Archive for the ‘Local SEO’ Category

Takeaways and SEO Action Items from SMX East #smx

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Ever come home from a conference, start sorting through your notes and think I know I learned something, but what the heck was it? Closely following will often be: Now I remember what I learned, what can I use to help my business?

There’s a lot of information in the SMX live blog recaps, a lot of which involves quick note taking and scattered thoughts. So in an effort to consolidate (in an admittedly very long post) and walk away with something helpful, here are my takeaways:

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Ranking Tactics for Local Search #smx

Monday, October 5th, 2009

David Mihm, Designer & Local Search Marketer, davidmihm.com

What local search looks like

  • the 10-pack
  • driven by google.com, yahoo.com, etc.

Organic search ecosystem

  • Google
  • Yahoo/Bing

Local search ecosystem

A little more complicated…

local search engines

Local search ranking factors

  • Verified local business listing
  • Off-page/off-listing criteria
  • Customer reviews
  • Traditional on-page criteria
  • 7/ top 10 are specific to local

Developing your local mindset

  • SEO is about optimizing sites, local is about optimizing location
  • Consistency: name, address, phone number are critical (don’t use tracking phone numbers, don’t stuff keywords into business name)
  • Building out business profile, you’re not creating an ad

Local Search

  • location (verification, claiming, off-site references, categoreies, reviews)
  • website

Traditional

  • Website (on-page, title tags, link building)

Mike Blumenthal, Owner & Local Marketing Expert, Blumenthals

How Google Ranks your listing

  • Web page totals in Maps (citations)
  • Geo references and reviews
  • Business name
  • Business category
  • content

The “new” PageRank

  • Score of website
  • # links referring to business
  • Highest score of those links

How Google scores your website

  1. In-bound links from documents that mention the business with full or partial name and/or address
  2. in-bound links with business name in anchor text
  3. business name in title tag
  4. all or part of business name in domain

Takeaways

  1. Choose your business name and domain carefully for use in local
  2. Think about gaining inbound links with your business name as anchor text
  3. Be sure your title tags reflect your name
  4. Strike a balance between optimizing your site for local and Google Maps

Mary Bowling, SEO, Director of Search Marketing, seOverflow

  • Sometimes the local 10-pack is a 3-pack
  • 10-pack isn’t exactly the Maps results
  • You cannot be in the 10-pack if you don’t have a Google Local Business Listing

Optimize your Maps listings

  • Use your main keyword phrase and complementary terms in your profile descriptions
  • Grab the long tail by including:
    - your products and services
    - the brands you carry
    - the locations you serve
  • Choose – or create – the right categories (choose two/three existing categories, then create the remaining two/three that apply to your local listing)
  • Create attributes (other information not already included – but DO NOT KEYWORD STUFF)

Create citations

  • AKA web references
  • They don’t have to include a link
  • Mine competitors’ web pages (would that site also be willing to give you a citation?)

Get reviews!

  • Reviews are exactly what people (and Google) are looking for
  • Google pulls reviews from across the web (so it doesn’t matter where your customers leave them)
  • Come up with a system to encourage reviews by happy customers
  • Yahoo has mentioned after a certain number of reviews, they’ll start figuring out whether your reviews are positive or negative

Your website and the 10 pack

  • Use your website to build trust and reinforce you LBL info by:
    - linking to your Maps lisitng
    -  get links from local websites (Center of Commerce,e tc.)

On-page optimization

  • Add location!!
  • Place full street address and phone number on every page of your website
  • Optimizae your Contact/About page for business name/location

Standaradize

  • Use same name, address, phone number everywhere
  • Got to sources of business data and standardize
  • Get listed on local directories

Check for Location Trust

  • Check data providers
  • Search for your business name
  • Search for your phone number
  • Search for your address

How to track the pack - how to track the 10-pack with Google Analytics

Will Scott, President, Search Influence

Barnacle SEO: attaching oneself to a large fixed object, then waiting for customers to float by in the current.

Local search: how?

  • “Web references” = links, Links = trust
    - Yellow Pages
    - Local directories
  • Links aren’t critical – the correlating factors are name, address, and phone

Places to submit:

  • Wire Fan
  • Mixx
  • Yahoo! Local
  • City Search
  • Super Pages
  • Insider Pages
  • Yelp
  • Yellow Pages
  • BrownBook.com

How can you do the same

  • Maximize local listings with SEO
    - Keywords in titles and copy
    - Links to local profiles (even low-quality links will do, leverage social bookmarking/directories)

Andrew Shotland, Proprietor, Local SEO Guide

Top SEO’d IYPs (Internet Yellow Pages)

  1. SuperPages
  2. CitySearch
  3. Yelp
  4. Yahoo Local
  5. InsiderPages
  6. Yellow Pages
  7. Biz Journals
  8. AreaConnect
  9. MagicYellow
  10. Switchboard
  11. Here are more

Rankings by site type

  1. Local Business – 32%
  2. IYP – 27%
  3. Vertical – 17%
  4. Article – 6%
  5. Local Vertical – 5%
  6. LYP – 5%
  7. Natl Chain – 4%
  8. Unrelated – 2%
  9. Gov – 1%
  10. Edu – 1%
  11. Social – <1%
  12. Video – <1%

Which Yellow Pages sites should you use for which categories?

Questions

  • Google’s Local Listing bulk upload instructions
  • Choose a certain number of “barnacle” or IYP sites, because you’ll want to continuously update them.
  • Like traditional SEO, keep profiles “fresh”. For example, in Google Maps, update coupons, photos, videos, etc. especially if your customers are used to it.
  • What social media sites are good for local businesses? Twitter for a company like a pizza place, for a company like a plastic surgeon: Facebook. For a more professional company, LinkedIn. LinkedIn is the easiest SM site to talk people into, and to ease them into others.
  • Vertical is important for review sites (Urbanspoon and Yelp is mandatory for restaurants, TripAdvisor for hotels)
  • Barnacle sites outrank you: you can get ahead of yourself.
  • Other important sites that will get picked up by a ton of others: Openlist, Zvents, Local.com, Mojopages, Immercifind
  • How to prevent local listings sabotage? Make your listing consistent across every IYP and every submission.

Google Adds a Dashboard (and Analytics) to the Local Business Center

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

your local business info

For every local client we have, we always submit and verify them to the major local search engines – including Google Local Business Center (essentially Google Maps). Recently, Google added a great addition to the works – the Local Business Dashboard! Here’s Google’s official story on it.

Some say the addition was simply for those with limited web presence, although if sites are even showing up in local search results, I’d say they’re doing something right. Regardless of the reason behind it, these statistics will be helpful for any local business: from those with a huge search presence to those with none. Furthermore, even with Google Analytics, this information is awesomely powerful; not to mention, you wouldn’t be able to figure it out any other way.

Your business info

If you already have an account, you know that there is a ton of information you can include in your local listings –  from what you do, to payment taken, to business hours, to tags, to photos, to video. What’s more, the dashboard acts as many social profiles do, with a % complete meter – to further persuade you to continue filling out information.

Activity & Totals

Activity is set up very similar to Google Analytics – impressions indicating how many times (in the past month – or whatever timeframe you select) your listing has shown up as a result. What I find even more impressive is the fact they drill down into actions: those people who click for more info on the Map, for driving directions, and those who click the link to your website.

activities and totals

Top Search Queries

Here’s where you can verify that you’re being found for the correct keywords. The only problem I can see: you don’t see the locations searchers used. In other words, for flyte, all of these keywords look great. But we don’t know if they were looking for website design in Portland, Maine or Kennebunk, Maine. My guess would be the former; but for a lot of our clients who are in lesser-known towns in the middle of Maine, that information is vital.

top search queries

Where driving directions requests come from

Again, priceless statistics: who’s thinking of coming to your location? Are you investing in those opportunities enough? This information may be a little less important for a company like ours than, say, an Inn or hotel who finds they get a ton of driving directions requests from the Boston area. That might convince them to advertise a little more in Massachusetts.

driving direction requests

Coupons are another addition to the dashboard. You can further enhance your local listing by adding coupons for customers who find you via Google Maps.

Nicki Hicks
What are you waiting for? Go submit your local biz
!

What’s Up With AdWords Markers on Google Maps?

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

I just noticed today a new little addition to Google Maps: markers for the paid search results!  Now, I’m not sure if I was simply late to this news; but no where in any of the major search news blogs or even the Offical Maps Blog is there any mention of this.

portland maine hotelsearchI’ve noticed the addition for nearly every industry – every one that would have AdWords ads.  This search was for “hotel portland maine”.  The top three results seem normal enough. One paid search result and the next two organic.

What floored me was on the map, the Holiday Inn now has a marker!  What’s more, is this result shows up above other result closer to Portland.  As a matter of fact, this particular Holiday Inn isn’t even in Portland, but South Portland; and as we’ve seen, results are based upon proximity to the city or (possibly) reviews.  Is it possible that now bids can help you get on the first page of local listings?

portland maine hotel google local map

Nicki Hicks
Small Business SEO

A Step-by-Step Guide to Optimizing for Local Search, A Mardi Gras Special

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009
mardi gras

Photo Credit: Associated Content

Let’s say I have a small business in downtown New Orleans, where I sell everything you could possibly want or need to celebrate Mardi Gras and Fat Tuesday.  How will I ever optimize my site with all the competition?!

(Note: This guide is assuming all other things are equal on my site: including clean and readable code, as well as proper keywords optimized for)

  1. I would first optimize my website for my location, including:
    - Keywords in title tags, meta-descriptions, and content.
    - Address on all pages (most likely in footer).
    - Phone number (with location specific area code) in meta-descriptions and on all pages.
    - Blog: posts incorporating location and local events.
  2. Verify my local listings using GetListed, as well as any niche listing sites in my industry.
    - Add as many images as I could to these local sites (including images of my storefront and products).
    - Add videos to listings (of anything and everything: from a scan of the store, to a scene from downtown New Orleans on Mardi Gras, to “What do you need to celebrate Mardi Gras 2009?”)
  3. Create (and optimize) a YouTube channel, and upload all of my videos.
    - Optimize channel using geo-specific keywords.
  4. Acquire backlinks from local bloggers and businesses, preferably (for local purposes, anyway) in New Orleans or surrounding Louisiana towns.
  5. Set up an AdWords campaign geared specifically toward New Orleans and the surrounding towns.
  6. Submit to all of the general and niche directories; as well as location specific ones – like the local Chamber of Commerce.

Nicki Hicks
Happy Mardi Gras

Learning from SMX West (Without Actually Having to Be There): Day 1 #smxwest

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Thanks to Barry Schwartz and Keri Morgret from Search Engine Roundtable for taking the time to live blog many of the SMX West sessions!  Here are a few of my notes from Tuesday, Day 1…

Technical SEO Issues for Developers

(Archived version from SE Roundtable)

  • Disallow certain forms from being crawled (like Contact Us page)
  • Use Webmaster Tools
  • Need both human and XML sitemaps
  • Canonicalization (www vs. non-www issues) fix: stay the same throughout the site; the fix when someone links to the wrong version: redirect it
  • Meta/title tags: HAVE them, CHANGE them
  • Be simple.  Use static HTML, meaningful page titles, clear anchor text, don’t link to spam.
  • Brevity is GOOD for URL’s, make them simple, stable, and scream COPY ME!
  • Improve crawler discovery by leveraging robots.txt (use only if fully understood, validate with Google), sitemap, and metatags
  • Use Yahoo Site Exploreer and Google cache to see what’s indexed
  • Use easy-to-crawl and search friendly URLs, keep titles and content close to the top
  • iFrames = good for gadgets, bad for homepage
  • Eye tracking software results: put your BEST keywords FIRST in the title tag (people read them first, and don’t always read all the way to the right)
  • Absolute URLs = BETTER

Up Close with Google Maps & Local

(Archived version from SE Roundtable)

  • Google Local data from:
    1. Google Local Business Center
    2. 3rd party providers
    3. General web crawl
  • Submit/verify your site at: infoUSA, Localeze, Yahoo, Best of the Web, OpenList, CityVoter, InsiderPages, SuperPages
  • Search for “your city and blog” for good blogs in your area
  • Factors that influence Local rankings:
    1. Proximity to city
    2. Reviews, number of reviews, positive reviews
    3. Overall SEO health of site
    4. Keyword relevancy
  • Make sure your address is on your homepage, contact us page, etc.
  • If you have multiple locations, submit them ALL to local sites; you still only need ONE website
  • No permanent address? Use a PO Box.
  • Claim listings with ALL applicable categories
  • Add videos!!
  • Track calls for free:
    - Pretend to start a Google AdWords account
    - Go to Audio Campaign page
    - Get free phone number
    - Track calls!
  • Large companies with multiple locations: create landing pages for geographic locations
  • One speaker encourages customers to follow up with work done with local reviews with Visa coupon incentives for next services
  • Remember – you CAN report Google Maps spam! (They welcome it!)

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One Stop Shop for Local Search: GetListed.org

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Last week, Search Engine Roundtable posted an article about GetListed.org, a site that is incredibly helpful for local businesses.  Get Listed truly is a one stop shop, as it pulls your local listings from Google Maps, Yahoo! Local, Best of the Web, and Live.

Here is flyte’s snapshot of listings:

To break things down a little further, Get Listed shows a “To Do” list for you website: showing on which sites your business is claimed, where you have photos, and even citations.

What a great tool for consolidating all of my local listings!

Nicki Hicks
Location, location, location

Why Can’t I Just Post Good Local Reviews For My Website?

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

With local search and reviews becoming so important, I pressure my clients who differentiate based on location to take it seriously.  Recently, as I was having this conversation with one such client, he asked me: “Well, if this local search stuff is so important, then why am I not running out and posting great reviews for my site; and bad ones for my competition?”  Great question.  And it quite honestly caught me off guard.  My response is multi-faceted:

It can come back to bite you in the butt…

…if you’re dishonest about it.  Search engines (or review sites) aren’t stupid, and neither are your customers for that matter.  Every review site I’ve seen requires you to create an account in order to post a comment.  Each user’s profile displays the amount of time they’ve been a member.  When a person has only been apart of one of these sites for a few days and suddenly begins posting reviews (maybe rave ones for their own site and negative reviews for competition), it serves as a red flag for both other users and the site itself.

A Yelp forum thread from a few months ago discusses this topic as it applies to Yelp, but can relate to any local review site.  Participants seemed to go back and forth about the morality of posting reviews for your own company, both with good points.  I think the consensus is…

Honesty is the best policy.

Posting your own review doesn’t have to be a bad thing, especially if you’re trying to get your name out there.  As long are you are up front and honest with both your connection to the company (owner, employee, consultant, etc.) and your true feelings about the company, other consumers can take or leave what you have to say.  The person reading it can take your biases (positive or negative) into account and form their own opinions.

Case in point, a review of flyte by Rich:

If you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all.

Remember Mom telling you that?  I suggest staying away from negatively reviewing competitors altogether.  No one likes to see one company slam another; if I remember correctly, competitor review commercials (think of most cleaning product ads) have among the lowest response rate from customers of all the possible marketing tactics.  Plus, there’s no need to give others negative reviews – especially if they don’t deserve them.  Worry about keeping your own reviews positive instead.

Nicki Hicks
Why not? Give yourself a pat on the back.

Using SEO to Manage Bad Press; AKA Reputation Management 101

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Search these days sometimes makes me feel like we’re all back in 3rd grade on the playground.  Managing our reps.  Hmm, maybe that was just my elementary school…

Nevertheless, all of these bailouts got me thinking about real life reputation management.  While all of these poor Fortune 500 car companies have to deal with reputation management on a large scale, it’s still just as important for small businesses.

Local Reputation

Local search obviously pertains more to businesses who differentiate geographically.  And as we all know, word of mouth can often make or break you – maybe even in search results.  Find an all-star within your staff to keep an eye on these:

  • Local Search Reviews – Reviews in Google Maps or Yahoo! Local are relatively easy to manage.  Not only managing them, but also responding quickly and efficiently to customer reviews and ratings can make a difference – whether it’s just that one person, or your entire online customer base.
  • Yelp - An example of a localized service provider customer review site.  (There are a bazillion – yes, that’s official jargon – of other industry-specific review sites out there other than Yelp.)  The same applies for these sites as far as managing your business reputation.

What are people saying about you?

  • On your blog - If you have a blog, be sure to respond to comments (especially negative ones) – it can result in much more satisfied customers.
  • Google Search + “sucks” - Something I like to do for fun.  Search for your company name and add “sucks” to the end.  “Microsoft sucks” is the ever popular example.  This should pull up any bad press or negative comments about your business.  Take steps to fix any problems from there.
  • Twitter Search - If you use Twitter, the Search feature can be overwhelmingly helpful for businesses.
    Just recently, I was complaining that my Pandora radio station had played the same song four times in a matter of a few hours.  Within minutes of my tweet, a woman from Pandora direct messaged me kindly explaining that I could use the “Don’t play this song for a month” feature so this wouldn’t happen to me again.  It was a 15 second conversation, but I must say, I was incredibly impressed and have a whole new respect for Pandora (I would’ve highly recommended it even before this).
  • Google Alerts – This feature allows you to choose which term to alert you on, what type of search (news, blogs, web, comprehensive, video, or groups), and how often (whether as-it-happens, once a day, or once a week); then sent to you via email.  You could be alerted every time someone searches for your business, or even that “your business + sucks” search.
  • Digg, YouTube, Wikipedia, etc. - Like Yelp, there are a ton of more generalized (and mostly social) networks out there: tools to see what people are talking about in your industry.

Damage Control

So now what?  You’ve figured out what people are saying about you through the various channels I’ve outlined.  Hopefully it’s positive feedback, but let’s face it, there’s going to be some negative.  What do you do?

  1. Respond appropriately to customer reviews and ratings.
    a.   Just listen.  It’s amazing the number of people who just need a listening ear to hear their complaint.  Empathize with and console them.
    b.  Offer something for their trouble.  A coupon for a percentage off, a free stay at your hotel.  Offer what you’re able to.
    c.  “It will not happen again.”  (Important: Only say this if you can actually follow through with that statement.  I am not liable for empty promises.)
  2. Comment on blogs, whether your own or others.
  3. Bad news stories or press releases about you?  (Think the Jet Blue fiasco almost two years ago.)  Write press releases of your own. Make sure they are properly optimized, so they rank higher than other (negative) releases.

Never underestimate a sincere apology and personal touch.  Truth be told, if a customer happened to have a bad experience with you, they may not ever buy your product or service again.  But, if you make the effort to “ease their pain”, they probably won’t storm off telling their friends you are the worst bakery or plumber or car dealership they’ve ever dealt with.  Instead, they might tell a different story, something that might go this way: “I had a bad experience with [so and so company], but you know what?  They emailed me [or better yet, called] and apologized and offered me [this] in return for my troubles.”

Think about how you would want a company to respond to your bad experience.  What would you want to happen?

Nicki Hicks
Manage A Good Rep

Voice Search Added to Google’s iPhone Search App

Monday, November 24th, 2008

The most recent edition of the Google Search App has a number of cool new changes, including automatically launching other Google apps.  But the coolest addition, by far, is voice search.  Here’s the official video on it:

The voice recognition is surprisingly accurate and much simpler than typing your search queries…go check it out!

Nicki Hicks
Vocal Searcher



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