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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

How to Get Your Business Listed in Local Search Engines


The Three Things You Can Do to Increase Offline Traffic: Part 1



You might have heard about local search as a buzz word, and wondered what it meant exactly or how it differs from traditional SEO in developing an online marketing strategy or an SEO implementation process. In this BusinessOnLine's Local Search Wednesday series for the next 3 weeks, we will explore how users may experience local search, what it is & the three major steps in local search optimization.

First, let’s explore how users may experience local search features from certain types of keywords that trigger search engines to suspect the possibility of searchers’ intent to look for local (geo-specific) information.

For example, if you search for “pizza” in Google, whether you wanted some web pages about pizza’s history or recipes, you will be prompted to enter your location in case you wanted local restaurant information.



If you enter your city or zip code, you’ll then see what’s called Google OneBox, which displays 10 relevant local business listings with their locations marked with thumbnails on a map of the city.



If you’re a sophisticated searcher and use a long tail search term such as “pizza san diego ca” from the beginning, your search results will display OneBox at once, and your web search results following OneBox will be different too. Notice how Domino’s Pizza’s general web site listing stays with OneBox if you have entered a zip code after being prompted above. The results page above shows a mix of local business search results and general web search results. However, the search results for “pizza san diego ca” display all localized results (See below) as Domino’s Pizza result is gone and San Diego location of Woodstock’s Pizza shows up. PPC listings are changed as well, as they show addresses in San Diego below.



We will explore more scenarios from the users’ end as we continue this Local Search Wednesday blog series. For now, let me provide a clear definition of local search optimization before we move on to the first step of the local search SEO process.

Definition of Local Search Engine Optimization



Local search optimization is an online marketing campaign that targets local audiences on the Internet by using various off-page local relevancy building strategies and by using keywords with geo-modifiers, such as city names or zip codes. For example, local search SEO would optimize a local business listing for keywords such as “sushi restaurants 92101” or “sushi san diego ca”, while traditional SEO will focus more on keywords like “how to make sushi” or “sushi market”.

Local search optimization’s goal is to increase visibility on local search engine result pages, such as Google Maps. This would ultimately lead to offline, in-store sales, increased brand recognition and even long term relationship building.

Step 1: Local Keyword Discovery



Like all marketing campaigns, a local search optimization campaign should start with learning about the audience you want to reach. Understanding and finding effective keywords to reach your local consumers who are interested in your business is very crucial in local search SEO, as it begins with defining the service areas your business covers. For example, if you own a sushi restaurant, you would want your city and cities nearby as well as different names locals might use to refer to certain areas or neighborhoods in your town. If you own a car dealership, the areas your business serve would be much bigger than a sushi restaurant because people are willing to travel farther to get a good deal on a car than they would for sushi.

In addition to defining your local business’ service areas, you should also research whether there are unique keywords your local customers use to land on your business listing. You can use keyword research tools that show which keywords are searched in which areas.

After defining your local service areas, you may discover the needs to develop geo-targeted content for each area. For example, if you discover your customers come from only one specific area, you may want focus on optimizing your About Us page or Contact Us page for that area mainly. If you find out, your local customers come from several different areas or use different geo-modifiers (city names or zip code, etc) to find your local business listing online, you may want to create new pages for each major area and use those specific search terms throughout the pages. However, the focus is to develop helpful local information about your service or industry, while using the right term to refer to the area, rather than repeating your local keywords over and over for the sake of SEO.

You will also want to set a page that would satisfy the intent of local searchers as a landing page for local search engines. If local customers would be wondering about a particular service, make that service page as a landing page. For the sushi restaurant example, it might make sense to submit an About Us page with customer testimonials about how tasty your sushi is compared to other local restaurants and allow that to serve as a landing page.

For next Wednesday, we will examine how to get your business listed in Google Maps through Local Business Center. It would be best if you subscribe to our RSS feed so you won’t miss it!

Local Search Wednesday Part 2 is up now: Exploring Google Maps Features for Local Business Listings. Part 3 is about The Right Techniques & Attitudes for Local SEO.

I appreciate your feedback, and if you have any other new questions, I will try to get them answered in the next post.
       

Friday, February 13, 2009

Google Announces New SEO Tool to Stop Duplicate Content Problems!



Good news from Google, Yahoo and MSN/Live who have announced support for the rel="canonical" tag. This new tag with the following syntax:

<link rel="canonical" href="http://www.example.com/product.php?item=whatever">

This should be placed in the head section of each page of the site, with the URL that should be used as the primary URL for that page.

So if for example, if this page is linked to somewhere in the site with this URL:

http://www.example.com/product.php?item=whatever&trackingid=1234

where a tracking id has been appended, Google, Yahoo and MSN will now understand that this page is really the original:

http://www.example.com/product.php?item=whatever

Therefore the duplicate URL is not indexed and the link connectivity is assigned to the right page. This is a wonderful new tool that now allows sites with extensive tracking codes to use that technology without duplicate content issues. Additionally, sites have CMS systems or dynamic Web platforms that generate multiple URL combinations for the same page can now be brought under control without a huge list of 301 redirects. Cheers to the search engines for getting this one right.

Catfish
       

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Online Marketing Summit (OMS) 2009 Conference Recap

Well now that I have almost caught up with the work I missed from being at the 2009 Online Marketing Summit, I have to say, what a fun time! If you missed my presentation on Long Tail Keyword Optimization, Kate Fleming did a wonderful job of summarizing the main points of the presentation. Additionally there were a lot of other great presentors and presentations which made this conference the best one ever in my estimation. Thanks again to Aaron Kahlow and his whole staff of tireless workers for making it such a success. And who can forget the free Jamba Juice!

For my personally, the opportunity to perform and sing in my acoustic project for the first time ever in front of the 100+ people at the Thursday evening cocktail hour was amazing. I really enjoyed myself and so did my band. Thanks to everyone for all the kind words and wonderful feedback about the performance. That was our first show together as a band and we are looking forward to playing a lot more of them soon.

If you missed this year's event, don't forget that regionals are coming and definately make plans to be here next year. It really is one of the coolest conferences that you can attend. See ya soon!

Catfish