The civics of local: Caring about your community
From Golden Gate Park in San Francisco to Central Park in New York City, with all of the town greens, plazas, fountains, schools, and libraries in between, America’s lasting community resources stand as a testament to our civic-minded past. Town fathers, city boards, and citizens of former times dedicated themselves to enriching local life by creating public access to features that fostered identity, civic pride, and a higher standard of living.
Modern cynics might look at today’s cityscapes and conclude that city planners have forgotten the need for accessible human resources. Sprawling housing developments without parks, whole districts without adequate shopping, good schools, libraries, or community centers would be evidence of this. And yet, 2016 points at a better future because, if nothing else, the ongoing election cycle has proven that the rising workforce — the millennial generation — cares tremendously about civics.
In the phenomenal youth movement currently sweeping the nation, I see an inspiring, fresh commitment to improving life for all people and all communities. If you're one of those citizens rallying for a living wage, greater educational opportunities, and the revitalization of both inner city and rural life, then this article will explain why a career in local search marketing could spell out satisfying work that directly impacts life quality in communities across the country. In other words, your best ideals will go hand-in-hand with what you do for a living. Sound good? Let’s take a look!
What is local search marketing, in a nutshell?
Anything you do to promote the online visibility of local businesses, organizations, and resources = local search marketing. Local search engine optimization (SEO) basically seeks to create a mirror image of real-world communities on the web, making it easy for anyone to find the best available resources for everything nearest them. You can promote the visibility of local businesses, schools, parks, organizations, churches, or anything else that exists for the use of people in any given city or town.
The basic components of local
Right now, the basic components of local search marketing include:
- Designing locally optimized websites
- Developing locall -relevant text, image, and video content
- Building local business listings on a variety of search engines and directories
- Helping clients earn and manage online reviews
- Helping clients engage with their neighbors via social media
- Ensuring that all client holdings are mobile-friendly
- Seeking local publicity opportunities, whether via news, advertising, sponsorships, or other vehicles
- Discovering innovative methods of helping your clients stand out from the competition
Here’s a broad overview of local SEO to jump-start your education. Ready for a deep dive? You can get a detailed picture of the major components of local search marketing from this Local SEO Checklist, and can take a gander at what industry experts cite as the most influential Local Search Ranking Factors you’ll be implementing for clients.
Manual + automated solutions
Local search marketing has been a viable career option for a little over a decade — ever since search engines like Google set out to replace the print Yellow Pages as the way people access local resources. In the early days, a majority of the work we did in local was manual — manual website development, manual local business listing creation, etc. Now, many tasks have been made easier via tools.
For example, you don’t have to build a website from scratch. You can learn to develop excellent Wordpress-based websites, choosing from mobile-friendly/responsive themes and using plugins that make it easy to incorporate basic local optimization components.
You don’t have to build local business listings (a.k.a. "citations") one at a time anymore, either. You can use automated tools or sign up for manual submission services, freeing you up for more creative work.
Intelligent tools now make it possible to analyze your social media opportunities and manage your review strategy.
You’ll be entering the field at a time when tools have taken quite a bit of the grunt work out of this area of marketing, meaning your best asset may be your creativity, rather than your capacity to grind through things.
Go solo or work for an agency
Before you take a job or start serving clients, you’ll want to educate yourself as much as possible about this form of marketing. Your education will prevent you from going to work for an agency that doesn’t adhere to above-board practices, and it will also lessen your chances of making a costly mistake for your clients.
You can set up your local SEO business in your living room, if need be, with nothing more than a laptop and a good Internet connection. Some people have no problem flying solo, beginning the work of making a name for themselves by their contributions to their own community and the local search marketing industry. The main benefit of this is autonomy; the main drawbacks are money worries until you get established.
Others may prefer to seek employment at an agency with an existing local SEO department. Some companies will only hire you if you’ve got proven experience, but if an agency is open to interns, this can provide a great opportunity to learn on the job and understand what it means to be part of a team. The main benefits of this are experience and a regular paycheck; the main drawback is less direct control over the work you’d like to explore.
Emotional requirements of the job
Here’s a simple checklist that should help you determine whether you’ve got the right temperament for the job. You’ll need to:
- Be a self-disciplined worker (especially if you’re going solo) but also be open to the benefits of a more flexible schedule. Some of the best Internet marketing agencies aren’t rigid about 9–5 work days and allow for some work being done outside the office. Some modern businesses are experimenting with concepts like the 6-hour work day and other new ideas. On your own, you may find yourself working 5 hours a day — or 15! Flexibility is an asset in this field.
- Have good communication skills. You’ll be strategizing with team members and distilling complex topics down into easily understood terms for clients. You’ll be well-served by the ability to speak well and clearly with anyone you meet in a day’s work.
- Feel empathy. Local SEOs should be able to identify with their clients’ struggles, whether they are mom-and-pop shops in neglected communities or large brands floundering over their identity. You become a part of every business you serve and will have a share in both failures and triumphs.
- Practice awareness of your own experience with commerce. Approach every one of your own transactions from the viewpoint of both merchant and consumer and analyze faults and successes. No part of commerce is too small to be analyzed, and your findings will give you something to think about, write about, and put into practice for clients.
- Love a mystery. When a business is failing to rank, when an incoming client might be spamming search engines, when Google tweaks its algorithm, or outreach is falling on deaf ears, you will be the detective who gets to the root of the problems and defines the solutions.
- Like to travel + network. While it’s not necessary for local SEOs to serve clients in person, chances are good that you’ll want to travel to industry events, and hopefully one day contribute to them for the educational advancement and prestige of your business or agency. Word-of-mouth is regularly cited as one of the most effective vehicles for client acquisition, so the more people with whom you network in local, the better the health of your company.
- Be honest when it counts most. You can’t fear civil confrontation in this field. It's pretty much guaranteed that you're going to have to deliver bad news to confused clients and lay down the law to spammy ones. You’ll be required to be totally honest when what a client has been doing is harming their own business. That’s your job, and it’s only when you’ve called out and halted bad practices that you can begin to implement better ones. You’ll also need to honest with agency team members about your work, progress, and concerns.
- Commit to continuing education. There may be no other form of Internet marketing that has experienced more changes in the past decade than local. Guidelines and tactics change on a continual basis and, as a local SEO, it will be your job to keep up with all such developments. Your education must be viewed as ongoing as long as you’re in business.
What does a job in local SEO pay?
According to the 2015 BrightLocal industry survey, the average annual income for SEOs (pre-taxes) was $70,000 and the median income was between $50,000–$60,000. How these figures strike you will largely depend on the cost of living in your geography. These earnings may not be adequate if you live in San Francisco or NYC, but may be just fine if you make your home in Albuquerque or Atlanta.
Note, too, that these are averages, and that there's room in this industry for innovators to work their way towards greater earnings. Remember, it was your generation that produced Mark Zuckerberg who founded Facebook when he was 20.
In the local SEO industry, there have been success stories like David Mihm’s $3 million sale of his local business listing product, GetListed, which became the foundation of Moz Local. While not every worker in this discipline will "make it big," no limit can be placed on your potential to succeed if you have the ability to discern opportunities that haven’t yet been explored to their limits. If you’ve been gifted with a great brain, it could be your company that invents the next app, software, or platform that lights up the local landscape.
Recommended skill acquisitions
Even as I’m writing this, local is out there changing and developing, so the best I can provide newcomers is a snapshot in time of the skills I’d recommend they acquire right now to be current + competitive:
Master the guidelines for representing your business on Google
As a local SEO, these are your rules for survival and contain the essential mindset you'll bring to almost every interaction you'll ever have with any client or team member. The guidelines are regularly revised, so check back periodically for edits that may totally change the game.
Learn PPC
Google, the biggest force in local, is steadily but surely moving towards more highly-monetized local search engine results. The local SEO of today and tomorrow will need to be able to advise clients about pay-per-click and other forms of advertising. Here’s a beginner’s guide to Google Adwords. We have a Pay-Per-Click category here on the Moz blog and you’ll enjoy this Phil Rozek article written about his 8 years of doing PPC for local businesses.
Engineering/dev skills could set you apart
You can stick to being a consultant if you prefer, but it can be a major asset if you know how to get in amongst the nuts and bolts of websites, applications, and widgets. In fact, your abilities as a developer could be a key to you moving from basic income to lucrative innovation.
Learn offline local marketing
Local SEO doesn’t exist in an online vacuum. It represent the real commercial and civic landscape we all inhabit. Understanding traditional forms of offline marketing (think print marketing, newspapers, billboards, radio, TV, etc.) will make you a much stronger force in the field. Most businesses will need to employ a combination of both on- and offline publicity, and you’ll need to be in-the-know about all of it.
Learn a second language
Having trouble breaking into the industry? Being bilingual could help. In the U.S., learning Spanish will help you serve the skyrocketing Hispanic business community. In Canada, learning French could be a real help to your agency. In Europe, pick the language of any neighboring country that has the infrastructure to benefit from local SEO and double your client base. In Australia, you might tackle Mandarin to serve business owners both at home and abroad. Despite working in something called "local," ours is a global economy!
Follow the leaders
Finally, I’d recommend that you make a commitment to follow industry leaders’ blogs and social profiles, as an essential part of your education and daily work. Local is an exceptionally generous area of marketing, with experts willingly sharing tons of useful information on a daily basis. We strive to offer some of the most comprehensive coverage and tutorials in the local SEO column here on the Moz Blog, and I would further recommend these high-quality resources:
- https://streetfightmag.com/
- https://blumenthals.com/blog/
- https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/blog/
- https://www.localsearchforum.com/
- https://localu.org/blog/
- https://www.getfivestars.com/blog/
- https://screenwerk.com/
- https://www.thelsa.org/lsa/news-room.aspx
- https://imprezziomarketing.com/blog/
- https://whitespark.ca/blog/
That’s a short list, and you’ll likely find many more smart people to learn from and network with. The main thing is to set yourself a regular schedule of checking resources like these for the latest local developments.
What a meaningful worklife feels like
The average American works 1,700 hours a year. If you start working when you’re 16 and retire when you're 75, you’ll be spending over 100,000 hours of your life on the job. 100,000 hours.
If you had a choice, chances are, you wouldn’t sign up to spend that much time doing anything that felt meaningless to you. If you had a choice, chances are you’d much rather get to put some of your personal hopes, ethics, and best self into those future hours ahead of you.
In your spare time, you’ll be socializing with friends, maybe caring for a spouse and raising a family, maybe volunteering on the local school board, or in community projects, social, environmental, or political causes. What if time away from the things you love best could actually go towards improving the usefulness and accessibility of the cities you and others live in?
And that’s why I’d recommend local SEO as a work option for young people. It truly can be meaningful when you help a senior center get found by your friend’s grandmother who never knew before that she could take a free class in sociology. Or when you help a family-owned restaurant make the front page of the local newspaper with their blue-ribbon organic tacos. Or when you help main street compete against the big-box stores, keeping your community unique.
That’s what local search marketing can be, and it can make the difference between a job you couldn’t care less about, and one that is integrated with the interesting, meaningful life you want to build for yourself. When you're equipped with the skills to get businesses, organizations, and local stories heard, when you have the necessary education and have a say in picking the voices you want to amplify, you will never lack for opportunity to lend a powerful helping hand to the civic improvements you feel matter most.
What a fantastic post on highlighting the areas needed to excell in this field. For myself I have traveled from an agency, to solo work at home, to now in house and all levels have had their trials but this article did a great job pointing out them all.
I have had some ups and downs in staying with SEO but when reading an article like this it makes me put my marketer hat back on and riding those waves. Thanks for all your posts they always inspire and educate.
Hey Tim!
I so enjoy your comments, and sounds like you've really ridden the waves and known lean times and good ones. Honoring your resilience! Hope that marketing hat is here to stay for you, and thank you so much for your kind words.
Good morning Miriam,
This post was really empowering! Being a millenial can be as cool as confusing (93's baby in here), and many times you don't really know which way can be the best for you, specially if you've studied marketing which can lead you to plenty of options out there. There are many kinds of marketing (fashion, culture, tech, local...) and inside each one of them there's direct marketing, seo, street marketing... Thousand of options.
Never thought about Local SEO before as an actual career, maybe I saw it integrated in a SEO Campaign but not by itself, and this post actually made me see the profits of working as a Local SEO Consultant. In our case, we're a small local real estate agency from Mallorca, a small mediterranean island, could we also apply this to our business?
Thank you very much!
It should be very important when from the blog of Moz are writing serveral articles about Local SEO, in the past weeks i´ve been reading at leats 2 o 3 more articles in this blog :), in spanish "si el rio suena..." ;)
Agua lleva :)
I'll find local seo very interesting for millenials but more applied to own business than to others businesses. It is part of the strategy that all local business should include.
Regards,
Czd
Hi There!
So glad you enjoyed the post. It could be that if your company has become skilled at marketing itself locally, you might consider what else you could do with those skills, whether as part of your agency, or as a new business of its own. If the infrastructure of your island supports it, there might be opportunity. And, if you are selling commercial real estate, you may already have a good set of contacts within the business community!
Thanks for the fast response Miriam! :)
Thanks so much Miriam!
I am musician trying to find a way into the social/marketing/SEO world.
I have been studying and researching for the last 8 months, any recommendations you may have to find the right position for me would be greatly appreciated! Moz is my goto source for anything social/SEO.
Thanks!
Hi Miriam Ellis,
I really enjoy reading your article. Local SEO play important role around people around you and its create new opportunity. Keep Posting like this.
Thanks, Khyati, and I'll hope to have a new post for you in August :)
Definitely nothing more rewarding (at least to me!) than helping a business grow and succeed! Especially after having opened a couple 'brick-and-mortar' businesses early in my entrepreneurial career that sorta fell flat...I appreciate the power of marketing and think with the advances in social platforms alone...millenials play a major factor in business growth going forward!
Hey Jason,
You perfectly describe the empathetic approach I was aiming at ... as someone who has actually run a business, you know just how hard business owners work and how much rides on their ability to receive. Your clients are lucky that this experience is informing the service you offer them. Enjoyed your comment!
Good morning Miriam,
Thank you very much!
Though I am not a millennial.
On the contrary, I am a baby boomer, experienced in enterprise and law, and started to study SEO - not an option but health issues forced me to look further.
I really appreciate the coverage you did for the local SEO. It encourages me to look for clients and pro bono - it is an old way to serve humanity and helps my pride too, in the sense that I am still useful for my community, which I really miss.
I am already expecting your next coverage.
Hi Veronica!
I enjoyed reading your comment, and you communicated very well. Admiro mucho a la gente que hablan dos lenguas!
One thing I have found is that Local SEO can be a good option for people with health concerns. Some of my favorite SEOs, in fact, have major health problems. Thanks to the Internet, they are still managing to earn a living.
Another thing to consider is that Local SEO might be a good option for a second job for elders after they have retired from their first career. They might even do some part time work in the field to add to their Social Security earnings or other programs.
I appreciate your wish to give to the community. That's extremely admirable! Thanks so much for taking the time to comment.
Hi Miriam,
Thank you for taking the time to read and comment.
Yes, you are absolutely right. It is quite an option for older people, especially considering the low amount of the pension against the high drugstore bills ;)
Or just to have enough money for nice vacations and to spoil the grandsons.
Probably there are some millennials reading this, that have a father or a mother who is highly techie - this runs in families like other genes - could be a solution for many.
Truly, I feel privileged, living in the 21st century. Despite my health I am able to work, as you said, thanks to the internet. My son's idea first of all. A few years ago, he had issues with a scholarship form - not exactly user friendly. After I managed to find the right solution, he said, “Why you do not use those skills!”...
I feel that being part of the community is just the life of a normal living person.:)
Thanks again.
That's a great story about your son, Veronica. Smart boy, smart mom!
I've had similar things happen with my family members. You could be right - it could be in the genetics!
Thanks for letting me know you'll be on the lookout for my next post. I hope to have one ready in August.
Thanks so much Miriam! I am a musician and looking to bridge the gap of my passion for marketing and music. SEO seems to be in the middle there somewhere. Right now I am deciding whether or not to invest time into being a community manager or work in SEO somehow.
I would love to hear any ideas you have for attaining one of these positions!
Thanks so much!
Hi Robin,
I'm not 100% sure I've understood your question, but I can speak generally here. If you're a musician who is interested in local marketing, you could work to promote things like bands, venues, music teachers, musical events, music schools and the like. This would be a way to keep one foot in the music scene while making the city you live in or the cities you want to work with more skillfully marketed, ensuring that communities are able to find their local music resources more easily. Is this what you're asking about? Please, feel free to provide further detail, if not.
Hi Miriam,
Sorry, not the clearest question you are right!
I hear your point about marketing locally. The challenge with musicians is typically budget. When you say market events, school etc do you mean online?
I like the idea of creating or improving on local music resources for musicians and resources for consumers. You have got me thinking now about a blog style or even a Facebook group style forum.
Also - I am open to any suggestions here. Would a record label hire an SEO person, or would they hire the services of someone for a short period of time? I have been reading the links and articles extensively and I guess the only thing left is to do some work to get a portfolio happen. What can you suggest in terms of a potential path to an interview?
Loaded, I know.
Answer what you can.
Thank you!
Hi Robin,
Hmm, this is outside my area of knowledge. I would guess that record labels would have large marketing departments, but this would not likely be local marketing, likely more like traditional PR. But music schools, music instructors, recording studios ... those would all be local businesses in need of Local SEO. So, yes, a Local SEO could certainly specialize in working with music-oriented local businesses, promoting them on the web. Hope this helps, and sorry not to have more information for you about the music industry. It's just not something I know a ton about.
I can't wait to see how SEO for voice search will work. That should give us a lot of stuff to work on and kep SEO relevant.
Hi Igor.
Yes, indeed, Voice Search is something all of us need to be on top of. I enjoyed this discussion between Mike Blumenthal and David Mihm at Local U which was posted a few weeks back, in case you missed it: https://localu.org/blog/video-deep-drive-voice-future-local-search/
Hi Miriam
Of course, thanks to a local marketing strategy we will be encouraging greater activity off-line customer and all that it entails (Go outside, relecionarse more in person ...) If this addition we help with shares, plus strengthen our own brand, we help all other brands (and the market in general ...) so this helps, sooner or later, you will turn in our favor
Excellent post!!
Hi Luis!
Yes, there are so many aspects to how you can market local businesses, and the whole goal of this is to support and encourage positive offline activity of customers. Thanks for taking the time to share your thoughts!
Love local SEO. Much easier than going after global terms. But I always had a hard time doing the "selling" of my services. Just my personality and in the beginning I wasn't entirely sure I could really deliver on the promise so that ate away at my confidence.
If anyone's in that boat, doing some pro bono work might help a lot.
Kata Kata Bijak
plant a link in the comments as I do now , is it good for seo ?
[Link removed by editor.]
Hi there! I'm afraid I've had to remove the link; we don't allow linking in blog comments unless the link is pointing to material that will contribute to the discussion. :) All of our blog comments links are automatically nofollowed, anyway.
That said, no, linking in blog comments is not good for SEO. It has long been considered a spam tactic, and I would strongly advise against it.
A very useful guide on how to start a career in SEO. It is true that the local SEO offers many possibilities to develop different strategies and then make the jump to bigger scope projects
Thank you very much for the article Miriam
Hi Danilas - yes, that so true! The breadth of the field of Local SEO is one of the exciting things about it, and hopefully, each newcomer will discover special talents they have to contribute. Thanks so much for reading!
It's great. Good contribution
The only thing you can learn from this article is "How to write an SEO optimize Content". to any given Subject. This article focused on "Local SEO" keyword. very well written article with 99% SEO optimized.
Great article and great advice! It can truly help people starting in this industry, especially a number of millennials between careers. Thank you so much for sharing it with us!
Really appreciated this post, thank you. I freelance as a Web Developer and have found that more and more of my clients are looking for ongoing local SEO work. This post has convinced me that Local SEO is a powerful service to offer my clients. Do you have any posts you'd recommend that provide a structured learning path for Local SEO? I have already read MOZ Beginners guide to SEO. Any help would be appreciated, thanks!
Esteban
Hi Esteban!
So glad you were inspired by this.
Our free Local Learning Center is a good place to start: https://moz.com/learn/local
Our Local SEO Checklist lists out all of the major components of a local SEO campaign: https://moz.com/blog/local-seo-checklist
And hopefully you can use the 'Follow The Leaders' section of this article to access free, ongoing learning from some of the industry's best and brightest! Hope this helps!
I'm currently doing seo for JodatLawGroup.com and it's one of the most successful local projects I've taken on. One tip for marketers is don't try to overload your work stack. The less you have, the more you can do. Once I took this project on, I found that real results only came after I worked really hard to get results in just one company.
Also, the pay and work environment for doing SEO is usually above the median average salary.
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Hey Miriam,
Spot on, and thanks for the list of informative sites focusing on local SEO. Priceless!
Hey Kevin! You're very welcome. We are so fortunate, in this industry, that some of the brightest people are also some of the most generous with sharing their knowledge.
Great post Miriam! I completely agree. I decided to focus on LocalSEO for pretty much all of the reasons you mentioned above.
Nice to know this post matched with your experience, Sean. Very cool!
Really fantastic post...your
coverage encourages and gives
ideas to start a career in SEO.
Thank you so much for sharing
this post...
Good read, a lot of SEOs neglect ppc, I'm glad you mentioned it!
Hey Josh! It's something I'd love to see more Local SEOs write about, too. It's an area of local marketing that hasn't received nearly as much coverage as some others. Definitely room for more education!
I quite liked this idea. This is a great place to start a SEO business, where there's not so much competition. Newbies can start getting some results and decide if they want to tackle more competitive markets.
This article creates a new hope and inspiration with in me. Thanks for sharing article like this. The way you have stated everything above is quite awesome. Keep blogging like this.
Hi Kaviyaa! That's wonderful to hear. I'm delighted you've found new hope and inspiration, reading this. Yay!
Good Read! Hopefully it's a new face of the SEO in future.
Glad you enjoyed it, and I hope you'll share with young people in your life whom you care about and who are weighing their options!
A lot of perspective to how you can find local businesses and the goal of this is to help and encourage positive activities of our customers. We thank your share .
Great roundup of what it needs to be up front in terms of local SEO. Really good read with some good resources linked. I agree that trying it with some local places you know and push them is a good place for anyone looking for a place to start and test and evolve their skills.
Yes, it's certainly amazing how much a new Local SEO will learn from their first client project, then their second, and third. Each new project represents a major learning opportunity, but it terms of strategy and technique. Thanks for your nice comment!
Brilliant post Miriam :) As a 22 year old who has been at a digital agency for 6 months, I've definitely found my calling mixing local & technical SEO services in both agency work and for clients on the side. I recently started an agency for freelance work with a few other freelancers, with a sole focus on local SEO; we're coming along well in a short space of time and have found that small businesses clients are much more open to letting us experiment, test and generally have free reign to improve their Local SEO efforts as we please!
Looking forward to reading your other posts.
Hi James!
I'm wishing you a ton of luck! It sounds like you are positioning yourself to learn a great deal from your first work with small, local businesses. That definitely qualifies as being 'in the trenches'. Way to go, and thanks so much for taking the time to leave such and a nice story here about your plans! Glad you enjoyed this piece.
Great post all the way around. I was just stressing the importance of implementing local SEO strategies to a couple website owners. As an open minded fan of continuing education you have convinced to reinvestigate PPC. Thanks for the info!
Hey, that's great, Mike. Particularly with the predicted monetization of all/part of many local packs, that knowledge will surely serve you well. Thanks for taking the time to read and comment!
Well-balanced, honest read. Loved how the old school civics were tied with the new school local marketing in there. Thanks for writing it up and sharing it with us folks. I'm going to be sharing it on my own social channels and with friends for sure. :)
Hello Francois!
Very honored that you find this good enough to share with your readers and friends. I hope they'll enjoy it. Have a really nice day!
Miriam,
No one can deny that local SEO is a reality and this is here to stay, at least for a long time. Implementing an adequate marketing strategy by applying local advertising for both on and offline, will attract higher conversions for our clients and encourage their offline activity.
Thank you for your post!
A scholarship for important and belonging to 70 % of the population , exempted from the requirement of institutional accreditation by the Ministry of Education for 2016 students.
This post unveil what is meant to be a local SEO... Thanks so much
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Local seo is one of best alternative to conquare market sale
Its a Amazing Information, Thanks for sharing such useful guide here.
stay local stay relevant plain and simple
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