“Why, there’s a change in the weather, there’s a change in the sea
So from now on, there’ll be a change in me.”
Ethel Waters - There’ll Be Some Changes Made
Change happens fast! Recently, I came across a local retail store that was violating Google’s naming guidelines on the company’s Google My Business listing. As a tiny experiment, I used a Google account I had never used before for any Maps tasks, recommending that Google correct the name. It took 48 hours for my suggestion to be implemented and for me to receive a thank-you email from Google. Just like that.
I like this particular business and didn’t want them to get in trouble with Google, but you can’t count on all your neighbors (or their marketers) to have the same civic-minded motivations. Negative SEO in the form of nefarious local listing edits to your name, address, and phone number (NAP) is a genuine threat to traffic, leads, and sales, requiring due vigilance.
Google makes changes and we adapt. Google plays Pomp and Circumstance for its announced “graduation” of Google Map Maker to Google Maps and respected Local SEOs like Joy Hawkins and Phil Rozek take a minute to sing the blues and then look around for solutions to the changes.
Your competitors can edit your listings without leaving a paper trail
High on the local SEO industry’s list of concerns surrounding the March shutdown of Google Map Maker is that it cements trackless negative editing. Map Maker formerly allowed us to connect the negative edit history of Google My Business listings to a specific Google user. This info might help us realize that our data’s assailant was a competitor, a disgruntled past employee, or a non-customer, enabling us to report the edits as obvious violations. Google’s sunsetting of Map Maker means all third-party edits (both positive and negative) will now go through Maps’ suggest an edit feature, leaving no traces behind them.
So, this most recent change is certainly a problem, and unfortunately, not one I can offer to solve for you today — but I can solve the bigger issue underlying this whole negative SEO scenario: I can help you make sure no one ever edits your Google My Business listings without you knowing about it right away.
Moz Local will alert you if anyone edits your Google My Business NAP
Unless you operate a famous brand with an active following ready to instantly alert you via social media if your listing data has changed, you’re more or less on your own when it comes to monitoring your GMB listings.
Whether you’re an overworked small business owner or the marketer of a franchise with 300 locations, it can be a tiresome challenge trying to police your listing data on a continuous basis. Of this task, Hawkins says,
“...unless the business wants to check their information daily, there is currently no way that they will know about changes.”
Making time for these manual checks, particularly if you’re short on resources or long on total number of listings you have to manage, is enough to give anyone the blues. Fortunately, Moz Local customers can whistle a happier tune, knowing that should unscrupulous persons edit their GMB name, address or phone number, an email alert like this will swiftly appear in their inbox:
This convenient alert system, already at work for all Moz Local customers, not only removes needless worry and the obligation of tiresome vigilance, it could very well prevent significant damage to your traffic and revenue.
Just how negative can competitive edits be?
Imagine a family-owned carpet cleaning company in a competitive market with one very unethical competitor who successfully swaps his phone number for the victim’s. Call volume suddenly tanks and the carpet cleaner begins to entertain a variety of stressful hypotheses for the cause. Is this drop something seasonal? Is he just too small to maintain profit in a crowded market? Are past customers unhappy with his service? Has a new enterprise come to town, edging him out with better pricing?
Days, weeks, or months of reduced call volumes could go by before the anxious owner connects the drop to his Google My Business listing having been maliciously edited. It can be hard for any small business to absorb a single day’s lost business, let alone weeks of it!
Doubt this would happen? I might have, too, until I went through the famous florist listing hijacking of ‘08 (the same year Google released Map Maker, coincidentally), resulting in tears, revenue loss, and staff layoffs at devastated businesses. We’ve seen phone numbers edited en masse to direct to call centers. We’ve seen thuggish demands for a piece of the action while listings were held hostage. We’ve seen lawsuits and sentencing.
So, yes, this form of negative SEO is a very real problem, and the truth is that dyed-in-the-wool spammers are already well aware of the trackless edits they can make via Google Maps. And in some ways, the shutdown of Map Maker may only further encourage them to continue their sneaky work… but not undetected.
While Moz Local can’t individually identify these spammers for you the way Map Maker has for the past eight years, it does take the major scare out of malicious edits by ensuring you’re alerted to them right away and can act to rectify them. It’s my sincere hope that knowing this provides welcome peace of mind for our customers who work so hard to achieve visibility in Google’s product.
It’s a new year and we’re all gearing up to meet and master whatever changes Local SEO will bring our way in 2017. Not familiar with Moz Local? Get to know us this Q1 via our free Check Listing tool.
Want to learn more about Local SEO firsthand? Join the experts — grab your tickets to MozCon Local, February 27th & 28th in Seattle!
Hi Miriam,
Feeling very glad after being aware this fact, earlier I was not, that anyone can change our GMB listing. I wonder that how much it could be riskier if it had been done earlier (change in my GMB listing by someone else). Thanks a lot for sharing this post with us and solution Moz local as well. If there are any other tool or way regarding this please share with us, would love to know about that. Wonderful post indeed!
Sincere thanks, Pratibha, for letting me know this post brightened your day. I'm not currently aware of any other tool that does this, but I definitely keep my eyes open for anything I feel would be helpful to our great community of local business owners and Local SEOs here.
I'm very delighted to get your response. Actually, I'm new in this SEO world and want to cover more and more terms, topics and aspects of SEO and for this Moz Blog is really proving to be the most ideal source to get started.
Once again a big thanks to Moz community.
Wow, this is awesome, Miriam - thanks! I always knew Moz had a Local tool, but never bothered to check it out since I spent a lot of time working on our listings when we first started, and I no longer focus on it because, after all, we are an online-only business. However, when I checked Moz Local today, I found a few incorrect listings and several unclaimed listings, both of which I have been able to correct.
Thanks again for tempting me to check out Moz Local!
Hey there!
My great pleasure, and I'm so glad you've checked it out. Please, keep us in mind should you have favorite local businesses you go to that are having Local SEO woes. Sometimes, a recommendation can help them out of listing troubles in a really nice way, and Check Listing is always free :) Have a great new week!
As always, I will definitely keep Moz in mind. Moz is my #1 recommendation when it comes to anything website-related (no, not just SEO related!). Thanks for all your great work!
I'm finding now that Moz Local is giving me incorrect information regarding the address listings (for example, it is telling me that HotFrog has the incorrect address although it has the correct one). I suppose I should wait a day or two and see if this corrects itself.
Hanna
Hi Miriam,
It seems like without tools like Moz Local, the life of small business owners might just get dreadful. Hope you will some day add the feature of identifying the person who nefariously edited the listings.
Hi Stacey!
That would be really cool if we could do that someday! I keep crossing my fingers that Google will migrate this traking function over from Map Maker to Maps, and, in fact, talked to a couple folks who have played Top Contributor roles in Google's forum. To date, none have had any word from Google that they plan to do this, though Google has stated that they are moving functions over - just no word that they'll be moving this one. We'll see, and thanks for the kind comment!
TRUE it'll be more dreadful for local business. Hoping more such good enhancements from moz. It's nice be get notified through moz local those nefarious edits.
Hello Miriam,
Good Update, One more thing I just tried this https://moz.com/local/search but I got this error "You have exceeded your rate limit. Contact [email protected] if you believe this is an error." Let me know how to fix it.
Hi Bhushan,
Please, definitely contact [email protected] so that they can look at your individual scenario. This isn't something I'd be able to evaluate third hand, but I'm sure our Helpsters will speedily reply if you give them a shout. Hope this helps!
Hello Miriam,
I will surely contact at [email protected] regarding this issue, thanks for the concern.
Miriam, what to do after finding that someone changed your details. i had experienced such practice more than 5-6 time in short span of 1-2 month only by some competitors. when change happen 5-6 time, google instead of listening your problem, just suspend your google listing.
1st, finding change in listing is not big deal, what steps to take after that so it dont happen again and update your old details is a problem. so does MOZ have any tool for it. if yes than i am interested in joining your services.
2nd, why MOZ dont provide this local feature outside USA ?. pls reply thanks.
Hey Miriam, thanks for helping to explain Moz Local to us!
Google My Business is a fantastic service – really it’s become indispensable to lots of businesses – but, as with all great services, there will always be people who use it. Moz Local sounds like a really great tool for helping to reduce the harm that unscrupulous individuals can do, and help protect businesses from digital damage.
Thanks for reading, Hitesh, and for your kind words about Moz Local. Much appreciated!
I appreciate the heads up on this feature.
Holy cow. Not good. Glad MozLocal will notifiy you! I just tested this by editing a Map listing for a client who has been unresponsive to sending my their GMB password. I suggested an edit to their GMB business name, and within minutes, the post was live! I got an email from Google, and the updated info is visible in Maps and Search already.
Hi Jack,
Good for you for doing a quick test in the trenches. Yes, as you can see, edits are quite easy to make. Hope it gives peace of mind to know if you're a Moz Local customer, at least these types of edits won't go unnoticed.
Thank you so much for bringing light to this and with a tool like Moz local to keep an eye out is great to have. I have really never considered a competitor changing other business information but it is more common than you think. I would of totally overlooked this in a odd audit situation.
Hi Tim!
You raise a good point - if you're auditing a client who has experienced an abrupt loss in calls/traffic, definitely smart to be sure their GMB listing hasn't been edited. Hope you're having a good week!
Hi Miriam,
Great update. So sad that we can't use MozLocal in Belgium. Maybe one day. :)
Regars,
Jonathan
Hi Jonathan,
Oh, I am sorry that Moz Local doesn't yet support your country. I'd love it if we could support them all! Thanks for taking the time to read my post, and wishing you great success in the new year.
Useful update, thanks. I haven't encountered this problem with my business yet, but if I do this will make life easier.
Ive got a couple questions for you on Moz Local:
Thanks for all your work!
Hi Caleb!
Just want to be sure you know how to contact Moz Local product support directly at [email protected]. See: https://moz.com/about/contact
If your listing has not gone live on those 3 direct network partners after 12 weeks, definitely contact support directly to see if there is some sort of hitch. They'll look at your listing personally to identify any problem that might be going on and help get it resolved for you. But, it can take up to 12 weeks for some partners to process your listing (each one has a different process), so you might want to just sit tight a couple more weeks on that.
Regarding those characters at the end of your URL, those are tracking characters Moz Local uses to track that updates are being made on schedule and as predicted. They do not affect your NAP consistency in any way, and are basically benchmarks being used for the success of data pushes. Again, please always feel free to contact our Helpsters with good questions like this.
Hope this helps and that you'll make robust use of our friendly support :)
Thanks for the info Miriam! I couldn't find contact information from within the Moz Local dashboard (perhaps that's my fault!), so this is helpful.
Hi Miriam!
Nice update, everything for keeping and eye on competition movement (even on your own home!) :P Really usefull!
Thanks, Sergio! Appreciate your comment.
Nice to see that negative feature shutdown - progress.
appreciate for this great post, hope we will get more updates in future like this, thanks once again.
Regards,
Techno Exponent