If you're having trouble getting your local business' website to show up in the Google local 3-pack or local search results in general, you're not alone. The first page of Google's search results seems to have gotten smaller over the years – the top and bottom of the page are often filled with ads, the local 7-pack was trimmed to a slim 3-pack, and online directories often take up the rest of page one. There is very little room for small local businesses to rank on the first page of Google.
To make matters worse, Google has a local "filter" that can strike a business, causing their listing to drop out of local search results for seemingly no reason – often, literally, overnight. Google's local filter has been around for a while, but it became more noticeable after the Possum algorithm update, which began filtering out even more businesses from local search results.
If you think about it, this filter is not much different than websites ranking organically in search results: In an ideal world, the best sites win the top spots. However, the Google filter can have a significantly negative impact on local businesses that often rely on showing up in local search results to get customers to their doors.
What causes a business to get filtered?
Just like the multitude of factors that go into ranking high organically, there are a variety of factors that go into ranking in the local 3-pack and the Local Finder.
Here are a few situations that might cause you to get filtered and what you can do if that happens.
Proximity matters
With mobile search becoming more and more popular, Google takes into consideration where the mobile searcher is physically located when they're performing a search. This means that local search results can also depend on where the business is physically located when the search is being done.
A few years ago, if your business wasn't located in the large city in your area, you were at a significant disadvantage. It was difficult to rank when someone searched for "business category + large city" – simply because your business wasn't physically located in the "large city." Things have changed slightly in your favor – which is great for all the businesses who have a physical address in the suburbs.
According to Ben Fisher, Co-Founder of SteadyDemand.com and a Google Top Contributor, "Proximity and Google My Business data play an important role in the Possum filter. Before the Hawk Update, this was exaggerated and now the radius has been greatly reduced." This means there's hope for you to show up in the local search results – even if your business isn't located in a big city.
Google My Business categories
When you're selecting a Google My Business category for your listing, select the most specific category that's appropriate for your business.
However, if you see a competitor is outranking you, find out what category they are using and select the same category for your business (but only if it makes sense.) Then look at all the other things they are doing online to increase their organic ranking and emulate and outdo them.
If your category selections don't work, it's possible you've selected too many categories. Too many categories can confuse Google to the point where it's not sure what your company's specialty is. Try deleting some of the less-specific categories and see if that helps you show up.
Your physical address
If you can help it, don't have the same physical address as your competitors. Yes, this means if you're located in an office building (or worse, a "virtual office" or a UPS Store address) and competing companies are also in your building, your listing may not show up in local search results.
When it comes to sharing an address with a competitor, Ben Fisher recommends, "Ensure that you do not have the same primary category as your competitor if you are in the same building. Their listing may have more trust by Google and you would have a higher chance of being filtered."
Also, many people think that simply adding a suite number to your address will differentiate your address enough from a competitor at the same location — it won't. This is one of the biggest myths in local SEO. According to Fisher, "Google doesn't factor in suite numbers."
Additionally, if competing businesses are located physically close to you, that, too, can impact whether you show up in local search results. So if you have a competitor a block or two down from your company, that can lead to one of you being filtered.
Practitioners
If you're a doctor, attorney, accountant or are in some other industry with multiple professionals working in the same office location, Google may filter out some of your practitioners' listings. Why? Google doesn't want one business dominating the first page of Google local search results. This means that all of the practitioners in your company are essentially competing with one another.
To offset this, each practitioner's Google My Business listing should have a different category (if possible) and should be directed to different URLs (either a page about the practitioner or a page about the specialty – they should not all point to the site's home page).
For instance, at a medical practice, one doctor could select the family practice category and another the pediatrician category. Ideally you would want to change those doctors' landing pages to reflect those categories, too:
Doctorsoffice.com/dr-mathew-family-practice
Doctorsoffice.com/dr-smith-pediatrician
Another thing you can do to differentiate the practitioners and help curtail being filtered is to have unique local phone numbers for each of them.
Evaluate what your competitors are doing right
If your listing is getting filtered out, look at the businesses that are being displayed and see what they're doing right on Google Maps, Google+, Google My Business, on-site, off-site, and in any other areas you can think of. If possible, do an SEO site audit on their site to see what they're doing right that perhaps you should do to overtake them in the rankings.
When you're evaluating your competition, make sure you focus on the signals that help sites rank organically. Do they have a better Google+ description? Is their GMB listing completely filled out but yours is missing some information? Do they have more 5-star reviews? Do they have more backlinks? What is their business category? Start doing what they're doing – only better.
In general Google wants to show the best businesses first. Compete toe-to-toe with the competitors that are ranking higher than you with the goal of eventually taking over their highly-coveted spot.
Other factors that can help you show up in local search results
As mentioned earlier, Google considers a variety of data points when it determines which local listings to display in search results and which ones to filter out. Here are a few other signals to pay attention to when optimizing for local search results:
Reviews
If everything else is equal, do you have more 5-star reviews than your competition? If so, you will probably show up in the local search results instead of your competitors. Google is one of the few review sites that encourages businesses to proactively ask customers to leave reviews. Take that as a clue to ask customers to give you great reviews not only on your Google My Business listing but also on third-party review sites like Facebook, Yelp, and others.
Posts
Are you interacting with your visitors by offering something special to those who see your business listing? Engaging with your potential customers by creating a Post lets Google know that you are paying attention and giving its users a special deal. Having more "transactions and interactions" with your potential customers is a good metric and can help you show up in local search results.
Google+
Despite what the critics say, Google+ is not dead. Whenever you make a Facebook or Twitter post, go ahead and post to Google+, too. Write semantic posts that are relevant to your business and relevant to your potential customers. Try to write Google+ posts that are approximately 300 words in length and be sure to keyword optimize the first 100 words of each post. You can often see some minor increases in rankings due to well-optimized Google+ posts, properly optimized Collections, and an engaged audience.
Here's one important thing to keep in mind: Google+ is not the place to post content just to try and rank higher in local search. (That's called spam and that is a no-no.) Ensure that any post you make to Google+ is valuable to your end-users.
Keep your Google My Business listing current
Adding photos, updating your business hours for holidays, utilizing the Q&A or booking features, etc. can help you show off in rankings. However, don't add content just to try and rank higher. (Your Google My Business listing is not the place for spammy content.) Make sure the content you add to your GMB listing is both timely and high-quality content. By updating/adding content, Google knows that your information is likely accurate and that your business is engaged. Speaking of which...
Be engaged
Interacting with your customers online is not only beneficial for customer relations, but it can also be a signal to Google that can positively impact your local search ranking results. David Mihm, founder of Tidings, feels that by 2020, the difference-making local ranking factor will be engagement.
(Source: The Difference-Making Local Ranking Factor of 2020)
According to Mihm, "Engagement is simply a much more accurate signal of the quality of local businesses than the traditional ranking factors of links, directory citations, and even reviews." This means you need to start preparing now and begin interacting with potential customers by using GMB's Q&A and booking features, instant messaging, Google+ posts, responding to Google and third-party reviews, ensure your website's phone number is "click-to-call" enabled, etc.
Consolidate any duplicate listings
Some business owners go overboard and create multiple Google My Business listings with the thought that more has to be better. This is one instance where having more can actually hurt you. If you discover that for whatever reason your business has more than one GMB listing, it's important that you properly consolidate your listings into one.
Other sources linking to your website
If verified data sources, like the Better Business Bureau, professional organizations and associations, chambers of commerce, online directories, etc. link to your website, that can have an impact on whether or not you show up on Google's radar. Make sure that your business is listed on as many high-quality and authoritative online directories as possible – and ensure that the information about your business – especially your company's Name, Address and Phone Number (NAP) -- is consistent and accurate.
So there you have it! Hopefully you found some ideas on what to do if your listing is being filtered on Google local results.
What are some tips that you have for keeping your business "unfiltered"?
How you doing!
I have a few questions. When you mentioned about the number of categories and that too many categories can confuse Google... what number do you suggest?
About engagement do you think that one of the best ways is adding some videos?
Thank you very much. Great article!
Mario
Hi, Mario...
With regard to categories, unfortunately there's no "magic" number. You may need to modify the number of categories several times to find the sweet spot where your listing shows up in search results.
There are a lot of ways to show Google that you're engaged -- adding videos is just one way. The main point is that you don't want to add videos (or photos) just for the sake of adding videos. Make sure the videos are of interest to your end users. If people open the videos but don't watch the entire video or turn the video off right away, Google will know this and it'll be a signal to Google that the video WASN'T "engaging" to the viewers.
Hope this helps!
Sherry
Perfect! So it's time to try and see the results. Thank you very much for your help!
The "Post" feature in the Google My Business dashboard is one that we are doing a lot of experimenting with. There seems to be a positive correlation between post frequency and listing views. However we are still working with a small data set.
One thing that I am very confident is that the Posts feature is valuable for promoting local events as those posts tend to receive more clicks thus drawing more attention to the businesses local listing. I wouldn't be surprised if they have a significant impact on CTR, which is also a positive SEO driver.
Hi, Luke...
I agree. I'm testing out Posts with my clients and am seeing them move up rankings. Not sure if it's related to the post offers or other factors (I'm still trying to pull out the data), but I'm seeing an improvement. Keep me posted!
Sherry
Just a quick note: I'm willing to see the results of your experiments, so feel free to share if you want! :)
Oh, and great article Sherry, really informative.
Great read but I'm a bit confused. You note "proximity matters" but the suggest to consolidate duplicate listings. For SAB who say service the Greater Seattle Area providing, Hell, I don't know, dumpster rentals (hehe), is it fair to have a listing in Seattle and another for Renton or Bellevue?
Hi, Luke...Service Area Businesses should claim their Google My Business location -- where their physical address is -- and then set their service area radius. They should NOT claim GMB listings for locations where they don't have physical addresses. I hope that clarifies.
Thanks!
Sherry
Very informative and and practical post! For people who tend to start new businesses local listing is one of things that will help them to get clients.
Thanks Sherry!
Thanks...Local ranking is increasingly more challenging! Glad you liked the post.
Sherry
Thanks for the article.
I have a question about Google+. Is it okay to repost articles from my blog to Google+ page after the article was indexed by the search engine? What is the worst case scenario here?
Hi, Igor...
I would recommend that you put a short summary of your blog post on Google+ and include a link to the entire blog post. Add a photo to capture/grab people's attention.
Good luck!
Sherry
Thank God, I am following the similar practice listed above!
Any way, You have noted down the points pertaining to Local SEO. Thank you Sherry for revising factors as I am working on local SEO stuff in these days.
Hi Sherry! Great read, local pack results have turned into a real headache recently, so this is a really helpful guide.
I wanted to also pass along an article from Bill Slawski here (https://gofishdigital.com/local-expert-reviews/), where he uncovered that Google Local Expert reviews might soon become a ranking factor for local search. This gives even more credibility to the idea that you need to just generally be a good business to rank.
Very interesting read, JR. Thanks for sharing! Google is taking the Google Local Expert program very seriously. (They just had a "summit" for the top Local Experts.)
I agree. The best thing a business can do is make sure their GMB (and other online directory) listings are complete with accurate information, contain engagement options and that their business/customer service is amazing!
Thanks!
Sherry
A very clarifying and practical article for companies to start using local positioning to get customers.
I give you my congratulations for the post Sherry Bonelli
Thanks
Thanks, Richard!
Hi Sherry
I would not have explained it better. Do you want to check out the local search results? Provide all the information and ensure that this information comes from quality sites
Sherry, your guide awesome way for local search.
It's exactly important point of local area search and results.
Thanks!
We always wanted to add audio explanation of our web pages at the top of our sites. Reading and explaining the page to the customers through a voice. What do you think of that when it comes to engagement?
And what about the good directories' links being no-followed? What's your take on that? Would it still affect our overall ranking?
Great tips. Very comprehensive.
Really interesting!
I have a question
I am trying to do my best to increase my company on Google maps. We have lots of positives reviews, actually more than all our competitors.We are the best evalued, but still not on first position.
Could it depend also from how much time the company is open on my business?
Thanks in advance!
Thanks, Sherry!! Your way of thinking is very unique and this was a great informative article.
I saw first time your earlybirdDM site so I want to say congrats for this achievement. What about your baby products ecommerce website, I didn't get any URL of this site.
Great post Sherry !!
I do not control much about local SEO and I have learned a few very interesting things. Tomorrow I put them into practice.
Greetings to all!1.
I had a lot of time trying to find content about the results in Google Maps, no doubt, very good article, thanks for the information as always
Great guide Sherry!
I love to read your content sherry, thank you.
Hi Sherry,
Thanks for sharing this blog with us, its really very helpful . For people who tend to start a new business for them local listing is a great idea to get more customer into their business.
Thanks Sherry, great post :) Thanks for the pick up on GMB categories, not something that I'd previously thought about.
In regards to inner pages, how would you recommend going about that for local search? My home page ranks higher than my optimised page for certain terms and I think the main reason is because when working on NAPs the backlinks are all being built to the home page as is natural, which is giving it a much high URL Rating/PA (depending on who's metrics you're using).
Thanks for the write up Sherry. Any further thoughts on how engagement is currently measured? Moving forward, it does seem to be a reliable quality metric for consumers looking to do business with someone local.
Hey, Daniel...
All I can say is I believe that Google sees (and knows) everything! That means they watch all interactions -- every time a customer searches for your business' hours on their smartphone, every time they click to call your business, when they +1 a Google+ post, click on your Google+ Post offer, Book an appointment using their new "Booking" feature, message you to ask a question using their Message feature -- pretty much everything. I believe that all of those "interactions" are factored into how popular Google thinks your business is and therefore how your business should rank.
Thanks!
Sherry
Great post Sherry!
I'd also like to add that it's also important to keep you Google My Business postings updated and to check them regularly. I've seen instances were wrong phone numbers, business hours, etc have been attempted to be added to the listings and I've had to remove the information from the listing.
Yes, Olin...You're absolutely right! Many people don't realize that anyone can "suggest an edit" to your Google My Business listing -- even your competitors! This means you have to be vigilant to ensure that the INCORRECT information isn't being "suggested" and thereby being changed on your listing. I recommend checking your listing at least weekly -- if not more often. Thanks for bringing this up!
Sherry
Thanks Sherry the post is great!!
I was already checking competitors local results for restaurant business and I´ve seen some of them using their website URL in the "Menu" field and geting a doFollow link with that. I think it has no sense and also their SERP results are quite bad. What do you think about? Could it be useful in some way?
HI, Toni...
I have not tested the "Menu" option in GMB. I'm curious to hear how your testing turns out!
Sherry
I´ll put an eye on it, and I´ll tell you about if there is something interesting, but I don´t spect good results ;-)
Hi Sherry,
Thanks for your article. I especially found the part for practitioners very helpful.
Thanks, Cesare!
Thanks Sherry, I liked the quick competitor analysis around checking what their categories is set as, if they are doing well.
Thanks, Brendon. Glad you found the information useful!
Sherry,
I have seen reviews make a big difference in some of my clients local search results. Reviews show authority and can entice potential users to select a higher reviewed business over others.
When competition is stiff reviews will set a business a part, It is the first thing I focus on when consulting with my clients. And getting reviews is easy, just ask!
Hi...
Yes, I've been doing Reputation Marketing for years now and it's FINALLY catching on! I'm working with a client now who is showing up last on GMB (but at least she isn't filtered) but she has no reviews. We're going to work on getting her reviews. It DOES make a difference!
Thanks for your input!
Sherry
How you doing!
I have a few questions. When you mentioned about the number of categories and that too many categories can confuse Google... what number do you suggest?
About engagement do you think that one of the best ways is adding some videos?
Thank you very much. Great article!
[link removed by editor]
Hi Sherry,
Such a great post very much informative, thanks for sharing with us.
Thanks, Tiffany! I loved writing the post and am happy that you found it useful.
Sherry
Love the point about G+ & engagement. Thank you for sharing the insights.
You're welcome, Christopher! Glad it helped.
Hi Sherry,
I absolutely love articles on Local SEO! Yours is complete and easy to digest for anyone! I hope you will publish again soon!
Thanks!