[Estimated read time: 9 minutes]
Right now, a customer is trying to find your local business. How quickly are you delivering the NAP, directions and other details he needs, on the go? See how accurate your listing information is right now.
Volumes of excellent free advice have been written for small businesses about creating quality, optimized local landing pages, but today, I’d like to talk about a topic that has received much less attention: helping customers discover locations when you’ve got a ton of them. This article is for the medium-to-large business with 50, 1,000, even 10,000 physical locations and a pressing goal to have each one be found by the customers local to it. Let’s talk about store locators!
Shopping wisely for store locators
A business with 5 or even 10 locations can easily work them into a menu tab labeled ‘Locations’ and trust that customers hitting the site will be able to click to their landing page of choice to access NAP, hours of operation, photos, reviews, etc. But when your company has grown beyond this, it simply isn’t practical to list dozens of locales in your top level navigation, whether on desktop or mobile devices. The solution, then, is a store locator widget that enables customers to enter a city and/or zip code, or click on an interactive map, to be guided to the right resource.
There are six main things you are looking for when assessing the quality of a store locator widget:
- Does it let me build and/or link directly to a customizable, permanent landing page for each of my locations? If so, this is a good sign. If not, your SEO opportunities will be severely limited.
- Does it allow me to search by city as well as zip code? If not, then you’ll have a problem with all travelers who may be trying to find your business in a strange city and have no idea what the local zip codes are.
- Does it work properly on all devices? This is must these days, given that as many as 50% of mobile queries may have a local intent.
- It’s a must that the widget will work with your existing website, whether that’s running on Wordpress, Magento, Demandware, or what have you. You don’t want to have to redevelop your website, just to get your widget to function.
- A bonus to look for would be automatic geolocation detection — the ability of the widget to detect where a customer is searching from. This provides convenience.
- And, finally, there may be extra features you’d like to have to ensure the best possible experience for both users and your business. This might include search text autocompletion, the ability to sync with a database to upload location data, or search filters that allow users to refine results based on personal criteria.
Keep all of these necessary and optional features in mind when evaluating Store Locator widget choices. Capterra has recently done a good job of profiling a number of popular options which should help you hone in on the right solution for your company.
Pricing varies widely, from free to upwards of a $1,000 initial investment with reduced rates for subsequent years of service. Wordpress offers a number of free and premium store locator plugins with varying degrees of popularity. For any paid product, I recommend choosing only those which offer a free trial period of at least 1–2 weeks so that you can be sure the solution works for you.
Weak landing pages? Weirdly, not a big worry!
I’m now going to write something kind of shocking you thought never thought you’d read on the Moz Blog: you can evidently get away with thin and duplicate content on location landing pages — if your brand is established enough.
I’m writing this because, having looked at a considerable number of live store locators while researching this article, I found landing pages like this one with next to zero content on them, landing pages like this one with a very meager attempt at content that is observably duplicative, and landing pages like this one with some duplicate content, but also, some added value for local users. Not trying to hurt anyone’s feelings, but, with the exception of the last example, the sheer volume of locations operated by these companies has likely caused their marketers to settle on the most minimal effort possible to differentiate between landing pages. The last of these (REI) has actually done a good job of adding interest to their pages by including a regional event schedule. I like what they’ve done, but is it necessary?
The answer may surprise you
In a word: no. Google is correctly finding for me each of these businesses in the right cities, both organically and locally, when I search for them. While I would never advise a small business to take a least-effort approach with their store landing pages, it’s my conclusion from my research that established brands can get away with a great deal, simply because they are established. It seems you can get the right data in front of the customer with a very minor effort, and that the minimum requirements for data on those pages would be that they have correct company NAP on them and are indexable.
Am I handing out a lazy pass for all?
Are lax standards a good reason to go with the minimum effort and call it a day? In another word: maybe. The investment you make in landing page development for your brand is going to be dictated by:
- Funding
- Scalability
- Creativity
- Competition
If funding is modest, you may need to spend elsewhere in your marketing for now. If you have hundreds of locations, the cost of going the extra mile on your store landing pages may not show any easily-discernible ROI. If your marketing department throws its hands up in the air regarding differentiating store #157 from store #158, there may be a lack of available creative solutions to the scenario. But this last bullet point — competition — this is where things get interesting.
Besting your toughest competitors
Let’s say you’re operating one of three sporting goods stores in town. Competitor A has zero content beyond NAP and hours on his landing pages. Competitor B has thin, duplicate content on her landing pages. But, you, you smartie, have not only got a unique paragraph of text on your pages, but also store-specific reviews, and a maintained schedule of guided hikes in the region. All three of you link to your respective landing pages from your Google My Business listings. If you were Google, would A, B, or C look like a more authoritative resource to you?
And let’s look at this from the perspective of me on my cell phone on a winter’s day, looking for a high end snowboard and being given raw NAP by one competitor, a generic message by the second, but a promise of a free cup of hot cocoa (according to your reviewers) and a welcome message from you that states that every employee at your shop is a fanatical outdoors enthusiast, ready to show a novice like me the ropes of investing in sporting goods.
In a competitive scenario, if your store is the only one maximizing the potential for consumer engagement on your store landing pages, you are working towards impressing not just search engines, but customers, too. You could end up earning more than your fair share of those 50% of local-intent mobile queries, in city after city.
Supercharge your landing pages
Here’s a quick brainstorming list of both typical and optional content you could include on store landing pages to make them extra useful and extra persuasive:
- NAP
- Hours of Operation
- Driving Directions
- Unique welcome message
- Proofs of local community involvement
- Store-specific reviews or testimonials
- Links to major review profiles for the store
- Social media links
- Live chat apps
- Store-specific specials, including coupons
- Location-specific schedule of in-store or topically related regional events
- A summary list of brands, goods and/or services offered at that location
- Indoor/outdoor imagery of the specific store
- Video content relative to the store or region
- A statement of guarantees offered at the store
- An interactive map
- Calls-to-action for how to communicate with the brand after hours
- Education about the availability of beacons or other in-store apps
Looking for more inspiration? Try this Moz Academy video to spark extra landing page content ideas.
You may necessarily end up with a minor amount of duplicate content, but by brainstorming a list like the above, you will be making a maximum effort to inspire bots to consider your pages authoritative and to inspire searchers to become customers.
Discovery and indexing: Making landing pages pay off
Now that you’ve made the effort to create all of these individual landing pages for your locations, your top priority is to be sure they can be discovered by customers and indexed by search engines.
Simple enough
The first is really easy: be certain your Locations or Stores link is in your top level navigation, at the top of every page of your website. Don’t count on users finding it if you’ve stuck it in a box somewhere within your homepage layout. Many users will not be entering your website via the homepage and you want to deliver the link to find the store nearest them immediately. Don’t make them search for it.
Take care here
Ensuring that search engines can crawl and index your local landing pages requires a bit more thought, given that different store locator widgets are developed with different types of code. Google can crawl CSS, and they can typically crawl Javascript and AJAX. Hopefully, the widget you choose will facilitate your landing pages being properly indexed with no additional effort. But, to make this foolproof, here are additional things you can do:
- Be sure you are linking from the Google My Business listing for each location to its respective landing page on the website.
- Be sure your other citations also consistently link to the landing pages instead of to the homepage.
- Submit an XML sitemap to Google Search Console.
- Create a permanent sitemap on your website, that includes links to all of the landing pages.
- On the main Locations page of the website, include an alphabetical directory of all locations with crawlable links. You can see an example of this at REI.com.
- Earning inbound links to these pages from third parties and, also, linking internally to landing pages from other pages of the website or blog posts, where appropriate, are other forms of insurance that they will be discovered, crawled and indexed.
You say “local landing pages,” I say, “customer service!”
Comscore/Neustar Localeze have estimated that more than ½ of desktop local searches and more the ¾ of mobile local searches result in an offline purchase. The same study asserts that almost half of the searches surrounding services, restaurants and travel are performed by users looking for companies with whom they’ve never had any previous transactions.
In this lively scenario, the smart business will be that one which gets name, address, phone number and driving directions in front of the customer fast. The winning business in a competitive environment may be the one which not only extends the courtesy of basic data to the customer, but which offers extra inducements (in the form of additional useful information) to be that customer’s choice.
Store locator widgets and local landing pages have become an established component of customer service. Properly implemented and developed, they may be the very first sign you give to a major percentage of your incoming customers that you are there to serve their needs. Serve them well!
Thanks Miriam for talking about this topic cos many are still unaware with right local landing pages. How this will help them to get direct leads. I have seen it many of the that mobile users used to find accurate and Geo based results and a NAP profile will help to generate more traffic.
Hi Shalu Singh,
Glad you found this topic a good one to see featured on the Moz Blog. Thanks so much for taking the time to read!
What an excellent overview on the importance of going above and beyond. Thank you for sharing!
To further enhance your local landing pages, you want to make sure that your citations in that market are also tied to that location page. With this being said, just going through a list of 150 citations resources and adding your NAP isn't cutting it anymore. We recently wrote a post called "Beyond the NAP" or BNAP citations for SEO. This is something that we always preach when it comes to local SEO.... and it works!!
Think about it:
Would Google rather index a listing on a yellow page site with just a Name, Address, Phone or a completely built out listing page with 300-500 words of original (never copied straight from your home page) content and all the bells and whistles that they offer you to complete?
Going beyond the NAP will allow the search engines to better index all your citation pages which will eventually build your trust flow and of course citation flow.
Think about this:
By completing every field and description in your citation resources, you may come across WYSIWYG editors that allow you to insert a link, some with rel="nofollow" and some are actually followed. This is just the icing on the cake.
Good citation resources are hard to come by so when you add your information, make sure you are going above and beyond like Miriam said.
Thanks again, you nailed it! : )
Good Morning, Brenan and what a thoughtful comment! Thank you so much for taking time to share your tips for success with the community. Excellent!
I consider it essential to include a topographic map at any tipoe local business so that users can go to your establishment. That itself has struck me that with the information on the first page , suffice as minimum requirements for positioning a business. Thank you very much for the information.
Hey Enrique!
I'm curious if by topographic map you mean including a zoomed in map showing major local features, or perhaps, something else? Please, do share your tips! Thanks so much for reading this.
Thanks Miriam!
This article may inspire a project or two this week… I think we'll need to play around with some of these store locator widgets. Is there one in particular you've used and would recommend from the links you've provided?
Thanks again!
Hey Paul,
I'm partial to WordPress-based solutions, because of pricing, but I also think the Captera comparison I linked to in this piece offers some good options.
Great post, Miriam, thanks! I'd like to add that when shopping for a store locator, the crawlability of the locator and the page authority distribution down to the location landing pages is critical for ranking organically and in the local packs.
Hey Mary!
So happy to see you here, and thanks for these added tips. Excellent ones! Looking forward to your next Deep Dive over at LocalU :)
I finally got around to reading this post and it was fantastic. As someone that has worked heavily - and written about - Local SEO. It is always helpful to have more info to help clients stand out locally.
Why no mention of Schema local mark-up?
We have multiple branches and it works very well.
We also embed the map from the Google Business listing on the landing page.
In many cases, we have the top organic listing, with the branch landing page, plus the Google Business box.
Hey Eric!
Good point, and yes, Schema would be a smart thing to add, maybe JSON-LD. Thanks for mentioning :) Appreciate you taking the time comment.
Excellent post regarding local seo that is a must for small business especially
Nice post!!
If you need more info about SEO Toronto then visit www.citymarketingexperts.com
Exceleant post and great information, Time to take notes
Ok - let's say the brand is a consumer packaged goods brand (CPG) - they don't own the locations, they're just distributed. But they want to show all the locations they're in with a store locator.
I can't really find a store locator that outputs in pure HTML all the locations and works without Javascript, so that it's best for SEO. Am I missing something here? Yes Google activates/crawls Javascript to a degree but it's not guaranteed.
Have you seen any solutions? Seems the answer to to manually put together a huge location of stores.
And landing pages are not possible since that would require a page for Whole Foods NYC, Whole Foods Los Angeles, etc - they are just the product brand sold in the store, they are not Whole Foods.
Hi Joe,
I believe what you're describing here is something like Organic Kettle Chips sold at Whole Foods Market and other stores. As I've mentioned, search engines can typically crawl this javascript, but to be honest, CPG is not an area I have any experience with, and I've never had to develop anything for a 'find our products at these fine retailers'-type scenario. Local SEO is really my strength. I've pointed to the REI example in this article in which they've got both a menu of links and a locator, but all of my suggestions are dependent on you building a landing page for each of the stores (which do get crawled), but if you're not going that way, I'm not sure what your options are.
I'm thinking about your scenario and wondering whether it's actually necessary for you to be concerned about landing pages or not. Your website would contain a list of retailers, accessible via widget or map or what have you, so that people on your website know your Kettle Chips are available at a Whole Foods near them. How much does it really matter whether or not search engines crawl this? Is it necessary for the individual retailers to get indexed via your own website? How so?
An interesting post!
In my opinion I think it is logical to include a topographic map at any tipo local business. It is essential to fill in all the information possible and have the data optimized so as not to confuse users.
Clearly reviews of your customers get is sometimes important and well know the heart of local SEO, through creation, double check and list your virtual store and why it matters for your local SEO strategy
Wow! Nice article my friend! Google Local is very important in searches!
Nice Post!
Great post Miriam,
In many sectors you do not need a global web positioning is easier to start with a good local seo optimization to reach your closest users.
Hi Jose!
That's quite true that competing locally narrows the playing field considerably for most businesses. Glad you enjoyed the post!
Would Google Street View Inside do as well as landing pages?
Hi Christina!
Are you speaking of Google Indoor Street View? While I'm not sure how that would replace a store locator widget, itself, it could certainly be a nice enhancement to add to a store landing page. Was this what you meant, or a different product?
Dear Miriam,
Your post is reaally interesting. Right now I can't use it cause' I'm working in a small business (three directions) and it's kinda easy to find our data, but I'd love to be able to use your advice someday! Personally, what I've seen in the big companies that differenciate them from the others are the customer service. There's a moment when all the big companies has kind of a similar product to offer than the others, so the only thing that's different is how you treat your customers. For example, the live chat you can stablish with them is a nice way to get a fast and good answer, preventing them to leave your page.
Good Morning!
I couldn't agree more - there is a sameness to the technology being used by many major brands, but there can be a huge difference between companies in the quality of service being provided by the human beings behind the technology. I had a good experience with this just recently. I purchased something from a company that offers both in-store sales and shipping. The product arrived broken. In the past, I've had to get myself to the post office and pay to mail back a defective product, but in this recent experience, the employee had been empowered by company policy to say,
"Wow, we're sorry about that. I'm sending you a new one tomorrow with free overnight shipping."
They didn't require me to send the broken one back. They took my word for it that the product was broken. Needless to say, that was so hassle-free for me that I'll gladly buy from them again. That's customer service success!
Interesting. Though not applicable to our business today I can see the benefits from the user standpoint!
Hi Luis!
Sorry this one isn't a fit for your business. Maybe share with friends who have or market local businesses :) !
It's very informative post for latest SEO trend for local business. Thanks.
Thanks Dillip! Glad you found this informative.
Good write-up Miriam.
REI normally does a pretty good job but pretty thin here. Of course with a domain authority like that, they can afford to be weak with content.
They are using json schema markup as well which certainly helps them.
Hi Nicholas!
That's pretty much what I've found, that if a brand is large enough (REI has 143 stores) they are not being obviously harmed by thin or duplicate content on their landing pages. They do a better job than many I've looked at. Of course, my ideal would be great, unique content on every landing page, but I struggled to find examples of big brands excelling at that! I appreciate your comment.
Thanks for sharing wonderful article .
Hello Miriam,
Great post ! It is always better to start slowly , from a local to a global positioning .
They are good recommendations.
Excellent article!!
For any brand that is present in various locations such as a chain of coffes shops and supermarkets it is important to locate any establishment of its brand at the specified location. It is the first fora to give the customer the best service !!
Congrats Miriam
Agree, Ivan! If you want customers to patronize your business, FIRST they've got to be able to find you :) Thanks so much for reading this!
Hi Miriam,
Thanks for sharing wonderful Post.
Great post thank you for sharing this
Refreshingly good :)