“We hope this tool will help small business owners become aware of the free opportunities to market their companies online, and alleviate some of the confusion many of them feel when it comes to the search engines.”Since TN Multisports is both a new business and website, I thought it would make for a good case study to test out Get Listed.
I started off by going to the home page and entered the business's name and zip code.
Unsurprisingly, the results reflected the business's brand-spankin-new status:
Get Listed correctly identified that TN Multisports did not have a local listing in Google, Yahoo!, Live Search or Best of the Web. I clicked on "Add your business listing" under Google, which opened Google's Local Business Center listing page in a separate window. I followed the step-by-step instructions and added TN Multisports to Google, Yahoo!, Best of the Web's free local business sign up (they have a premium listing available for $9.99/month) and Live Search. Google gives you the option to receive a follow up via phone or snail mail--I chose mail because I didn't want my trainer to get a phone call and not know what the hell was going on; however, David Mihm recommends verifying by phone if you can because sometimes mail follow ups can get lost. He did acknowledge that Google prefers to have the actual business owner add and claim a business instead of an SEO. Live Search also promised to send a follow up via mail so I could verify the listing. Yahoo! didn't have any sort of follow up, making me wonder how "secure" my listing would be.
At this point I have to play the waiting game for a bit and check back with Get Listed in a couple weeks after I've received my follow ups in the mail and have had a chance to claim my listings. Once I've done that, I can check to see if my listings have received any citations ("mentions" of my business name and address or business name and phone number on other sites, which Get Listed says are "used and tracked by Google and other search engines") or reviews. Citations come from data providers or from sites that Google scrapes that are predominately fed by data providers. For example, SEOmoz is listed as having 2 citations in Google:
The first citation listed is from our own site, and the second one is from Michael Vandemar's blog. His citation isn't a positive one, but unfortunately there's no way to have a citation removed--much like reputation management in the SERPs, we'll have to push the negative result down with other content.
Keeping with SEOmoz, our listing snapshot revealed that we have claimed a listing in Google but not in any of the other locations.
Clicking on "What does this score mean?" pulls up a lightbox that explains what the listing score is and links to a handy checklist that details how you can improve your score:
Going back to the dashboard, the "Try our Advanced Check" link pulled up multiple listings for SEOmoz, one for each of our old business addresses (we've moved twice since I've been employed).
This is actually important information to have because David told me it's important to claim previous addresses and update the information in order to consolidate listings. Also, since one of our old listings has a couple citations, absorbing that listing could hopefully push down the negative citation displaying for our most current location. Lastly, notice how two of the businesses say "SEOmoz" and one says "SEOmoz.org." David stressed to me the importance of keeping business mentions consistent and going with the same name each time.
I loved seeing this information, but I wouldn't have thought to click on "Try our Advanced Check" because above the link it says "Expecting to see a different business?" The result for SEOmoz's current address was exactly what I was expecting, so I didn't bother to run an advanced check. It would be nice if the snapshot said something like "We have found X similar business results that may interest you," which would compel me to click and see that we have to claim and update our old listings.
Some other nice touches on Get Listed include ways to rank higher in the local search engines and a great resource center that features lots of local search marketing advice, information and tips. The site also displays recent local search engine reviews for your business, but I didn't have any for TN Multisports or for SEOmoz, so that's something I definitely want to play with in the future.
Overall, I really like the concept of GetListed.org. I think it's an especially valuable tool for small businesses who maybe can't afford to hire an SEO or don't have a huge marketing budget but want to do what they can in order to have some visibility online. My previous post about the ramifications of the Honey Hole not verifying their listing is a perfect example of how Get Listed could help businesses with local search. It's also great for SEOs like me who aren't experts in local search and need a crash course on which metrics are important and what to do in order to improve local search rankings. Additionally, it's a good resource that I can refer to people to help get them started and going in the right direction.
One potential downside of Get Listed is that you have to keep going back to the site to check your business listings. For example, I have to wait a couple weeks for my follow ups from Google and Live Search to come in the mail. I might forget to check back with Get Listed, especially if my postcards get lost. Some sort of email ping or status tracker would be awesome for forgetful business owners. Pat Sexton has created a Google gadget that you can add to iGoogle, but otherwise you'll have to manually re-query your business via the Get Listed tool.
Other than the "stickiness factor," however, I think that Get Listed is a great new addition to local search and that it has the potential to help out tons of local businesses and SEOs with their local search efforts. I'll definitely keep using it for TN Multisports and some of my friends' small businesses, for site audits and for Q&A, and I'm looking forward to seeing how David and Pat continue to improve upon it and make it even more valuable.
Looks a great service. I hope they add UK support at some point!
Just to let everyone know, there are several international versions of Getlisted.org being worked on. Thanks for all the comments!
This is a great site. I used it recently to improve my own local search results and had noticable results in a few days! There is also some good content on this site to assist in learning how local search ticks!
Great article! As an advertising agency, what is the best way to list our clients as an added service on their behalf? Can the verification process be completed without the client being "bothered" with any follow-up calls or letters?
Nice post Rebecca. All I can tell you is that signing up to get listed in the local directories FREAKING SUCKS. It's one of the lousiest experiences I've ever had while doing submissions. This is especially true when there are multiple listings for the same company (likely due to multiple phone numbers or if you move).
GOOGLE... LOL. I can tell you from personal experience that you should verify by phone. Out of the many times I've tried the snail mail approach, I have only ever received ONE verification post card. HORRIBLE!
Yahoo... Don't even get me started. Horrible all-around.
The Local Search product managers need to get their proverbial $hit together in this regard. There are no excuses for making things this difficult and frustrating for your users.
I think this is an excellent example of what can happen when two great search marketers combine their respective talents and abilities.
David and Pat - very well done.
Wow, great details, thanks Rebecca. I think you highlighted a very important thing with the advanced search issue. Me and David will figure that out, I think that it is a great way to check if you are listed under different addresses, and you are right, it does not state that very well. Thanks for highlighting us!
My pleasure! I'm really a fan thus far, and I think you guys will continue to improve it and do great things with it (you smarty pants, you).
awesome site - congrats guys :)
I have been looking at getlisted and was saddened that it is U.S. only at the moment. It looks so great! I hope they add support for Canada soon.
Hey, this is Patrick Sexton. We will be adding Canada and UK soon :)
hey Patrick, can you guys make it to France too? or global if that's not too much to ask for? :) great tool, well done.
and a great article too, Rebecca
Where can we get updates when getlisted has UK functionality, a reminder would be great :)
I think twitter would do the job on that front! @yummyman and @davidmihm (hope you guys dont mind me twimping u out like that!)
this tool sucks and always has. how the buffoons mihm and blumenthal managed to sell it baffles me.
Hey.. Thats something good...
However, I have a .co.uk site and was surprised that they didnt have support for UK sites..
Hope that gets included soon.. It would be helpful..
I think they're planning on expanding to non-US areas soon.
great tool, very simple and easy to use
I agree with all the comments about this being a great tool. I have personally used it for 3 sites and have already recommended it to several people. The great thing is, it keeps all the info in one place and let's someone who doesn't understand this whole SEO business get their sites listed.
Rebecca thanks for the great post! Pat and David, nice job! I'll be watching for updates.
Congrats Pat on the great service.
Good job.. glad to see you hit the ground running.
Also.. i don't think people understand that google maps and google search are 2 different databases, hence getting listed locally will also help you in search.
Using GetListed.org helped me claim some listings I had somehow missed! I think it is very organized and easy to use.
Thanks for a great article!
Thanks a ton..after writing this comment i am using this tool to list my business.
Hi, i've been looking for a tool like this based in the UK for a while. I had been on getlisted.org and hope they had a UK version too but it doesn't appear to. I've just googled getlisted uk and it comes up with a site called getlisted.tv. It seems to be uk based and offers a similar offer. You can get listed in yellows pages, google, etc and you can also get listed in bing and a whole host of others too. It looks like a good offer for some cheap business marketing especially as i am a start up.
Does anyone have any experience of getlisted.tv? It says it's only £14.99 which seems pretty good to me?
Thanks
A really nice tool and big help for SEO.
But there is no Philippines listing and Zip Code for other countries not accepted.
I hadn't heard of GetListed before. Thank you for sharing and for the run down.
Sergey, thanks for the reminder of Grader. I forgot about it. There are so many tools available I can't keep track of them all!
Looks like a great tool. Definitely will use it.
Really nice detailed post Rebecca. I can't wait to spend a little time exploring the site.
Hi Rebeacca,
I love the detail in which you simplified the process for clients/new businesses to get listed on .org :-)
All be it the interface looks great, clean and simple to follow, I feel your post has broken down the bariers clients normally face in undertsnading the process and how complex/time consuming some elements of SEO can really be.
I have to say, I'm also on a high having met Rand in person today at SES London. :-)
I think I've found a new site to add to my small business website arsenal. Thanks for this review! I think this will definitely help bolster small, family businesses in communities in the future!
Nice summary! Thankful Rebecca did this analysis and admit I forgot about GetListed.org since it launched. I'll be checking it out again.
Patrick, David, KUDOS! You are providing excellent value to the industry that will help SEOs and more importantly small businesses!
Looks like a great tool. Too bad it won't accept Canadian Zip codes.
This most definately is a very useful new tool, but unfortunately not really useable outside the us...
Nice job as always Rebbeca. I thought you did a great job of explaining not only what you were doing but the extra input David was giving really helped.
Congrats Patrick, now quit feeding the bot and start serving the globe ;)
Great, it is the simple stuff that I overlook sometimes. Can't see the forest sometimes.
What about this service that getlisted.org recomends www.universal business listing .org? Is it worth the $30?
thanks
scott
Scott,
I met with one of the founders of Universal Business Listing at SMX last week to learn a little more about their service, which I've used for my clients personally for about 15 months.
UBL is absolutely the fastest and most reliable way to get into infoUSA's full database, which is the main db used by the search engines to start (and verify) their Local data set, and the one used by the largest number of other Local search portals. They also feed your listing to a number of other smaller databases. Theoretically, this should increase your citation total dramatically (and improve rankings). It seems to have worked well for my clients, which is why we recommend it on our enhanced page.
Localeze is its own database, but almost as valuable as infoUSA (and perhaps MORE valuable than info going forward), which is why we list it on that page as well.
That's a lot of info for an SMB owner to take in, let alone an SEO, though :)
Thanks for all the comments & feedback, mozzers!
It didn't impress me. There are a lot of simple tools like this which can tell you if your site listed on search engines / local directories.
As for me, I recommend Grader (by HubSpot). Grader will tell you everything about a website. It will show your Yahoo, DMOZ, Digg, Del.Icio.Us etc listings.
This tool didn't impress me. There are a lot of tools in the Universe, which can tell you a lot of stuff about many things. As for me, I recommend a chainsaw from Craftsman Tools. It can cut through branches and makes tree-trimming much easier. Some people even use them to make sculptures out of ice. You see where I'm going with this, Sergey? Let me explain: GetListed.org is a tool that provides information about local search listings. It's something that Pat and David have clearly spent a lot of time on, and yet they have graciously made it available for everyone to use--for FREE. Rebecca knew that this tool would be a valuable resource for SEOs and business owners, so she wrote about it in this blog post. Then you came along and left a comment that says you're not impressed with this tool--you recommend Grader. The problem is... Grader doesn't tell you ANYTHING about local search listings. In other words, you have recommended a tool that has nothing to do with what we're talking about in this post. Here's a tip: If people around you are discussing things you don't understand... it's okay to just STFU.
russian dude.. don't be a..
DICK!
darren... spot on mate!
Grader sucks.. AND.. doesn't do the same thing.