|
GMB Signals |
21.63% |
19.01% |
-12.11% |
Link Signals |
14.83% |
17.31% |
+16.73% |
On-Page Signals |
14.23% |
13.81% |
-2.95% |
Citation Signals |
17.14% |
13.31% |
-22.36% |
Review Signals |
10.80% |
13.13% |
+21.53% |
Behavioral Signals |
8.60% |
10.17% |
+18.22% |
Personalization |
8.21% |
9.76% |
+18.81% |
Social Signals |
4.58% |
3.53% |
-22.89% |
If you look at the Change column, you might get the impression that there were some major shifts in priorities this year, but the Change number doesn’t tell the whole story. Social factors may have seen the biggest drop with a -22.89% change, but a shift in emphasis on social factors from 4.58% to 3.53% isn’t particularly noteworthy.
The decreased emphasis on citations compared to the increased emphasis on link and review factors, is reflective of shifting focus, but as I’ll discuss below, citations are still crucial to laying down a proper foundation in local search. We’re just getting smarter about how far you need to go with them.
The importance of proximity
For the past two years, Physical Address in City of Search has been the #1 local pack/finder ranking factor. This makes sense. It’s tough to rank in the local pack of a city that you’re not physically located in.
Well, as of this year’s survey, the new #1 factor is… drumroll please…
Proximity of Address to the Point of Search
This factor has been climbing from position #8 in 2014, to position #4 in 2015, to claim the #1 spot in 2017. I’ve been seeing this factor’s increased importance for at least the past year, and clearly others have noticed as well. As I note in my recent post on proximity, this leads to poor results in most categories. I’m looking for the best lawyer in town, not the closest one. Hopefully we see the dial get turned down on this in the near future.
While Proximity of Address to the Point of Search is playing a stronger role than ever in the rankings, it’s certainly not the only factor impacting rankings. Businesses with higher relevancy and prominence will rank in a wider radius around their business and take a larger percentage of the local search pie. There’s still plenty to be gained from investing in local search strategies.
Here’s how the proximity factors changed from 2015 to 2017:
Proximity Factors | 2015 | 2017 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Proximity of Address to the Point of Search | #4 | #1 | +3 |
Proximity of Address to Centroid of Other Businesses in Industry | #20 | #30 | -10 |
Proximity of Address to Centroid | #16 | #50 | -34 |
While we can see that Proximity to the Point of Search has seen a significant boost to become the new #1 factor, the other proximity factors which we once thought were extremely important have seen a major drop.
I’d caution people against ignoring Proximity of Address to Centroid, though. There is a situation where I think it still plays a role in local rankings. When you’re searching from outside of a city for a key phrase that contains the city name (Ex: Denver plumbers), then I believe Google geo-locates the search to the centroid and Proximity of Address to Centroid impacts rankings. This is important for business categories that are trying to attract searchers from outside of their city, such as attractions and hotels.
Local SEOs love links
Looking through the results and the comments, a clear theme emerges: Local SEOs are all about the links these days.
In this year’s survey results, we’re seeing significant increases for link-related factors across the board:
Local Pack/Finder Link Factors | 2015 | 2017 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Quality/Authority of Inbound Links to Domain | #12 | #4 | +8 |
Domain Authority of Website | #6 | #6 | - |
Diversity of Inbound Links to Domain | #27 | #16 | +11 |
Quality/Authority of Inbound Links to GMB Landing Page URL | #15 | #11 | +4 |
Quantity of Inbound Links to Domain | #34 | #17 | +17 |
Quantity of Inbound Links to Domain from Locally Relevant Domains | #31 | #20 | +11 |
Page Authority of GMB Landing Page URL | #24 | #22 | +2 |
Quantity of Inbound Links to Domain from Industry-Relevant Domains | #41 | #28 | +13 |
Product/Service Keywords in Anchor Text of Inbound Links to Domain | - | #33 | +17 |
Location Keywords in Anchor Text of Inbound Links to Domain | #45 | #38 | +7 |
Diversity of Inbound Links to GMB Landing Page URL | - | #39 | +11 |
Quantity of Inbound Links to GMB Landing Page URL from LocallyRelevant Domains | - | #48 | +2 |
Google is still leaning heavily on links as a primary measure of a business’ authority and prominence, and the local search practitioners that invest time and resources to secure quality links for their clients are reaping the ranking rewards.
Fun fact: "links" appears 76 times in the commentary.
By comparison, "citations" were mentioned 32 times, and "reviews" were mentioned 45 times.
Shifting priorities with citations
At first glance at all the declining factors in the table below, you might think that yes, citations have declined in importance, but the situation is more nuanced than that.
Local Pack/Finder Citation Factors | 2015 | 2017 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Consistency of Citations on The Primary Data Sources | n/a | #5 | n/a |
Quality/Authority of Structured Citations | #5 | #8 | -3 |
Consistency of Citations on Tier 1 Citation Sources | n/a | #9 | n/a |
Quality/Authority of Unstructured Citations (Newspaper Articles, Blog Posts, Gov Sites, Industry Associations) | #18 | #21 | -3 |
Quantity of Citations from Locally Relevant Domains | #21 | #29 | -8 |
Prominence on Key Industry-Relevant Domains | n/a | #37 | n/a |
Quantity of Citations from Industry-Relevant Domains | #19 | #40 | -21 |
Enhancement/Completeness of Citations | n/a | #44 | n/a |
Proper Category Associations on Aggregators and Tier 1 Citation Sources | n/a | #45 | n/a |
Quantity of Structured Citations (IYPs, Data Aggregators) | #14 | #47 | -33 |
Consistency of Structured Citations | #2 | n/a | n/a |
Quantity of Unstructured Citations (Newspaper Articles, Blog Posts) | #39 | - | -11 |
You’ll notice that there are many “n/a” cells on this table. This is because I made some changes to the citation factors. I elaborate on this in the survey results, but for your quick reference here:
- To reflect the reality that you don’t need to clean up your citations on hundreds of sites, Consistency of Structured Citations has been broken down into 4 new factors:
- Consistency of Citations on The Primary Data Sources
- Consistency of Citations on Tier 1 Citation Sources
- Consistency of Citations on Tier 2 Citation Sources
- Consistency of Citations on Tier 3 Citation Sources
- I added these new citation factors:
- Enhancement/Completeness of Citations
- Presence of Business on Expert-Curated "Best of" and Similar Lists
- Prominence on Key Industry-Relevant Domains
- Proper Category Associations on Aggregators and Top Tier Citation Sources
Note that there are now more citation factors showing up, so some of the scores given to citation factors in 2015 are now being split across multiple factors in 2017:
- In 2015, there were 7 citation factors in the top 50
- In 2017, there are 10 citation factors in the top 50
That said, overall, I do think that the emphasis on citations has seen some decline (certainly in favor of links), and rightly so. In particular, there is an increasing focus on quality over quantity.
I was disappointed to see that Presence of Business on Expert-Curated "Best of" and Similar Lists didn’t make the top 50. I think this factor can provide a significant boost to a business’ local prominence and, in turn, their rankings. Granted, it’s a challenging factor to directly influence, but I would love to see an agency make a concerted effort to outreach to get their clients listed on these, measure the impact, and do a case study. Any takers?
GMB factors
There is no longer an editable description on your GMB listing, so any factors related to the GMB description field were removed from the survey. This is a good thing, since the field was typically poorly used, or abused, in the past. Google is on record saying that they didn’t use it for ranking, so stuffing it with keywords has always been more likely to get you penalized than to help you rank.
Here are the changes in GMB factors:
GMB Factors | 2015 | 2017 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Proper GMB Category Associations | #3 | #3 | - |
Product/Service Keyword in GMB Business Title | #7 | #7 | - |
Location Keyword in GMB Business Title | #17 | #12 | +5 |
Verified GMB Listing | #13 | #13 | - |
GMB Primary Category Matches a Broader Category of the Search Category (e.g. primary category=restaurant & search=pizza) | #22 | #15 | +7 |
Age of GMB Listing | #23 | #25 | -2 |
Local Area Code on GMB Listing | #33 | #32 | +1 |
Association of Photos with GMB Listing | - | #36 | +14 |
Matching Google Account Domain to GMB Landing Page Domain | #36 | - | -14 |
While we did see some upward movement in the Location Keyword in GMB Business Title factor, I’m shocked to see that Product/Service Keyword in GMB Business Title did not also go up this year. It is hands-down one of the strongest factors in local pack/finder rankings. Maybe THE strongest, after Proximity of Address to the Point of Search. It seems to me that everyone and their dog is complaining about how effective this is for spammers.
Be warned: if you decide to stuff your business title with keywords, international spam hunter Joy Hawkins will probably hunt your listing down and get you penalized. :)
Also, remember what happened back when everyone was spamming links with private blog networks, and then got slapped by the Penguin Update? Google has a complete history of changes to your GMB listing, and they could decide at any time to roll out an update that will retroactively penalize your listing. Is it really worth the risk?
Age of GMB Listing might have dropped two spots, but it was ranked extremely high by Joy Hawkins and Colan Neilsen. They’re both top contributors at the Google My Business forum, and I’m not saying they know something we don’t know, but uh, maybe they know something we don’t know.
Association of Photos with GMB Listing is a factor that I’ve heard some chatter about lately. It didn’t make the top 50 in 2015, but now it’s coming in at #36. Apparently, some Google support people have said it can help your rankings. I suppose it makes sense as a quality consideration. Listings with photos might indicate a more engaged business owner. I wonder if it matters whether the photos are uploaded by the business owner, or if it’s a steady stream of incoming photo uploads from the general public to the listing. I can imagine that a business that’s regularly getting photo uploads from users might be a signal of a popular and important business.
While this factor came in as somewhat benign in the Negative Factors section (#26), No Hours of Operation on GMB Listing might be something to pay attention to, as well. Nick Neels noted in the comments:
Our data showed listings that were incomplete and missing hours of operation were highly likely to be filtered out of the results and lose visibility. As a result, we worked with our clients to gather hours for any listings missing them. Once the hours of operation were uploaded, the listings no longer were filtered.
Behavioral factors
Here are the numbers:
GMB Factors | 2015 | 2017 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Clicks to Call Business | #38 | #35 | +3 |
Driving Directions to Business Clicks | #29 | #43 | -14 |
Not very exciting, but these numbers do NOT reflect the serious impact that behavioral factors are having on local search rankings and the increased impact they will have in the future. In fact, we’re never going to get numbers that truly reflect the value of behavioral factors, because many of the factors that Google has access to are inaccessible and unmeasurable by SEOs. The best place to get a sense of the impact of these factors is in the comments. When asked about what he’s seeing driving rankings this year, Phil Rozek notes:
There seem to be more “black box” ranking scenarios, which to me suggests that behavioral factors have grown in importance. What terms do people type in before clicking on you? Where do those people search from? How many customers click on you rather than on the competitor one spot above you? If Google moves you up or down in the rankings, will many people still click? I think we’re somewhere past the beginning of the era of mushy ranking factors.
Mike Blumenthal also talks about behavioral factors in his comments:
Google is in a transition period from a web-based linking approach to a knowledge graph semantic approach. As we move towards a mobile-first index, the lack of linking as a common mobile practice, voice search, and single-response answers, Google needs to and has been developing ranking factors that are not link-dependent. Content, actual in-store visitations, on-page verifiable truth, third-party validation, and news-worthiness are all becoming increasingly important.
But Google never throws anything away. Citations and links as we have known them will continue to play a part in the ranking algo, but they will be less and less important as Google increases their understanding of entity prominence and the real world.
And David Mihm says:
It’s a very difficult concept to survey about, but the overriding ranking factor in local — across both pack and organic results — is entity authority. Ask yourself, “If I were Google, how would I define a local entity, and once I did, how would I rank it relative to others?” and you’ll have the underlying algorithmic logic for at least the next decade.
- How widely known is the entity? Especially locally, but oh man, if it’s nationally known, searchers should REALLY know about it.
- What are people saying about the entity? (It should probably rank for similar phrases)
- What is the engagement with the entity? Do people recognize it when they see it in search results? How many Gmail users read its newsletter? How many call or visit it after seeing it in search results? How many visit its location?
David touches on this topic in the survey response above, and then goes full BEAST MODE on the future of local rankings in his must-read post on Tidings, The Difference-Making Local Ranking Factor of 2020. (David, thank you for letting me do the Local Search Ranking Factors, but please, don’t ever leave us.)
The thing is, Google has access to so much additional data now through Chrome, Android, Maps, Ads, and Search. They’d be crazy to not use this data to help them understand which businesses are favored by real, live humans, and then rank those businesses accordingly. You can’t game this stuff, folks. In the future, my ranking advice might just be: "Be an awesome business that people like and that people interact with." Fortunately, David thinks we have until 2020 before this really sets in, so we have a few years left of keyword-stuffing business titles and building anchor text-optimized links. Phew.
To survey or to study? That is not the question
I’m a fan of Andrew Shotland’s and Dan Leibson’s Local SEO Ranking Factors Study. I think that the yearly Local Search Ranking Factors Survey and the yearly (hopefully) Local SEO Ranking Factors Study nicely complement each other. It’s great to see some hard data on what factors correlate with rankings. It confirms a lot of what the contributors to this survey are intuitively seeing impact rankings for their clients.
There are some factors that you just can’t get data for, though, and the number of these “black box” factors will continue to grow over the coming years. Factors such as:
- Behavioral factors and entity authority, as described above. I don’t think Google is going to give SEOs this data anytime soon.
- Relevancy. It’s tough to measure a general relevancy score for a business from all the different sources Google could be pulling this data from.
- Even citation consistency is hard to measure. You can get a general sense of this from tools like Moz Local or Yext, but there is no single citation consistency metric you can use to score businesses by. The ecosystem is too large, too complicated, and too nuanced to get a value for consistency across all the location data that Google has access to.
The survey, on the other hand, aggregates opinions from the people that are practicing and studying local search day in and day out. They do work for clients, test things, and can see what had a positive impact on rankings and what didn’t. They can see that when they built out all of the service pages for a local home renovations company, their rankings across the board went up through increased relevancy for those terms. You can’t analyze these kinds of impacts with a quantitative study like the Local SEO Ranking Factors Study. It takes some amount of intuition and insight, and while the survey approach certainly has its flaws, it does a good job of surfacing those insights.
Going forward, I think there is great value in both the survey to get the general sense of what’s impacting rankings, and the study to back up any of our theories with data — or to potentially refute them, as they may have done with city names in webpage title tags. Andrew and Dan’s empirical study gives us more clues than we had before, so I’m looking forward to seeing what other data sources they can pull in for future editions.
Possum’s impact has been negligible
Other than Proper GMB Category Associations, which is definitely seeing a boost because of Possum, you can look at the results in this section more from the perspective of "this is what people are focusing on more IN GENERAL." Possum hasn’t made much of an impact on what we do to rank businesses in local. It has simply added another point of failure in cases where a business gets filtered.
One question that’s still outstanding in my mind is: what do you do if you are filtered? Why is one business filtered and not the other? Can you do some work to make your business rank and demote the competitor to the filter? Is it more links? More relevancy? Hopefully someone puts out some case studies soon on how to defeat the dreaded Possum filter (paging Joy Hawkins).
Focusing on More Since Possum |
|
---|---|
#1 |
Proximity of Address to the Point of Search |
#2 |
Proper GMB Category Associations |
#3 |
Quality/Authority of Inbound Links to Domain |
#4 |
Quantity of Inbound Links to Domain from Locally Relevant Domains |
#5 |
Click-Through Rate from Search Results |
Focusing on Less Since Possum | |
---|---|
#1 | Proximity of Address to Centroid |
#2 | Physical Address in City of Search |
#3 | Proximity of Address to Centroid of Other Businesses in Industry |
#4 | Quantity of Structured Citations (IYPs, Data Aggregators) |
#5 | Consistency of Citations on Tier 3 Citation Sources |
Foundational factors vs. competitive difference-makers
There are many factors in this survey that I’d consider table stakes. To get a seat at the rankings table, you must at least have these factors in order. Then there are the factors which I’d consider competitive difference-makers. These are the factors that, once you have a seat at the table, will move your rankings beyond your competitors. It’s important to note that you need BOTH. You probably won’t rank with only the foundation unless you’re in an extremely low-competition market, and you definitely won’t rank if you’re missing that foundation, no matter how many links you have.
This year I added a section to try to get a sense of what the local search experts consider foundational factors and what they consider to be competitive difference-makers. Here are the top 5 in these two categories:
Foundational | Competitive Difference Makers | |
---|---|---|
#1 | Proper GMB Category Associations | Quality/Authority of Inbound Links to Domain |
#2 | Consistency of Citations on the Primary Data Sources | Quantity of Inbound Links to Domain from Industry-Relevant Domains |
#3 | Physical Address in City of Search | Quality/Authority of Inbound Links to GMB Landing Page URL |
#4 | Proximity of Address to the Point of Search (Searcher-Business Distance) | Quantity of Inbound Links to Domain from Locally Relevant Domains |
#5 | Consistency of Citations on Tier 1 Citation Sources | Quantity of Native Google Reviews (with text) |
I love how you can look at just these 10 factors and pretty much extract the basics of how to rank in local:
“You need to have a physical location in the city you’re trying to rank in, and it’s helpful for it to be close to the searcher. Then, make sure to have the proper categories associated with your listing, and get your citations built out and consistent on the most important sites. Now, to really move the needle, focus on getting links and reviews.”
This is the much over-simplified version, of course, so I suggest you dive into the full survey results for all the juicy details. The amount of commentary from participants is double what it was in 2015, and it’s jam-packed with nuggets of wisdom. Well worth your time.
Got your coffee? Ready to dive in?
Darren, your opening paragraphs are far too kind. Excellent job with the survey this year & I am glad to see it in good hands for the long-haul!
PS I share your bafflement at the lack of importance placed on critical lists. The authority of those mentions is huge, and I'd argue they've been a major factor since the days of "Best of Citysearch" and CityVoter's top 10 lists....for the SEOs reading who even remember Citysearch and CityVoter ;)
Interestingly if one obtains many reviews in certain sites or commentary in media wherein a particular smb is described as "best" ie best seafood Portland Oregon, best chiropractor Denver Colorado, etc. One can show up high in the pac for that search phrase. Searches with best: I bet there are a lot of restaurant searches using that term...and its used around the web for endless services. On the restaurant side of things, when a certain place gets lots of mention as "best"...its geographic visibility can be astonishingly large covering an enormous population. Google is evidently scraping that language either across the web or in selected sites.
Thanks for your trust and confidence in me, David.
And yeah, it's weird that the best/top/critic lists aren't on the radar of most local search practitioners.
Darren, congratulations and full tribute to you for being such a good captain of the LSRF 2017 ship. It was really good of you to take this on so that the study can continue and I found it truly valuable this year to watch the shift in some of the top local pack ranking factors, even where the shift was small. My gosh, after all these years, I still LOVE our industry and feel such respect for each of the colleagues in the trenches who take the time to answer the annual LSRF call. Local has come a long way since year one of this study and we've all gotten to watch our discipline mature and grow. Fun and energizing!
Thanks, Miriam! I love our industry too! The local search community has such a wonderful culture of sharing and helping. I feel proud and lucky to be a part of it.
Super helpful Darren, thank you for organizing these great results! I noticed Link Signals jumped up quite a bit as a Local Search ranking factor. This is interesting to see, and I was curious if this pertains to just link signals going to your website and it's pages or links going to your Google+/Google Maps pages?
I have seen local SEO specialists do both of course and I wonder if the Link Signals should be almost 100% focused on driving quality, non-spammy links to a website or if there should be a effort to drive links to a local businesses Google+ and/or Google maps listing as well. Thoughts?
The importance of link signals that you see in the survey results is 100% about links to your website and the web page that your GMB listing links to. It's not about links to your Google+/Maps listing.
If your GMB listing links to your homepage, then that's the page you want to get links to (this is the most common scenario). If your GMB listing links to a specific location page on your site, then that's the page you want to get links to.
I don't believe that linking to your Google+/Maps listing on Google has any direct benefit, but it might have some minor impact on behavioral signals, by driving more views of those pages, and give you some indirect benefit. I certainly wouldn't put a lot of effort into building links to your Google+ or Google Maps listing. There are much higher value activities for you to focus on.
Hope this helps.
It definitely does! Thanks for the insight man.
"As I note in my recent post on proximity, this leads to poor results in most categories. I’m looking for the best lawyer in town, not the closest one."
With some local businesses, going for the closest does make sense: e.g. a florist, or a restaurant/coffee shop (especially if you're literally in the middle of the street in a new town and just want somewhere close-by to eat/drink). But it's almost as if Google are naïvely using this logic across all local/brick-and-mortar businesses, including your example (lawyers). Hopefully in the future Google will become better at distinguishing between the two types of local business: those where proximity matters, and those where it really doesn't. And then who knows... maybe proximity will be important for some sectors and less-so for others. That'd be interesting to see (and optimise)...!
Yes, this is exactly what I hope they do as well. They need to adjust the importance of proximity by category, because it makes sense for some categories, but not others.
Darren - this phrase stuck out for me too. I knew years before I tried that to rank (in organic search) for 'driving schools Sydney' when I am located about 1000km away in Lismore was "mission impossible". I am now altering my strategy by becoming more 'place specific' through site titles and URLs. Haven't implemented it yet - and I acknowledge the importance of being able to rank nationally as well as locally - but will soon. We'll see what happens - it's a shame I can't simply keep running one of Australia's best driving schools. Why has the great God Google forced me to have also become one of Australia's best (amateur) SEO's?
Hi Darren, Very nice article for the local search ranking factor. Your research is really valuable for optimizing for local search. The main purpose of Google is giving it's own my business listing much of value is to make sure they get a large share of local advertising market using My Business listings. The way I see it, the value of genuine business listings would be above spammy listings in the long run, however, as of now local search have a huge possibility of getting manipulated by spammy SEOs.
What's your take?
Well, here's one cynical view: if spammers are pushing down the legitimate businesses and then those legitimate businesses turn to paying for Adwords to get customers from Google, it doesn't leave Google with a lot of incentive to fix the spam problem.
Wow, great job and very useful information. How can we make a link to GMB listing page? Is it the same url than google maps or how can we find it?
This is a tricky one. It used to be your Google Places listing, then it was your Google+ page, and now it's... what? The search results page for "business name, city" that brings up the branded Knowledge Panel for your business is about the best we have these days for a link to your listing at Google. We have a free tool on our site to help you generate this link: https://whitespark.ca/google-review-link-generator...
Great tool, i didn't know it. Thank you very much Darren
:)
Darren,
Excellent piece of research and very interesting to see some of the major shifts in local ranking factors from 2015 to 2017. Google My Business is an element we are constantly explaining to clients as being a huge factor in local ranking, but here in Ireland, they generally think we are talking waffle, it is great to have this research to back up our claims.
Thanks for this amazing resource - great quality research is a powerful tool!
Cheers,
Kevin
Glad you find this resource valuable, Kevin. And thanks for teaching me a new phrase! "Talking waffle". I like that. :)
I'm adding "International Spam Hunter" to my email signature ;)
Haha. I'll be looking for that in your emails, Joy. :)
Nice Job, Darren. I look forward to these every year. It is a great way to re-focus and re-evaluate any current practices that may or may not be working.
In terms of photos, I would think images of the location with the company name ("signage") should help the verification team confirm. If not from the one photo, it would help them spot it in Google Streets. Not exactly a ranking factor but contribute the nebulous "confidence" of a location.
While it may not directly contribute to ranking, I think schema is most effective in demonstrating relationships associated with the location. With all the buzz around artificial intelligence, I would think this would be a good thing. For example, showing that the information on the location's page includes a person (or entity) who is an employee who may be also associated information about that person. Anything that will help Google stalk us better is going to be something Google likes.
Thanks again!
When talking about "review signals", are those exclusively Google reviews? Now that Facebook and other reviews are being displayed in knowledge panels, it would seem like those could have an effect on Local Pack rankings as well.
No, the review factors evaluated in the thematic ranking signals can be considered "impact of reviews in general, across all important review sites". When we get into the detailed local pack/finder factors, there is some differentiation between Google reviews and third party reviews.
Hi Darren,
thanks for this comprehensive list and findings.
I've some trouble with interpreting the data. For example on Google My Business signals. The article above states that GMB Signals declined from 21.63% to 19.01%. But if look at the 2015 results (https://moz.com/blog/local-search-ranking-factors-...) the my business signals contributed for 14.7% in 2015. So it would be a huge increase instead of a decline in importance. Same goes for other pieces of the pie.
Could you maybe explain how i should interpret the data correctly?
Thanks a lot,
Wouter
Amsterdam,NL
Hi Wouter,
Interesting. I see what happened. In 2015, David combined the scores for Local Pack Factors and Local Organic Factors to come up with scores for Overall Ranking Factors. I chose to keep these separate in my presentation of the results. I used the data analysis from the 2015 spreadsheet that David sent me. Here is what the numbers looked like for just the Local Pack ranking factors in 2015: https://prntscr.com/eywsf5
So, this is why you're seeing the difference. I prefer to look at local pack factors and local organic factors separately rather than combined. Hope this helps.
Thanks for the reply, the answer makes sense.
Is there any way to create a similar overall ranking factors chart? Or do you know which method David used to combine the numbers for the overall chart?
Thanks!
Great job, Darren! I'm sure David is very pleased with how you have handled the passing of the baton. The changes that you have incorporated in this survey reflect the ever changing nature of local search and make these results as relevant as ever.
I typically prefer to read blog posts late in the day and into the evening so I can focus on client services and recruitment during the day. However the Rankings Factors Survey always demands my immediate attention. So you screwed up my entire morning and now I'm having to catch up again. So thanks for that, buddy!
;-)
Thanks for the kind words, Jim. Sorry to screw up your morning!
Wow. Such a good friggin read!! Question: What if the brand name of the company also contains keywords and geo modifiers. For ex: "San Jose Painting Company". Will google know not to penalize a biz that uses this as it's GMB name, understanding that this is the brand's name and not that they are keyword stuffing or manipulating?
Google has access to company registration data, so they are able to determine if the business name is your actual registered name or if you're just keyword stuffing it. If I was starting a painting company in San Jose today, I would absolutely name my business "San Jose Painters" and I would get an office right smack dab on the city centroid.
I have a local home inspection business and aGMB page that I will optimize now after reading this. Thank you
Darren great job. Thanks for putting up with my lateness and including me in this years survey. Must admit something: I've been focusing on local SEO since the early 2000's, before Maps. That makes me predisposed to always work on links, see impacts of links, and reference links.
Boy I completely love the comments section. Its always RICH!!!! and valuable. Here is an example: In response to the very first question, Lisa Kolb of Acorn referenced a VERY SIGNIFICANT change for the industry she watches so closely: The hospitality industry. Availability dates provided by the OTA's seems to have an enormous impact on ranking in the 3 PAC.
H.O.L.Y. C.R.O.W!!! Imagine if that kind of information filters into ranking algo's for many other verticals. Imagine if they reflect paid references as the influence of the OTA's represents. Items such as that bear watching outside of that industry.
I always enjoy reading the results. You did terrific work in assembling this. As with you I also value the insights of a large massive study as you referenced on the first page (provided by localseoguide.com)--tx guys)
Lots more to digest. Kudo's to you and again I'm grateful for your efforts this year.
Thanks "earlpearl". Yeah, that information from Lisa Kolb was very interesting. In other businesses, opening hours are an important consideration. If you're not open, Google will probably show other businesses in the results. So, make sure you've got your hours correct on your listing!
Great article and valuable hands-on insights on Local SEO! Thanks for sharing. I too believe that Product/Service & Location Keyword in GMB Business Title is one of the strongest ranking factors today.
I have updated the GMB profiles accordingly for most of my clients and experienced huge lifts of rankings in the local pack. This seems to work especially well in less competitive markets & industries (I am working for Danish clients). I can highly recommend picking up these low hanging fruits.
It definitely works like gangbusters, but it's against Google Guidelines. You risk your listing getting nuked, or worse, all of your clients listings getting nuked. I prefer to play it safe with this. I liken it to the days when building links on private blog networks was all the rage. It worked awesome, and many SEOs did it, but then Google came out with the Penguin update and everyone that was manipulating links got destroyed. It's not unfathomable that Google could do the same to businesses that spam their GMB listings. Even retroactively. I don't recommend messing with this. Instead, report your competitors that are doing it. Here's an excellent guide to fighting spam in Google Maps: https://www.sterlingsky.ca/ultimate-guide-fighting-...
Hi Darren. Thanks for the info. I will keep that in mind and be more careful with that kind of stuff.
Thanks for sharing it. But How to resolve the problem that we get lots of local links but our customers are mostly in other district? And definitely we want to rank better in our customer districts(different country).
Hi Elaine. I think I need some more details on your situation. If you want to add more info, I'll see if I can help!
I'm surprised why Schema factor didn't get place in this article! With all above local ranking factors, use of Schema markup on our UNAP teaches search engines about content easily. We should not forgot this thing. BTW Behavioural Signals are still confusing. Otherwise local businesses can rank better considering all above factors. Thanks Darren for sharing with us.
If you have your NAP data on your site, Google can generally do a good job of crawling it and parsing it. They've been doing it for years. Putting it in schema is best practice and a good idea, because it makes it guaranteed that they'll be able to understand your NAP data, but in general, this one thing alone doesn't usually have much of an impact on rankings. It's just one of those things that's a good idea to do.
I personally experienced Schema is the great practice for local rankings.
I am getting very lost in all the local SEO advice and information.
My issue is this I have a window cleaning business that offers window cleaning, gutter cleaning, pressure washing and a couple other services.
I create a page for each service which is fine but then I cover several towns. How do I then target the towns? I can't stuff towns in those service pages or titles and I can put a list of towns on the site as google doesn't like that either. I could create town specific pages but I am not sure its worth because our window cleaning service for example is exactly to same in each location there is not enough uneque about it to warent separate town pages.
How can ensure I rank for the areas I cover
We have GMB and citations but specifically how can I tackle this on my site? Am I left with just trying to focus on one area which isn't great.
I assume your smb is a Service Area Business (SAB). I'd create those pages with town names and services. Its going to be content--not something I'd stuff into a gmb record as it would spam the name and category fields.
First I'd give great customer to the customers. I'd ask for permission to take pictures. Can you put those little yard signs out front that builders or contractors often use when they are working on a house.
So if I were doing gutter cleaning on a house in town B or C, I might have a series of pictures showing your crew on ladders, before and after and hopefully a testimonial. I'd give that page a title something like Gutter Cleaning/Town Name and put it on your site.
There is another way to attack this: A business called nearbynow.co has a great app that applies to wordpress sites. What it ultimately creates are review pages for SAB's wherein the review pages are segmented by town name. They use marked up records and will create pages in the organic content that will show up with eyecatching review stars. Years before NearbyNow started there have been some custom developed programs like this. They have generated great organic results w/ service/town names and their reviews show in Google results with eyecatching stars. Dramatically effective in search and for the smb's I know that applied this way back the results have been phenomenal for the business
In Google My Business, 1 physical location = 1 GMB listing. Your business only has one location, so you're only going to get one listing, and because Google has put so much emphasis on proximity, you'll only be able to rank in the local pack and local finder in a relatively small radius around your business. Unfortunately, there isn't anything you can do about this other than opening a new office in every zip code.
Your strategy to rank in these other areas is to target the local organic results through what are called "city pages". Here are three articles from Phil Rozek you should read to help you create these city pages:
https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/2015/04/06/25-principles-of-building-effective-city-pages-for-local-seo/
https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/2016/09/30/template-for-creating-knockout-city-page-content-for-local-seo/
https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/2013/04/30/16-ways-to-create-unique-local-content-for-cities-where-you-want-to-rank/
The other option, of course, is Google Adwords. Pay to rank. This is exactly what Google would like you to do, which is maybe why they've cranked the dial on proximity so much.
WHAT DARREN SAID! Yep. The first part of my response above was a short version of Darren's excellent explanation and response. His reference to Phil's articles, especially the first, which is extremely thorough, thoughtful and covers so many options and considerations is the place to go. Then cover the next two articles. I've made these pages. They work.
The second suggestion is also an organic suggestion. Those also work. Fortunately there remain many verticals for small businesses where organic opportunities remain extremely worthwhile. Darren's/Phil's suggestion is potent. Good luck.
It's amazing survey!!
I personally impressive with on-page signals, link signals, my business signals, review signals and social media engagement signals.
Nothing to rest after enjoying to read this, thank you Darren.
oh my goodness - this is massive.
This is a lot to take in, I'm going to need to make notes!
Couldn't help but notice though that schema wasn't mentioned in the survey at all. Do people really believe that schema is that irrelevant to local SEO? I always consider it to be a priority when starting local SEO on a client.
A lot of very interesting changes in how people are prioritising their efforts now.
Speaking for myself, I've never considered schema a "ranking factor", except to the extent it can influence clickthrough rate with a prettier result than your surrounding SERP competitors. Schema simply makes a crystal-clear connection between a given webpage and a given entity.
What David said. Adding your NAP info in schema is a good idea, but it's not going to have much of an impact on rankings.
It did make it into the results, though. If you go to the main survey results and ctrl-f for schema, you'll see that it's something that local SEOs consider, but it just doesn't rank highly as an important ranking factor.
Hello Darren,
Great post for the local search ranking factor. This research will really help to optimize local search. As the research says My Business Listing is one of the most important raking factor. We have to focus local listing.
How can ensure I rank for the areas I cover?
Hi Rakesh,
If you're talking about a service area business, like a plumber or electrician that services an entire city, and even the surrounding cities, then you can't expect to rank in the local pack/finder for all of those areas. You need to focus on the local organic results for those areas, and this article from the amazing Phil Rozek should help you with that: https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/2015/04/06/25...
What a fantastic list. Anytime I am confronted with a task of this magnitude I want to apply the Pareto Principle. What do you think the 20% of the ranking factors are that really matter. I love how you did this with your 10 factors to wrap up the piece.
What a comprehensive list. I've been trying to get my GMB page up for ages but have had trouble with the verification process.
Great to be able to see what moves the needle for local. Thanks for this!
Very good article and well worked survey. You haver really worked hard to get the results in the survey and well designed post to describe the ups and downs of the survey result. Very good work Darren, very informative.
Wow! Great article ... as a local marketing company working with clients to get better rankings, this is a gold mine of an article. Thanks for all the hard work in putting this together.
Hello,
You have beautifully explain explain factor that affect search results but can you please explain me about GMB signals, since I don't have much knowledge about SEO, so help me out.