First published in 2008 by David Mihm, the Local Search Ranking Factors survey of Local SEOs around the globe has become a high point in the year in local search. If you eagerly await this yearly report and comb through it for new insight, then the information in this guide may not come as news to you. I wrote this guide for marketers who are new to the field of local SEO and for local business owners who are flying solo in their efforts to market their companies on the web.
Local Search Ranking Factors 2013 identified 83 foundational ranking factors. This guide takes the top 20 most important factors and offers a succinct, illustrated example of each.
By reading this guide, you will understand both the lingo and the concept of each local search ranking factor. Use this information and you will be on the road to promoting local businesses on the web from a firm and educated foundation. Sound good? Start reading!
1. Proper category associations
2. Physical address in city of search
3. Consistency of structured citations
4. Quality/authority of structured citations
5. HTML NAP matching place page NAP
6. Quantity of structured citations
7. Domain authority of website
8. Individually owner-verified local plus page
9. City, state in Places landing page title
10. Proximity of address to centroid
11. Quality/authority of inbound links to domain
12. Quantity of native Google Places reviews (w/text)
13. Product/service keyword in business title
14. Quantity of citations from locally relevant domains
15. Proximity of physical location to the point of search
16. Quantity of citations from industry-relevant domains
17. Local area code on local Plus page
18. City, state in most/all website title tags
19. Quantity of third-party traditional reviews
20. Page authority of Places landing page URL
1. Proper category associations
Proper category associations are important enough to be ranked #1 in the survey. During the process of creating your Google+ Local page, you will be choosing categories at two distinct points.
When you enter your initial details, you will be selecting a primary category for the business. This is the most important category you will choose.
Then, once inside the dashboard, you will be allowed to select up to nine other categories for your business.
All categories must be chosen from Google's pre-set category taxonomy. Earlier versions of Google's dashboard allowed the business owner to custom create categories, but this feature is being phased out.
The concept here is simple. If you wish to appear in the local results for a search like "dentists in denver", your business must be categorized as a dentist. If it is categorized as a certified public accountant, you have no hope of appearing for your important search terms.
To help you determine which categories are available to describe your business, you can use Mike Blumenthal's free Google Places for Business category tool. Type in keywords that you feel best describe what your business is and the tool will show you which categories are available. Your choice of categories will often be obvious. A dentist will want to choose "dentist" as his primary category. But, he may wish to perform keyword research and combine that with use of the above tool to discover additional important categories such as "dental clinic" or "cosmetic dentist".
You will be building listings for your business in a variety of other local business directories and indexes. These platforms will not necessarily offer categories that are identical to those in Google's system. You must take time to discover the most relevant categories on each platform as you build each listing.
2. Physical address in city of search
Your business is most likely to appear in Google's pack of local results for searches that either:
- Contain the name of the city in which it is physically located, or
- Stem from devices based in that city
This search for "chirporactors san francisco" illustrates this phenomenon, in that all of the results Google is returning in its local pack are for practitioners physically located in that city:
In the above screenshot, you will note that there are no chiropractors in neighboring cities included in these results. It's safe to say that Google has a very definite bias towards physical location in the city of search. This is a simple concept, but it represents a major stumbling block for two distinct business models.
A) Service area businesses (SABs) with employees who might travel to a city like San Francisco to do plumbing, management consulting, or dog walking, but who are physically based in another city or town. In other words, the SAB does not have a physical address in San Francisco.
B) Brick-and-mortar businesses located just outside the borders of a major city like San Francisco, Dallas, or Denver. An example of this might be a locally-heralded acupuncturist who is located in Mill Valley, California, but who has numerous clients who are happy to travel a few miles outside of San Francisco to visit him.
In both cases, the business owner understandably wants these major city audiences to know his services are available, but because of Google's bias toward physical location, these businesses are unlikely to ever appear in the local pack of results. As things presently stand with Google, the best hope for these types of business owners is to begin developing city landing pages that showcase their professional association with these other cities, whether this involves windows they wash on the skyscrapers of Dallas or lectures they give at a Denver hospital. The goal here is to gain additional visibility in the organic results for these other geographic terms.
There are some exceptions that may overcome Google's bias. If you search for a niche business model in or around a major city, or search for any business model in a rural location, you may see listings in the local pack of results that stem from several cities. For example, if there is only one gas station serving a large radius in a rural area, it may pop up as a local result for any of the towns in that region. This scenario, however, tends to be the exception rather than the rule.
In sum, it is generally wise for local business owners to set the goal of earning local pack rankings for searches related to their city of location, and organic rankings for any other geographic terms they feel are important.
3. Consistency of structured citations
A citation is any web-based mention of your company's partial or complete name, address, and phone number (NAP). A "structured citation" refers to a listing of your business in an online local business directory such as YP.com, HotFrog, or Best of the Web.
Inconsistent citations might involve:
- A difference in the business name (i.e. Smile Dentistry vs. Smile Dental Clinic)
- A wrong street address, a typo in street address numbers, or a missing suite number
- A wrong or different phone number, a toll free or call tracking number
- A different or wrong website URL
Citation inconsistencies may arise from simple carelessness during the citation-building process and these mistakes may then be duplicated across the local search ecosystem. Inconsistencies also commonly arise if a business has moved at any time in the past decade or so. Apart from causing confusion for humans, these discrepancies hinder Google's ability to trust the data they have gathered from around the web about a given business. A lack of trust on Google's part can spell ranking difficulties for the business.
Here is an illustration of a randomly-chosen dental practice in Sacramento, California which recently moved. The new location of the practice is on Riverside Blvd., but a search in Google reveals that many structured citations for the business still list its old location on Freeport Blvd. As can be seen in the Google+ Local area of the results, the business currently has two listings that reflect this inconsistency, meaning that their authority is being split up instead of consolidated into one correct listing.
If you have to move locations, it's a given that you'll need to put in some hours editing your old citations so that they reflect your new address. You'll see this being referred to as "citation cleanup." However, many businesses that haven't moved will discover that they have inconsistent NAP data out there on the web, too.
An easy way to begin searching for this is to simply type your business name into Google's main search engine and see what comes up. Go through the results by hand and make sure that each part of your NAP is identical across all listings of your business. Edit where necessary.
4. Quality/authority of structured citations
It's just good horse sense that having your business listed on high-quality websites is going to help you more than being listed on sites of low quality. As a rule of thumb, businesses should initially concentrate on getting listed on a handful of really authoritative local business indexes and directories. Use the tool at GetListed.org to be sure that you have a listing in the dozen or so basic, authoritative directories highlighted there.
Once you have all your ducks in a row with these basic citations, you want to continue down the citation building path to further enhance your company's visibility and authority. Perform searches for category terms, service terms, and geographic terms to see what comes up in the search engine results. The websites that come up may be places you would like to list your business, if possible.
There is no standard process for judging the quality of a citation source. Metrics you might consider could include domain authority, domain age, link profile quality, and even simpler quality signals such as whether the website looks fresh or neglected. Darren Shaw of Whitespark has written a good blog post entitled "How to Identify Quality Citation Sources". If you are in a competitive market, you may need to build numerous citations to compete and may find that using a paid tool like Whitespark's Local Citation Finder makes your work both easier and more effective.
5. HTML NAP matching place page NAP
Google will be looking at the website page you've linked to from your Google Places/Google+ Local page to cross reference the name, address and phone number of your business. If all elements match, as shown in this screenshot, you're good to go:
However, if there is a discrepancy in the NAP you have on your +Local page and the NAP on the website page your +Local page links to, then Google will become "confused" about the data they have about your business. Small discrepancies like Ste. vs Suite or Hwy. vs Highway do not matter. Reference Point 3 in this guide for a list of discrepancies that do matter. Your task is to ensure that your NAP is cohesive in both places.
There is a specific scenario in which Google may not be able to cross reference the complete NAP in the +Local Page dashboard with the NAP published on a website. This relates to home-based businesses which, for reasons of privacy, do not publish their street address on their website. It is speculated that this decision may put the business at some disadvantage, given what an authoritative source the website is, but to date, I am unaware of any in-depth studies that have been conducted surrounding this interesting topic.
One might guess that if there are five home-based seamstresses in a town and only one of them publishes her home address on her website, she might have an edge over the other four, because Google is able to confirm that the Google+ Local page dashboard address matches the one found on the website. This is a subject that is deserved of further study!
6. Quantity of structured citations
Again, a structured citation is a listing of your business name, address, and phone number (NAP) on an online local business directory. While the quality of these structured citations counts most, quantity is definitely important, too.
Each unique local business owner will find he needs to build a different number of citations in order to be competitive. Typically, the more competitive your market is, the more citations you will need to build.
A simple way to find new structured citations for your business is to type your business category terms into Google's main search engine to see what comes up. For example, a Boston-based search for "doctors" highlights these two directories where it may be smart for any doctor to get listed.
For a more sophisticated approach, you might use a tool like Whitespark's Local Citation Finder (Moz members get a 20% discount!) which will not only help you find new citations to build, but will also keep track of the numeric quantity of citations you have earned:
For businesses in less competitive markets, an initial session of citation building followed up by a very modest, occasional effort to build new citations may be all that's needed to become dominant in the search engine results. If you're in a tough market, however, ongoing citation building will likely need to be an integral part of your local search marketing strategy.
7. Domain authority of website
At present, the overall strength of a local business' website plays a major role in how it ranks both locally and organically. Simply stated, "Domain Authority" is a metric used to predict how well a website may perform in search results compared to other websites. Moz offers a Domain Authority toolbar called the MozBar that makes it easy to see the DA of any website in the search engine results. See the bottom of this screenshot, below:
There are many factors that make up the domain authority of a website. Some of these include the age of a website and the number and quality of links pointing to it. For a great explanation of DA, read this blog post by Matt Peters.
In general, every local business will want to publish the strongest possible website. This means having a user-friendly, optimized site with excellent content that earns links and social mentions over time. You will always be working to build your domain authority, and the higher it is, the better your chances of ranking well for your most important terms.
8. Individually owner-verified local Plus page
Creating your Google+ Local page for your local business is your first step to being included in Google's index. Your second step is to verify your ownership of the listing. These days, this typically involves receiving a postcard/letter from Google containing a pin number which you must enter in order to complete verification.
Avoid letting anyone else act as a go-between for your company, putting your Google+ Local page into some master Google account of their own. It's fine to have a Local SEO help you with the steps of verification, but this should be done with your own Google account and not the account of any third party. You need to be in direct control of your Google+ Local page, and while you will find unverified listings managing to rank in some local packs, it is always wiser for any local business owner to take the time to verify his or her listing. It's easy to do!
9. City, state in Places landing page title
Your Google+ Local page should link to a page on your website. This page on your site will have an element in its code called a "Title Tag." This is typically located in the <head> section of the code and the words contained in it send a very important signal to both search engine bots and human users regarding the topic of the page in question. The title tag of a page typically displays in the upper left hand corner of your browser window:
In the above screenshot, you can see that the title tag of the page contains both the city and state name. Local Search Ranking Factors 2013 cites the inclusion of these geographic terms as being especially important on the landing page to which your Google+ Local page links. For many local businesses, the landing page will simply be the homepage of the website. However, for multi-location or multi-practitioner business models, specific landing pages may have been developed on the website to reflect this diversity, and the Google+ Local pages created for these locations or practitioners will often link to these landing pages instead of the homepage.
By including your city and state names in your landing page title tag, you will be letting both search engine bots and human visitors know that your business is local to a specific geographic locale.
10. Proximity of address to centroid
Traditionally, the centroid in Local Search has been defined as the city center identified by Google in its Maps product. You can go to maps.google.com, type in a city and state and get a result that looks like this, with Google putting a red pin on the presumed city centroid:
However, expert Local SEO Mike Blumenthal has recently pointed out that the centroid can change position relative to different industries and may often have nothing to do with the the designated center of a city. In other words, Google can decide that the center of business for auto dealers is different than the center of business for chiropractors. This is a somewhat complex topic and I recommend you read Linda Buquet's forum thread, Google+ Local Centroid - Not City Center! to see illustrations of this concept of the shifting center of business.
Proximity of address to centroid is one of those factors over which your business will have little control. Some businesses located outside this centroid/center of business radius may discover that they are at a disadvantage in comparison to competitors who are within the radius. Short of moving to a new location, (not a realistic suggestion) your proximity to Google's designated center of business for your industry isn't something you can change.
11. Quality/authority of inbound links to domain
Because organic signals play a big part in local rankings, earning high quality links from authoritative sources will help your business to improve its visibility in the search engine results. A tool like the Open Site Explorer can help you to begin understanding both the number and quality of links currently pointing to your website:
For a local business, high quality, authoritative links may come from a variety of places, including local and national newspapers, local business indexes, high profile bloggers and professional industry associations.
These days, strategies surrounding the acquisition of links have evolved from link building (the process of actively seeking web pages on which links can be placed) to link earning (the process of generating links without having to build or request them due to some outstanding aspect of the website).
Local businesses can both build links, as in the case of having their domain linked to from their local business listings, and earn links via forms of marketing like content development and social sharing. The more authoritative the sources that link to your website, the better your chances of gaining visibility for your important search terms.
12. Quantity of native Google Places reviews (w/text)
This is a simple one! It is currently felt that the number of reviews your business earns on its Google+ Local page influences rank more than reviews you might earn on other review platforms. You can easily see how many reviews you have by clicking either on the "reviews" link on your Google+ Local link in the main search engine results, or by visiting your + Local page directly. You'll see something that looks like this:
No local business needs to earn a ton of Google-based reviews at once. In fact, if you earn reviews at too great a velocity, you may find that some of them get filtered out. Rather, best practices for this revolve around slowly acquiring positive reviews from happy customers, one by one, over time. You want to earn more reviews than your direct competitors have, but you don't need 10 times as many reviews to see the benefits. In fact, if you've got many more reviews that your competitors, it may look suspicious to Google and human users.
Google allows you to ask for reviews, but not to offer money or incentives in exchange for explicitly-required positive reviews. Reviews must come directly from your customers' Google accounts. Never hire a third party marketer to pose as a customer and post fake reviews or post reviews on behalf of real customers. Create an internal process in your company for requesting reviews either at the time of service or shortly thereafter. Remember, a slow, steady acquisition of reviews is the goal here, so that you are gradually building a great online reputation, over time.
You will note that this ranking factor relates to the quantity of Google Places reviews rather than the quality or rating of them. At this point in the evolution of Local Search, sheer numbers seem to matter most.
13. Product/service keyword in business title
The business title of your business is its legal name or DBA. It is believed that having the name of a core product or service in your business name may give you some advantage over competitors who lack this. Here's an example of some auto body shops in Boston with the full or partial keyword phase "auto body" in their business names:
If your business name currently doesn't contain a product or service term, don't take a wrong turn by simply adding keywords to the business title field on your Google+ Local page or other citations. This is not allowed!
Ostensibly, you could take the legal steps to change your business name so that it includes a keyword phrase, but be advised that if you do, you will be signing up for a mountain of work editing all web-based references to your old name, in addition to offline re-branding in your signage and marketing. Often, it is simply more realistic to concentrate on other promotional efforts. However, if you are starting a new business, it will be good to take note of this bias on Google's part and consider including your core product/service term in the naming of your company.
14. Quantity of citations from locally relevant domains
Having your business NAP (name, address, phone number) mentioned on a website that relates specifically to your geographic community acts as a locally-relevant citation. This type of citation reinforces Google's trust in your relevance to your locale. Here's an example of a locally-relevant citation for an accounting firm, listed on the Livermore, California Chamber of Commerce website:
Apart from Chamber of Commerce websites, other locally-relevant domains on which you might earn citations could include local news sites, local professional association sites and local blogs that publish content about businesses or happenings in your community.
Remember, a citation does not necessarily have to link to your website, but that's always nice, too!
15. Proximity of physical location to the point of search (searcher-business distance)
For many searches, it is no longer necessary to include a geographic term in your search in order to be shown local results. If Google feels that your search term has a local intent, they will automatically detect your physical location and show you local results. For example, a user located in Laramie, Wyoming can simply search for "wood stoves" in order to be shown a local pack of results containing businesses near him.
This phenomenon of proximity demonstrates Google's bias towards businesses with a physical location within a specific geographic area. If your business is physically near to the searcher, your chances are good of showing up in the local results, but if it's too far away, it is unlikely to be included in the results.
For Google Maps app users looking for local businesses on their cell phones, this concept of proximity is especially sensitive. If you run a local auto body shop on the north side of your city, your chances are good that you will be shown to searches who are driving around that part of town, but if you are on the south side, there is a chance you won't appear as a result for that specific searcher at that time. He'd need to drive or walk closer to you to see you as a result.
Obviously, local business owners have no control over where a particular searcher is physically located at the time he performs a search, but it's important to understand that the closer a searcher is to you, the better your chances of being shown as a result for his search.
16. Quantity of citations from industry-relevant domains
Just as it can be helpful to earn to have your name, address and phone number listed on locally-relevant websites, being included on industry-relevant sites can improve your authority and rankings, too.
An industry-relevant website can be defined as one that is widely recognized to be authoritative within a particularly category of industry, be that automobiles, hospitality or health care. GetListed.org partnered with Whitespark.ca to create a great data set highlighting The Best U.S. Citation Sources By Category. Here's an example of the data you'll find on this page:
Definitely check that resource out if you are looking for citation sources that are relevant to your industry. You can also perform manual searches for your industry category and create a list of the authoritative websites that come up most frequently for your terms. Once you have created this list, you can visit each of the sites to see if they allow local businesses to be listed in a directory-type feature, or if there are other opportunities for earning a citation, such as guest blogging.
17. Local area code on local Plus page
Using your local area code phone number as your primary phone number on your Google+ Local page is considered a best practice. The area code of the phone number should match the area code/codes traditionally associated with your city of location. This may seem obvious, but the local search engine results reveal that some businesses take a wrong turn here and publish a toll free number, instead. Alternatively, they might publish a cell phone number or call tracking number with a different area code.
Here is a screenshot of a business which has done this correctly, publishing a 505 area code phone number consistent with the city of Santa Fe, New Mexico:
Google allows you to enter a secondary number (such as a toll free number) when creating your listing. This is especially important for businesses like hotels who receive calls from all over the world and want their guests to be able to make a charge-free phone call to book a room. Just be sure that, when you create your listing, you are putting the local area code number in the primary number field.
18. City, state in most/all website title tags
As referenced in point #9 of this guide, the title tag is an extremely important element of any website page. Local Search Ranking Factors 2013 posits that inclusion of your city/state name in most or all of your title tags can have a positive impact on how your local business ranks. Here's a screenshot from Open Site Explorer showing how these geo terms have been included in many of the title tags for a carpet cleaning company in Livermore, California:
While it isn't necessary to include your city/state in every single title tag of your website, it makes sense to include it on major pages such as the home page, contact page, service description pages and bio pages. You want to send the clearest possible signals to search engine bots and human users that you are a local business and the title tag really helps transmit that message.
19. Quantity of third-party traditional reviews
In point #12 of this guide, we discussed the importance of earning customer reviews on your Google+ Local page. Beyond this, there are many third-party platforms on which it can be useful to get reviews. In ranking your local business, Google takes into account the quantity of reviews you have earned around the web. Take a look at how the famed New Orleans restaurant, Antoine's, is the recipient of reviews on a variety of sites:
How do we know that Google takes this third party data into account? For one thing, they link out to third party review sites right on the Google+ Local page:
In the above screenshot, you can immediately see that Google is aware that reviews exist for Antoine's Restaurant at UrbanSpoon, TripAdvisor and Switchboard. Consider this a hint!
When trying to decide where it would be best for your local business to win reviews, it can help to look at the +Local pages of your direct competitors to see which third party platforms, if any, are being highlighted, as in the above screenshot.
You should also research which review sites appear to be most active in your locale. For example, in California, Yelp is an incredibly active website, but it may be less so in other parts of the country. Your state or city may even have locally-relevant review sites that your community is using. The idea is to get your business profiled anywhere that your potential customers might leave a review so that you are building a broad, web-based portfolio of positive reviews over time.
20. Page authority of Places landing page URL
Similar to the concept of Domain Authority of a whole website described in point #7 of this guide, this ranking factor relates to the authority of the specific website page linked to from your Google+Local page. For many companies, this will simply be the homepage of the website, but for businesses with multiple locations or practitioners, other pages on the website may have been designated as the landing pages. You can get a sense of your landing page's Page Authority using www.opensiteexplorer.org.
Open Site Explorer uses Page Authority to predict a specific page's ability to rank well, based on an algorithmic combination of link metrics, MozRank, MozTrust and other factors. For a detailed explanation of this concept, read What Is Page Authority. Because of the influence organic factors have on local rankings, the higher your landing page's Page Authority, the better your chances of becoming dominant in the local search results.
Whew, you made it!
Now you're off to a good start! You understand the top twenty most important local search ranking factors. Your next task is to move on to the rest of the eighty-three foundational factors, and from there to the competitive difference maker factors and then the negative factors. I consider the study of Local Search Ranking Factors to be essential and exciting homework for every Local SEO and local business owner on the planet. Taking the time to understand the concepts represented by each factor can spell success for any local business you own or market.
The smartest Local SEOs I know are the ones who study hardest. I'm here to help you in the Moz Q&A Forum if you hit a stumbling block. In the meantime, let me wish you good luck in the learning process!
Fantastic post, Miriam. I thought I knew a lot about Local SEO but there's a few things here that I didn't realise at all, such as the fact that Google has different 'centres' for different industries - I always thought it was what whatever Google deemed to be the city's 'centre' for everything. I look forward to reading Linda's post about that :-)
I also wish that there was a version of the "The Best U.S. Citation Sources By Category" list for the UK... That'd rock. (Hint hint!) ;-)
Hi Steve,
Totally agree that Mike Blumenthal's explanation of the centers of business is an amazing insight! Thanks for suggesting UK categories. I'm sure David Mihm will make a note of your suggestion. In the meantime, do you follow Nyagoslav Zhekov of NGSMarketing.com? He's done some amazing work on citations on an international level. Could be worth you checking out!
Ooo thanks Miriam. I know of Nyagoslav but didn't realise he'd done all that. Thanks! :-)
Hey Steve,
We're working on the UK version of the Best Citations by Category/City. Should have some data for you soon.
That's great news, Darren. Thanks for popping in to share this!
Cool, thanks Darren! I used your tool at a previous agency role... Given that I do a lot of Local SEO, I should really register again! :-)
The concept of using the city-centroid for a ranking factor is pretty amusing. I've never asked a client to move their officers, and yet we are still able to rank them. :)
I get that you have to be in a city to rank for the "city name" + "keyword" query, but I've even been able to get around this for a vineyard that is located 15 minutes outside city limits.
I can't help but assume the ranking factor here is pretty low.
Hi Bryant -- the Centroid can still be a dominant factor in less competitive markets, or in markets without a dominant handful of players. Vineyards, for example, are naturally going to be spread out...try hotels or insurance agents and you're likely to get much more centralized clusters.
True true. Here in Cardiff, with Google treating the city centroid as the entrance to Cardiff Castle, I always joke with clients that if they want to do really well, they should relocate across the road! :-) That said, I've helped two clients way out of the city centroid to do well - one is currently the 'A' pin for a number of keywords and it's 8 miles away from the centre (and most of their competitors). Like you say, it's a factor alright, but it's not the be-all-and-end-all...
That is pretty interesting - still hard to figure out what's going on - some of my stuff ranks for things we are optimized for that really aren't the businesses main objective. But they do drive revenue which is what it's all about.
Yep, great suggestion, Steve, and Darren and I are already "on it." :)
Great news, David - I look forward to seeing it :-)
You've taken a lot of information and made it look manageable and less overwhelming. I work with local search often and find there are always improvements to be made, no matter how complete you think your listing is. Thanks for the great post Miriam.
Thanks for the kind words, Faith. Completely agree that Local is an on-going effort for every local business owner and marketer.
All 20 factors you mentioned are exactly what we are following but still some pages with no content and no proper local listing, proper link building still comes up in google serp for example " php training in ahmedabad" this was focused keyword of us still some pages which are having keyword in "meta description" for 2 three times are shown ahead of us.
And one suggestion on local search ranking suggested is local e news papers do something By which you can come on local e news papers. which can be also big factor to come on local ranking.
Hi Deep Bhatt,
Unfortunately, it is totally possible to do everything right and still find your business outranked by entries of poorer quality. Google sets guidelines, but does not always uphold them perfectly. From your question, I'm not sure whether what you are talking about is actually a true local query. In the US, at least, there is no Google Places for Business category for 'PHP training', so this isn't something I would expect to see local pack results returned for. That being said, whether you are going after local or organic rankings, it can sometimes be frustrating to see yourself outranked by businesses which you don't think are doing as good of a job marketing themselves as you are. In the case of flagrant spam on the part of a competitor, you can often report it to Google, but in general, your task will be to audit what competitors are doing and continue to make maximum efforts to build as diverse and authoritative a profile for your company on the web.
This is more immediately for CTR, but Schema markup is super important too!
Thanks for such a detailed post Miriam. I've seen lists of important factors before but the detail with this is going to be helpful actually putting this in place to help clients out. And I think Brady made a good point above that it seems like consistency is the key for local SEO. Really, consistency isn't only good for that but also for marketing in general.
Miriam, Thank you for this wonderful post and the time you put into it. Your visual approach is fantastic.
Great post - really a getting started guide for diving into local SEO. Thank you.
Great article for local search! Thanks for sharing
This was a great blog! Very informative. It reinforced a lot of things and also brought some new things to mind that I never would have thought about. Like the part about city centroids.
Great post, thanks for sharing with the neat picture presentation. It is very informative and best for local SEO.
Great post Miriam, definitely a resource that I am going to share and bookmark for a future reference!
Thanks a lot Miriam Ellis, your article post is really helpful for me, I like some points like 3,9,12 and 13. these are really amazing. I never focused on these points, because i always focused on brand. So Miriam thanks to you because you shared valuable information with us.
Great post @Miriam also nice picture representation.
Nice Post...
Awesome post! Great insight and I'll be bookmarking this post to reference later!
Great post regarding Local Listing, it will help us more to local business owners for ranking improvement.
Excellent post and I appreciate the screen grabs. I work in the franchise world and have to deal with many of these issues daily. To complicate matters more, I work with SABs and have to figure out how to get them listed in the metros where they do 90% of their work.
As far as keywords in business names, using an Assumed or DBA name can help. A couple of years ago I published a guide to making this happen state by state, and it's still highly relevant (perhaps more so) today. Just don't go overboard with this, and be ready to do a little paperwork. Using DBAs for Google Local SEO
Thank you, Scott! The SAB + franchise market is definitely about as complex as it gets in Local. I'll look forward to reading your post.
Great Post Miriam! I am also working with local clients at the moment and found this post really helpfull. Thanks for this valuable content. :)
Amazing how most of the top 10 local search ranking factors are simple details like having the same NAP across all assets, labeling the proper category for your business, making sure the city and state are featured prominently on your website, and verifying your G+ local page. Being consistent = local SEO success.
That's true, Brady. Most of this stuff is just good horse sense, when you think about it. Yet, considering the huge number of issues that arise from getting these basics wrong, it's pretty clear that 'the devil is in the details' when it comes to Local SEO.
Yeah, it's pretty simple when you're setting up from scratch. But most of the time I'm having to go in and clean up poorly setup profiles and listings, which gets much more complicated.
WOW !!! Time spent reading is worth spent....
great post @Miriam
The points mentioned in the above post is not applicable for Local Search but also for ranking in Global. These are good practices and it is applicable in all aspects.
Great article and a great resource too! Thanks!
I work in sales at an online agency & field lots of calls from small, local business wanting to get better local listings. I've never had too much to tell them in the past (local really isn't a focus for us), but now I can point them towards this resource. Thanks Miriam, very helpful.
What a brilliant piece of work. Thank you! This page will come in handy when illustrating what a business needs to do in order to be successful in local search.
So glad to hear it, Greg!
Awesome, thanks Miriam ellis to describe twenty fact under a url there are some more but I think this list is best then other. DA of local sites and physical location is must matter for local ranking.
I know this article is not technically new but I've just stumbled upon it again and it's still very, very relevant and has helped me a lot with some local SEO I'm working with at the moment.
I'm a strong believer in local citations, even more so now that the google algo has changed the landscape.
Content and local (positive) reviews will make the difference.
Awesome post! I'm going to print this out and keep it handy on the desk lol
It doesn't get much better than this: follow the steps for local success - thanks Miriam :-)
Thank you, Andy! Glad you enjoyed this.
Fantastic post Miriam. Thank you so much.
I'm thinking about citations and their descriptions... You only talked about NAP, but what about the "description"? Is it important? Positive, negative? Can be considered as a duplicate content?
Thanks Cycleek,
The value of the description, in terms of influencing rank, is probably quite minimal, if it has any value at all. It is, however, an important area for describing your company to human users. Regarding duplicate content in the business description, this is unavoidable because of the way data is shared across the local search ecosystem. That being said, many Local SEOs will create a variety of descriptions (maybe 5-10 of them) for the listings they are manually creating so that there is some variety of content. However, because creating a listing on one platform means it can be published elsewhere, a level of duplication is pretty much baked into the citation building process. Good questions.
Thank you Miriam for your answer. It's interesting to know all of that. Then, when you are takling about "one platform to create a listing" is it mean, we can use a solution like Yext to get listed? Duplicate content in the business description on 50+ sites will not involve our ranking???
Hi Cyleek,
What I'm saying is that some level of duplication is unavoidable in the local business listing process, because of the way data is shared across the ecosystem. It stands to reason that search engines must be aware of this, and seems unlikely to me that they would penalize someone for using a service like Yext's, or for the manual citation building that would likewise lead to some measure of duplication in the business description. I hope this helps!
Thanks Miriam. Your replies would be very useful for us.
Interesting article, every day I learn more new things in this blog, I hope to follow your concerns and take into account all the knowledge put into this article, thank you very much
WOW !! This post is absolutely wonderful Miriam Ellis
i think this is one of the finest articles .... thanks for share this great post
Nice guides.
Sometimes, i notice on the Australian google map results, it says "the results are powered by yellowpages. Not sure what is the linkup between google and yellowpage?
Hi Enamul,
In Australia, Yellow Pages is Google's primary data source for this type of information. If you do some searches, you'll find quite a bit published about this partnership. Hope this helps.
Great Post Miriam. I know that was a lot of work to put together. I would add that we are seeing some really good results with social signals for local businesses. We have seen ranking jumps across the board, in less competitive markets just by using Google's Authorship Markup to the customers blog. I know this isn't a new thing to SEO's but local businesses have a hard time doing social right so a bit of healthy activity goes a long way in some categories.
Thanks, Gregory. Great to hear you having success with social in the local environment. Totally agree that this is becoming more important with each passing year. Local Search Ranking Factors 2013 does include mention of social activity - it just didn't make it into the top 20. By next year, who knows?
I appreciate the detail of this post. We are a small company helping small companies and this will be very relevant for us to pass on to them as they vie for coveted real estate on "The Google". Thanks!
Hi Courtney,
I'm a fan of the small business, and delighted to know you'll be sharing this article with them. Great to know!
This guide is terrific! However now I think user-centroid results should be added to #10.
Thank you for the wonderful article! I have a few questions.
Thank you so much for your great article!
Hi There,
Let me tell you what I can here.
1) Google converts suite to # automatically and understands these two things to be equivalent. This does not represent an inconsistency of citations and is not something to worry about or change.
2) Google sees your business as being primarily relevant to its city of location (whatever the city/town is in your physical address at which you receive mail). This is the city for which your core pages should be optimized. If you want to build additional content to highlight other towns/suburbs/etc. where you are not physically located, you can do so, with the goal of gaining additional organic (not local) visibility. This tends to be easy to do for service area businesses because they can showcase their projects in various locations. For brick-and-mortar businesses like your dental practice, finding an authentic reason to write geo-specific content is more challenging. The fact that patients may come to you from neighboring cities is not a good reason to write. But, perhaps the dental clinic does some form or community outreach, such as visiting schools or other types of involvement in the neighboring communities that would provide a legitimate reason to showcase the practice's involvement in other geo regions.
3) You need to do a complete citation audit to discover where this citation inconsistency stems from and correct every instance you can find. If the duplicate Google+ Local page exists, you should use the troubleshooter to report it:
https://support.google.com/places/
Click the red 'contact us' button, then 'my listing has incorrect information' and the proceed through the wizard to document the duplicate listing issue. You've got to clean up all 3rd party citations and take care of the Google+ Local page problem. This will not be a fast fix. It will take some work, but can be done!
Thank you so much. I'm glad to hear the suite/# is not an issue! I will work on cleaning up the bad citations. I know the longer they are out there, the more our address will get spread around. Thank you!
Hi Miriam, if you have time could you please advise about the following ? I have a client that has a G+ profile and a G+Local page (1st) with the name different from the business name. At the same time the client has a Google Places page merged into her G+Local page (2nd, this time with business name). So The client has two G+Local pages.
The client's G+ profile and 1st page are linked to the business website and to YouTube channel.
Authorship was created against the G+ profile but reviews don't show up in Google search.
The website was not ranked by Google. The question is : how to solve this "G+ - website" knot so Google can notice this website and Google reviews, and rank the website ?
Any help in this case would be appreciated.
Thank you,
Alex.
Hi Miriam,
This is a best blog I have ever read, thank you very very much for writing such an excellent blog.
Awesome share. I am sure this post will help to lots of our SEO folks.
I have read this post. I found it many useful post. Its a very great post to read. All the 20 points in this blog is fantastic . After reading this, I get many useful information. Mainly, I like the 10th and 11th points the most.
Everytime I seem to stumble on something I usually find an answer from you or Mike Blumenthal. Thank you for investing so heavily in the sharing economy
Awesome post. Thank you very much for it.
Any idea, how to restrict spam users to edit incorrect information of any particular POI?
Thanks.
Thanks Miriam Ellis.
Really Fantastic and Awesome post about Local Search. I was looking for this types of post last few days.
Just Love this. Following your post I am working on Bdlive24. Hope I will be in Success !
I've been claiming Google Places profiles for clients for a number of years and I've seen the different rules and regulations come and go. Over the last couple of years I've seen a huge increase in the number of companies and law firms using satellite offices from companies like RGIS to manipulate the map section. I'm wondering of Google will eventually catch on and implement new controls to correct for this.
Bradley SEO Marketing is an Inland Empire website designer
[link removed by staff]
Hi Miriam! Thank you for sharing these top 20 local search ranking factors. I believe that businesses should initially concentrate on getting listed on a few of really authoritative local business indexes and directories.
Interesting article.
Um, the Blumenthal category thing I cannot recommend.
Copywriter apparently doesn't exist at all.
The only matches for Writer were
Typewriter and Typewriter repair.
Really? Blumenthal's category thingy seriously doesn't know what a copywriter is but thinks people are still falling over one another to get their oh-so-popular typewriter repair service ranked high on Google+?
Otherwise, nice article.
Hi David,
Thank you for taking the time to read this piece and comment on it. The categories in Blumenthal's category tool are taken directly from Google's category base. They simply reflect Google's category taxonomy. You are quite right that 'copywriter' isn't a Google category - my bet would be that Google would not see a copywriting firm as a local business. Many forms of marketing are viewed as primarily virtual by Google. 'Typewriter' on the other hand could be viewed as a search with the intent to purchase a typewriter locally or have a typewriter repaired locally. There are definitely business models that are absent from Google's category system that some business owners would like to see included, and I wanted to clarify for you that this is based on Google's decisions and is not a fault of the category tool I've linked to, which is simply a faithful representation of Google's system. Hope this clears things up for you, and thanks again for your comment.
This is extremely useful. Thank you for taking the time to post this. There's not much information on the Internet when it comes to helping with local Google biz rankings.
Hi Miriam, thank you for posting this great article and for sharing with us so much helpful information. I really liked the picture presentation, looks like a lot of work. What intrigues me now is the suggestion to list our websites on third-party platforms.. I'm pretty sure it will be very useful, but besides Yelp there are plenty more alternatives. If you are familiar with these platforms, I (and surely many other) will be happy to read more about them. For example, websites such as https://www.citysearch.com and https://www.showmelocal.com look very similar, but which of them both is more effective? One post about this topic would be very interesting.
I noticed that showmelocal is listed in your profile. If you're affiliated with a company, it's best to disclose this in your comments.
Miriam Ellis Thank you for great post.
Gosh - what a great report - we're going to run one of our weekly training sessions using this as the foundation; just remarkable!
outstanding article A company that earn local citation and loyal social following has a built-in army to promote their content, day in and day out. That content will get shared, get links, send social signals…all of which can't be a bad thing.
Thanks for the article. I have a dilemma with my business location. It's right on the border of a big city (population 450k) and a nearby smaller city. My address says the big city but the actual location is technically within the small city. I have otherwise good SEO for my site but it hasn't ranked for local for this reason maybe. Is this a problem if I want to rank for Local Pack-7?
Its too helpful to post new Google Listing and Google listing is one of the best way to get quality traffic as well as business.
Don't forget... the relevance of your entire website plays a HUGE role in local ranking factors. You can't just put up a 1page site with keywords and a NAP.
I know this seems obvious but I see a lot of thin websites in the top 10 (local query), and it's only a matter of time before a competitor comes along and out-performs them.
Absolutely true, Bryant. Thanks for mentioning.
VERY nice visual resource Miriam! Off to share it now and thanks for linking to my Centroid post.
Aww! Thanks, Linda. Delighted you will share this with your awesome forum.
Thanks for the solid post, Miriam! You did a really awesome job of expanding upon Cyrus Shepard's post from last month where he unveiled the results from the 2013 report. Sometimes it's difficult to break stuff down for clients and in my experience, one of the biggest challenges is explaining each of Google's (assumed) ranking factors, how they're weighted in relation to one another and most importantly, how each can be leveraged to improve search rankings. So thanks again :)
Hi Brandon,
That was one of my main goals with this post - to make it easier for local business owners to quickly understand a variety of key concepts that can really help them to begin building a strong online presence. So glad you found this useful!
Thanks, Miriam! We were just discussing this very same topic on Monday in a meeting with a new legal client. We brought up on their projector screen the Moz Local Search Ranking Factors page (https://moz.com/local-search-ranking-factors) and spent some time reading it and having a nice open conversation. I've already forwarded your post to them so we can chat some more as visuals do help bring things into perspective a bit more.
What stands out to us and something we're working on to educate our current clients as well as our new clients is #19 and obtaining reviews. We hear it all the time "Why would someone care if our ABC company has any reviews?" Your screen grab can help us combat those doubts. GOOGLE cares!! They are pretty much getting the point that Google Reviews are good, but why all the other sites. In all honesty, Google showing the relevant review links from other sites is something I forgot about. Being able to show clients your quick screenshot adds more credibility to our pitch that reviews across the board on the major sites is a good thing, so long as they are positive :)
Hi Patrick,
I'm totally thrilled that this post will help you demonstrate the importance of a broad review profile to a client. Music to my ears!
Thanks a lot for sharing its is very informative....
Hey Guys..
Have you observed that Google is promoting G+ in some unusual ways a lot these days ain't it spamming. So who is going to decrease their ranking....
Hi Qadir,
Would you like to share an example of what your referencing? I'd be happy to look at it.
@Miriam Ellis the post is good but i have a question ?
do we need to use the keywords before the location name before the keyword or after the keyword.
e.g do we need to use "UK website design" or "website design UK", which one is good.
Hi Rahul,
Good question! I recommend you read this post from Linda Buquet from 2012 which discusses this very topic:
https://localsearchforum.catalystemarketing.com/local-seo-tools-software/849-local-keyword-research-tools-tricks.html
However, I'll throw in the proviso here that Google does not consider web design companies to be truly local businesses. They haven't been included in the local pack of results in many years, so the goal for a company like yours is going to be organic rather than local rankings. Hope this helps!
You are right but I expect this to change. I've seen some of our own rankings start to show up in a map pack vs organic. https://www.google.com/search?q=redding+seo&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&hl=en&client=safari This SERP is for an SEO query but I think other online/offline businesses are soon to follow.
Great article Miriam! Here is a link to the original local search factors from 2008 on David's site. Amazing to see some of the changes.
Hi Kevin,
Yes - 2008 is starting to seem like a long time ago! Some things have definitely changed, whereas the fundamentals of clean, clear data web-wide have remained the same. Thanks so much for taking the time to comment.
Hi Miriam,
Thanks so much for putting this together, it really helped me narrow in on what is important as I begin my journey into Local search.
Quick question - if you are a SAB and you choose not to show your address, how does that work with building NAPs?
I know you recommend showing your address on your website and in Google+ so they can easily verify.
The way I understand it, to build NAPs you would need to include your entire address...would you not be able to do that otherwise?
Thanks in advance for the insight - I will probably include the entire address, but good to know moving forward in terms of privacy.
Hi Hudson316,
I'm so glad you found this article helpful. Regarding building citations, you are correct that a business which chooses to hide its address is not including their complete NAP (name, address, phone) on the various listings they create. However, this does not preclude you from participating in Local SEO, provided that you have a physical address and phone number. What you can do is this:
1) Create a Google+ Local page in which you enter your complete NAP but check the options during the creation process that will cause Google to hide the address rather than show it to the public.
2) Build citations only on those directories which also allow you to hide your address. Phil Rozek of Local Visibility System has written two fantastic posts on this topic in recent months. Here they are:
https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/2012/08/13/can-you-rank-well-in-local-google-without-revealing-your-street-address-anywhere/
https://www.localvisibilitysystem.com/2013/04/22/private-local-citations-where-can-you-list-your-business-but-hide-your-address/
3) The one area of debate surrounding this scenario deals with whether or not to publish your complete NAP on your website. Ideally, one would do so, but there are some legitimate cases in which this is not possible. See the closing paragraphs of Ranking Factor #5 in my post for more on this.
In sum, it is possible to rank without revealing your physical address, provided that you can enter one in the dashboard during the local business listing building process. Nota Bene: this must be a real physical address that is not shared by any other business, is not a virtual office or P.O. box. It's got to be real.
Hope this helps!
Great post about Local SEO. It's nice to get an elaboration or the most important factors instead of just a simple list of ranking factors. While some of them were obvious, it was great to have some clarification on others. Feeling very motivated to tackle some tasks form our clients that would benefit from Local.
That's great to hear, CML63. Good luck with the work ahead!
One of the best posts about Local SEO I've seen in awhile
Great Post - translated into german and posted in the intranet for the crew wich is creating the maps entries here. THX for that.
What a great comprehensive post!
Great job, Miriam!!!
Thanks, Nyagoslav!
Thankyou, a great post, with some much needed discussion and clarification particularly for multi-location businesses.
As a multi-location business, the local search always is always a delicate issue, and involves a lot of duplication of work .
I would be interested to see a guide and hear your thoughts on how cloud based businesses and home servicing businesses (both without published premises) can overcome the obvious bias in search results.
Thank you, Mike. While I'm no expert in how virtual businesses can overcome Google's clear local bias for searches deemed to have a local intent, home-based local businesses can do very well in the local results. They can have their address hidden on the Google+ Local page and can list their business in third party directories which allow them to do the same.
Where a disadvantage arises is when these types of businesses won't publish their home address on the website. If, within their geography and category, other businesses are publishing an address on the website, then it stands to reason that the business without the address isn't able to confirm Google's data as clearly regarding their core NAP. The website is such an authoritative data source, so the inability to publish complete NAP there could put this business at a disadvantage. On the other had, if none of the businesses in their geography and category are publishing an address, then the playing field would be level.
Great post but I have a question; I have 2 Google + Pages, one which is local and one which isn't I have been using the one that isn't local for a while now and I'm nearly at 1000+'s where as the local one I havent used, Will I lose all the +1's If I merge the two pages?
Hi Lee,
The decision to merge needs to be made based on your business model. Recommend you read:
https://localu.org/blog/kind-google-plus-page/
Excellent post Miriam. Very visual, I like!
One thing I'll mention having claimed and updated 10s if not 100s of restaurant listings is that the primary category may not be the one that actually appears on the listing page. It's a bit confusing to me which one Google decides to use if you have 1 primary and 3-4 others on the list. I believe there is some favoritism with some categories (likely the more specific ones) that will show up replacing the primary. Nonethless, selecting the most relevant and appropriate one is the way to go in hopes that that is the one will appear on the listing.
As for your tip on city specific landing pages - one website that I've worked on in the past held training seminars in different cities across North America. What is extremely effective is to ensure all your on-page optimization efforts are as complete and unique as possible. We wrong unique text for each landing page - often talking about the the city while throwing in the keyword we wanted to target. I believe this tactic can be applied here greatly and be effective).
Again, thanks for the great post!
Good point, Jackson! Yes, that does happen sometimes that Google will display a secondary category rather than the primary one of the listing. They appear to determine that one is more relevant than the other, even if the business owner disagrees. If it's causing problems, you might go through the troubleshooter to try to get one-on-one help.
Totally agree with your tip on unique text. That's so important!
The visuals helped a lot Miriam and the way your detailed each local search ranking factor was well done. Citations are still important using since links to the site still play a role.
Moving forward a G+ Local Listing that has many 5-Star Reviews will be even more important for ranking purposes.
Thanks Miriam for this great reference. I particularly appreciate that you took the time to explain each one along with a few great references.
I wonder if you or someone in the community can help me with a very serious problem I'm currently facing. A few months ago we rebranded our business. Over the past 4 years our local listing has dominated our industry in our city, ranking 1 or 2 in the local pack for most local search phrases related to our business. We also have by far the most Google reviews out of any of our competitors. Naturally we have come to depend highly on the business we get from this listing, so I was reluctant to mess with it and risk losing our reviews or rankings. So for a few months now we've plodded along just fine without updating our name and website URL (which of course redirects to our new website).
Over the past few weeks though, I noticed our local rankings slipping a bit, so I finally took the plunge and updated our local listing, changing the business name, URL and copy etc. However it's been more than a week and a half since I updated it and Google still hasn't updated our live listing (they said about 24hours when I hit the submit button). Now as of this morning, I see Google rolled out an update to the page layout (in South Africa at least) and our reviews dropped from 25 to 12... and still our listing hasn't updated to the new business name.
To make matters worse, we have now completely dropped out of the 3 pack (as far as I can tell) which has never happened before. I've taken care to fill out all our categories accurately and completed everything else one can do on that page except add a video. I also took care not to be spammy in any way.
I am desperate for this listing to switch to our new business name so that I can turn it into the full Google+ page. And of course we want our listing to bounce back into the top results as soon as possible.
Has anyone had recent experience with this (name and website change) and is there anything I can do to speed up the process? How long should I expect it to take? Is there a way to get Google's attention on this perhaps?
Any help is greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Brendon
Hi Brendon,
It sounds like you have multiple issues going on - likely more complex than can be answered with generalities. I am able to shed light on one particular issue, however. There is documented review loss going on in conjunction with the rollout of the new page layout. See:
https://blumenthals.com/blog/2013/11/12/google-rolling-out-new-page-layout-reviews-lost-in-the-process/
Hopefully, this will be temporary and the reviews will come back.
Regarding your ranking shifts, they may simply be the predictable outcome of not only re-branding your business, but also switching to a new website. Without being able to actually dig into your unique situation, my guess would be that you have created citation consistency issues (see point #3 in my post). Google has likely become confused about the identity of the business and, because of this, the business is losing traction in the SERPs.
You must bring all references, web-wide, into cohesion so that they reflect a single brand, address, phone number and website. This would include the data on your website, structured and unstructured citations. This will likely involve a great deal of work and seeing the results of it could take many months.
Rebranding is an enormous move for any business, and for local businesses it can be especially tough because of the vital role played by consistency of citations. Regaining your previous standings is unlikely to happen overnight, unfortunately. It's important to be prepared for this. Hope this helps.
Hi Miriam,
Thank you so much for your response, and sorry it's taken me so long to come back... I've been buried for a week updating my citations... that was definitely a lot harder and more work than I thought it would be....
I'm pleased to report though that the day after I posted my comment here, our review count was back to what it should be, and in fact no reviews were lost, it was just that the count was wrong temporarily. Similar instances were reported in the comments of the article you linked to, so I hope everyone has all their reviews still.
Regarding the ranking shifts, it seems like we've bounced back to where we normally were, although Google still hasn't switched our listing to the new name. As of a few days ago however, there's a note in my dashboard that says the listing is under review and may take a few weeks to appear. Thankfully though they haven't dropped our old listing in the meantime.
You were absolutely right about the citations being out of whack. Thank you for reminding me about this. In some cases I had purposely left directory listings/citations as our old name, because I wanted our customers to still easily find us, not thinking that this would cause Google not to update our places listing or confuse them. Worse yet, I didn't realize how many citations were actually out there until I started digging. So this could definitely be the reason Google took so long to react. Thank you for this tip.
If it helps, I'll post here once our listing updates in case people want an idea of how long it took, and the results.
Brendon
Big grin here too, Miriam...as one of the contributors to David's survey now for a few years, it's nice to see this displayed so that it both offers up an image to match the info as well as teaching same at the same time! Kudos there girl....I'm muchly impressed! :-)
Hey, Jim! Coming from you, that means a lot. Appreciate it. Eh?
Great post and tons of useful information. While many folks will hire a consultant to help, for those doing this on their own, it will take them some time and effort. Can you comment on the top 5 to get right or top 5 to do first? Thanks for providing this in a much more digestible format. Blair
Hi Blair,
Good question! My answer is that, for a local business, the first thing to get right is the website. The organic strength of the website plays a really big role in local rankings, so that's step one. After this is in great shape, your next steps would be to:
1) Build a violation-free Google+ Local page, making sure your categories are perfect
2) Do a citation audit to correct any citations with bad data on them
3) Begin to build new citations wherever appropriate
4) Put a review earning strategy in place
5) Create a plan for on-going content development
These tasks correlate with top ranking factors, and creating an organized plan for accomplishing each will stand your local business in good stead.
"If you are a chiropractor in San Francisco, you are most likely to appear in the local pack of results for a search like "san francisco chiropractor", or if someone searches for "chiropractor" from a computer or cell phone based in San Francisco."
You no longer need to use location in your search phrase to trigger both local and organic listings optimized for location in the search results. In fact if I search on "chiropractor" with no location, I am indeed seeing both local listings, and organic listings optimized for my IP address location.
Additionally in Google Adwords, I am seeing location is more and more being left out of search phrases looking for local businesses.
Hi Brian,
That's correct. This is what I meant by, "or if someone searches for "chiropractor" from a computer or cell phone based in San Francisco." Hope that's clear.
For a business with multiple locations in different cities, the location-specific landing page title tags are easy, but what do you recommend for the home page and other important page title tags? Would you just leave the location out of the home page? use the most important location?
Hi Robert,
If there is a 'most important location', then that is definitely an option to highlight it on core pages like the homepage as well as building a specific landing page for the office in that city. In such a case, you might utilize a slightly different wording of the product/service keywords for the two types of pages so that you aren't cannibalizing your keywords (e.g. san diego plumbing company on one page and san diego plumbers on another). This would be a good way to go, in my opinion.
What about NAP listings when you have two physical locations (one in city proper and a second in a suburb)? Will your authority be split up as you suggested in #3? I'd want both results NAP listings to be promoted online and in business listings, but will this affect the impact of my main business location?
Hi Jjive101,
For each staffed, physical location you have, you can build a separate, unique landing page on your website and build a distinct set of citations linking to that page. You can earn links to the unique content you've created for each location and work in every way you can to build up the authority of each.
My example in factor #3 is a different case in which the authority of a single business is being split between a new location and a closed one.
Just be sure that you are doing your all to promote both of your locations and you will be fine.
Thanks! Makes sense.
Wow, this guide is what I was looking for. I wrote article even of 2000/3000 words and it takes a whole day. I think you wrote this post not in a single day. Great info shared!
Wow this was an amazing post, whith really good resources. I spent 2 hours to read this post with the added resources.
Thank you Miriam for taking the time to write this post. Now I have to do a lot more things to my website :)
Wow, this maybe the most useful article I have ever read on local listings. Thank you for putting it all together, a slight shame that a lot of the tools/lists are US centric and not really usable for UK businesses but other than that, superb!
Hi David,
So glad you liked this! I am primarily familiar with the U.S. market, but know you are so right that many tools are not international. Could be a good post of its own to highlight tools for other countries. Perhaps one of our enterprising members should consider this for a YouMoz submission. Hint, hint :)
What is the strength of Local SEO for a company that is located in small town in the south-east of a country but provides goods trough the whole country. Think about wholesalers and traders in b2b goods. Because optimizing these websites for local SEO may even harm their image of a company that is nationally operational in my opinion?
B2B buyers are more likely to buy their goods at a big, well running company than in their eyes a small regional company. Any tips? Or is for this kind of companies the advice to ignore Local SEO?
Hi Michael,
The choice to engage in Local SEO starts with ascertaining whether the business model qualifies for inclusion in Google's local index. In order to do so, the company must:
1) Have face-to-face transactions with customers at its location (like a restaurant) or at the customers' locations (like a plumber)
2) Have a unique street address and staffed office
3) Have a unique local phone number
If the business can say 'yes' to all three, then it qualifies for inclusion. At this point, having determined whether or not your business qualifies, then you must make a choice about whether your customer base is local or national. If local, then it's the right move to approach your marketing from a local mindset. If national, and you do not do face-to-face business locally, then traditional SEO is going to be more appropriate for you.
If the business does both (i.e. serves both local and national clients) then you can choose to do both forms of marketing. Speaking very broadly, this will mean taking the right steps to secure high local rankings (locally optimized pages on the website, a Google+ Local page, citation building, review earning, etc.) and then building big enough authority to also rank for non-local product or service terms, independent of your local rankings. This is a tall order, but it can be done where necessary.
HI Miriam Ellis, You have clearly described what is needed in local search ranking . Most of the SEO webmasters dont pay attention to it. Schema markup is very important tool. It almost took my 3 horus to read this post.
Sounds like you gave this a very thorough read, Jitendra. I'm flattered.
Great post Miriam, looks much describe about local marketing.. Got the very simplest ways to promote my local clients business in local market demanded. While zip code - pin playing a big role in the local search, Sha.. getlisted not working here in INDIA.
Hi Manoj,
Right, I'm afraid GetListed doesn't yet have a version for India. Maybe in the future!
Getlisted indicated that it was suspended in the UK and Canada in May - and is still not up and running here in the UK. When can we expect this service to be resumed?
Thank yo for these wonderful ideas! They are all helpful. There are really few chances that you will not be successful with these in your list. Local SEO-ing has been so rampant today. People rely on the Internet even with the smallest details.
Agree with my buddy Nyagoslav and many other wiser local search types. You have done an excellent job Miriam. Thank you for the clarity
So glad you enjoyed this, RobboM.
[Thanks Miriam, I agree with post that our Google+ page (NAP) Complete Name, Address, and Phone Number and Google local business (GLL) should be same to add double change of visibility in GLL search...]
Nice Post!
I will be sharing it with my SEO Team. I liked the point of 'Proximity of address to centroid'.
Thank You.
Great Post!
valuable post
Hello!
This is Bryan Knowlton over at the Daily Blogcast for Internet Marketing.
I just wanted to let you know we discussed your blog post on our show and would love if you could help get the word out to your readers!
016 – Generating Traffic Case Studies, 20 Local Search Ranking Factors
https://dailyblogcast.net/2013/11/25/016-generating-traffic-case-studies-20-local-search-ranking-factors/
We found the article to be well written and decided to feature it in this episode. If you woud like to provide any additional comments, you can do that directly at the bottom of the page listed above.
Since this is a Daily Podcast, we will definitely be visiting your blog from time to time to find more great articles to discuss. If you would like to leave us a comment, question or a voicemail, you can do that on the right side of the page.
Again, thank you for the blog post! Without it we might have not had much to talk about! :)
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Thanks again!
Bryan & Mark
Daily Blogcast for Internet Marketing - Because reading is hard...
nice article really helpful
Great Post! Thanks for sharing us...........
information you share is useful to people and I feel very comfortable and interesting with it, thank you
It looks too accidental, it is hard to imagine, thanks for sharing,
I liked your post very much and shared at my fan page also.
https://www.facebook.com/samyakonlineindia