Local online listings are an essential component of an effective strategy to drive customers into local stores. Ranking highly in the search engine results and dominating the top rankings with your listings is critical for your customers to be able to find you in an online search.
Partnering with Placeable, Mediative, one of North America’s leading digital marketing and advertising agencies, took twenty-five of Canada’s top retail brands (those with multiple local stores, spread nationally), and analyzed how they're faring when it comes to local digital marketing compared to their American counterparts. The analysis found that 80% of the online listings for twenty-five of Canada’s top retailers are inconsistent, inaccurate, or missing information. The top twenty-five US retailers are outperforming the top twenty-five Canadian retailers by over 28%.
The retailers’ digital presence was analyzed across four dimensions, and brands received a score from 0 to 100 for each of the four dimensions. The dimension scores were weighted and combined into a single overall score: the NatLo™ Score ("National-to-Local"). This overall score is an authoritative measure of a company’s local digital marketing performance:
Depth |
|
Depth and accuracy of published location content, as well as the richness and completeness of site information. Some examples include name, address, phone number, descriptions, services, photos, calls-to-action, and more. | |
Brands that achieve exceptional depth deliver a better customer experience with richer content about their locations and offerings. Greater Depth also produces higher online to offline conversion rates and supports other marketing calls-to-action. |
Visibility |
|
Website effectiveness in search/discoverability. Some examples include site structure, page optimization, and web and mobile site performance. | |
Strong visibility produces higher search engine rankings and greater traffic. It also enables brands to achieve multiple listings in search results. Brands with poor Visibility surrender more traffic to directories and competitors. |
Reach |
|
Data consistency and coverage across third-party sites. Some examples include presence, completeness, and accuracy of location data on third party sites such as Google, Facebook, Factual, Foursquare, and the Yellow Pages directory site (YellowPages.ca). | |
Brands with outstanding reach can be found by consumers across a range of search engines, social sites and apps. Poor Reach can lead to consumer confusion and misallocated marketing investments. |
Precision |
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Geographic accuracy of location data. For example, the pin placement of each location based on latitude and longitude, or the dispersion of pins on third-party sites (pin spread). | |
Superior precision enables customers to efficiently navigate to a brand’s location. Failure to ensure Precision damages customer trust and increases the risk of competitive poaching. |
Key findings of the report
- Across twenty-five of Canada’s top retailers, on average, 80% of all third-party site listings are inconsistent, inaccurate, or missing information.
- The top twenty-five US retailers outperformed retailers in Canada by over 28%. Canadian retailers are weak in comparison.
- In the analysis of twenty-five of Canada’s top retail brands, seven (or 28%) did not have local landing pages on their website, a key component of local SEO strategy that's needed to rank higher in search engines and get more traffic.
- Of those that included local landing pages, 72% failed to provide any content over and above the basics of name, address, hours, and phone number on their location pages. Engaging local content on local pages increases a brand’s visibility on the search engine results page, and ultimately drives more traffic to the website and in-store.
- When it comes to Facebook location data, 90% was either inconsistent or missing, and 75% of Google+ location data was either inconsistent or missing. Inadequate syndication of location data across the third party ecosystem leads to poor placement in search engine results and the loss of online site visits.
- Only 8% of map pin placements were "good," with 92% being "fair" or "poor." Inaccurate pin placements lead to customer frustrations, and a stronger chance customers will visit competitors’ locations.
Canada’s best-performing retail brands
Brands with NatLo™ scores of over 70 have positioned themselves digitally to perform effectively within their local markets, drive consumer awareness, achieve online and mobile visibility, and capture the most web traffic and store visits. Brands achieving a score in the 60s are still doing well and have a good grasp of their local strategy; however, there are still areas that can be improved to maintain competitiveness. Scores below 60 indicate that there are areas in their local strategy that need improvement.
The average score across the Canadian retailers that were analyzed was just under 48—not a single one of the brands was excelling at maintaining accurate and consistent information across multiple channels. Ultimately, the listings accuracy of Canadian brands is weak.
The five top-performing brands analyzed and their corresponding NatLo™ scores were as follows:
Jean Coutu |
60 |
80 |
66 |
37 |
56 |
Walmart |
60 |
70 |
64 |
63 |
42 |
Rona |
58 |
50 |
86 |
41 |
56 |
Lululemon Athletica |
57 |
40 |
74 |
60 |
54 |
Real Canadian Superstore |
55 |
50 |
51 |
72 |
45 |
Deep dive on depth: Jean Coutu
Jean Coutu performed exceptionally well in the dimension of depth, achieving the highest score across the retailers (80). What does Jean Coutu do to achieve a good depth score?
- The brand publishes the name, address, phone number, and hours for each location on its website.
- Additional location information is provided, including local flyers and offers, directions, services provided, brands offered, photos, and more (see image below). This delivers a much better customer experience.
Deep dive on visibility: Rona
Rona performed exceptionally well in terms of visibility, with a score of 86.
Rona achieves superior digital presence by using optimized mobile and web locators, plus page optimization tactics such as breadcrumb navigation. The website has a good store locator (as can be seen in the image below), with clean, location-specific urls that are easy for Google to find (e.g. https://www.rona.ca/en/Rona-home-garden-kelowna-kelowna):
In this study of Canadian retailers, many brands struggled with visibility due to the absence of specific, indexible local landing pages and a lack of engaging local content.
Deep dive on reach: Real Canadian Superstore
Real Canadian Superstore performed exceptionally well in the dimension of reach with a score of 72. The brand has claimed all of its Facebook pages, and 69% of location data matches what is listed on their website. Real Canadian Superstore also performed well in terms of its Google+ Local pages, with 49% of location data matching. The brand has a good local presence on Facebook, YellowPages.ca, Factual, Foursquare, and Google+ Local. By claiming these pages, the brand is extending its online reach.
Across all third-party sites measured, Real Canadian Superstore had a 0% location data missing rate on average, compared to the total average across all brands of 20%. Many of the brands struggled with external reach, missing important location information on Facebook and Google+, or having inaccurate information when compared to the same location information on the brand's website.
Deep dive on precision: Rexall Pharmacy
Interestingly, none of the top-scoring retailers performed very well in terms of precision (accuracy and consistency of pin placements). Rexall Pharmacy was the top performer, with a score of 62. At the time of writing, their precision scores were as follows:
39% were good. | |
35% were fair. | |
26% were poor. |
In the retail industry, competing businesses can be located very closely to one another, so if the location of your business on a map or the directions provided through the map are accurate, there’s less chance of your customers visiting your competitor’s locations instead of yours.
In conclusion
All in all, Canada’s top retail brands excel at brand advertising at the national level. But when it comes to driving local customers into local stores, a different strategy is required, and not all the top retailers are getting it. A solid local strategy requires all four dimensions to be addressed in order to achieve the synergies of an integrated strategy. By emulating the tactics implemented by the four retailers highlighted above, even the smallest local business can make significant improvements to their local online strategy.
Rebecca Maynes, Manager of Content Marketing and Research with Mediative, was the major contributor on this report. The full report, including which brands in Canada are performing well and which need to make some improvements, is available for free download.
I have a technical question. You shared the Jean Coutu using a finder tool on their locations page. I understand this is great for user experience but is Google able to actually index the information on the finder tool. It seems like all of that info would be behind JavaScript which I thought would make it so Google could not index the info. Let me know
Hey Brian,
I worked on that site redesign a few years ago :) The answer is quite simple, you'll find an "all locations" page listing locations by province & city and it is linked to from the main footer. It is quite similar to the way Apple boutique store locator to ensure all locations are indexed.
HI Brian,
So sorry for the delayed response. This question fell through the cracks - I had to reach out to our Director of Organic Search here at Mediative. because technical SEO of this depth is not my forte! He has let me know that you are right, Google will have a hard time or not be able at all to crawl dynamic store locators. But, as Samuel mentions above, the Jean Coutu site also has a static “by province” store locator that enables crawlers to index properly and easily every location found on the site.
Local listing matters a lot. Now if we talk about Online Marketing, local listing becomes one of the most targeted strategy. I completely agree - "80% of the online listings for twenty-five of Canada’s top retailers are inconsistent, inaccurate, or missing information" as i am already working for few websites and getting the impact of local listing on daily basis.
Rebecca@ Your case study is very very effective. Very useful and effectively written post.
100% agree with you!local seo is the key!
Nice post!
A good SEO campaign is important for a small or medium business can compete with a company on the internet. Therefore, it is interesting to make a good SEO strategy to gain visibility in local search results.
Thank you for sharing your article with us.
I appreciate your work, Local listing becomes one of the most targeted strategy. It seems really interesting that the top 25 Canadian retailers has such errors still they are in the list of top? Local listing is very much required to be perfect as competition lever increasing day by day. Your blog is so interesting, it quite interesting and really very helpful for me. Thanks again..
Nice Article Rebecca. Majority of local listing websites show some problems in fetching accurate information when we enter local pin code and i am sure that its one of the major reason people adding pin of other location. Users can't even ignore these websites because they have good page rank and importance in google. I did it even so many times because at least i am getting backlink for my website... Interested to know audience openion about this... have anyone faced same problem...?
Great study, @Rebecca! I'm sure you must have spent hours on analyzing that data.
Thanks for sharing your insights with the world!
All the best,
VS
This is an interesting study and helped me a lot... Very good post @Rebecca
The reducing from 7 pack to 3 pack also providing the opportunity for the SEO professionals to get Top page ranking / first page ranking for their website with their SEO efforts.
Thanks! nice and useful info and example. Internet supposed to help customers get to their seller not complicate things.
This is an interesting study... Good Post @Rebecca
Rebecca,
I appreciate the work you have done behind finding this data, and thanks for sharing with us too. It seems really interesting that the top 25 Canadian retailers has such errors still they are in the list of top? Local listing is very much required to be perfect as competition lever increasing day by day. Even, now google showing only three results in local, so it would be very hard to get placed in the top three. Must have to be perfect in all the areas of local.
Thanks again Rebecca for this wonderful post, looking forward to see boost on this :)
Thanks @Rebecca
A very interesting piece. We have already started to see the reduction from 7 to 3 over here in the UK. It is now about providing greater localized info on the client websites to ensure they rank in those top 3 SERP's. Thanks again for your article.
Regards.
Great post @Rebecca.
I really found your post well written and insightful. With Mobile designs leading desktop, many of us need to take the wake up call and look for opportunities. Local SEO is just getting ever more popular partly because of this, but has always been a very useful tactics that can benefit pretty much any brand that has a physical address.
For Canadians, aside from Moz Local (which targets only the US I think) & maybe brightlocal, Is there any other tools you'd recommend?
Thanks,
I read your blog and found it quite interesting and really very helpful for me…Thanks for such a nice post. Please have a look at my blog also…
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