As you know, Internet is the global system. But
most small businesses have a local level and, of course, don't want to invest
money for promotion in all regions. This problem is solved at the level of
browsers but how to make your site “local” to significantly increase conversion
rate?
Country Specific Local
SEO Tips
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Get a local domain extension: Google places a
lot of weight on the domain name, so it is important to get the appropriate
country-code domain extension. If you compare results across the different
geo-targeted flavors of Google, you'll notice the weight given to the local TLDs.
There are exceptions, but the local TLD tends to trump .com when it comes to
local result sets. Different countries have different registration criteria for
domain resitration. It is fairly easy to register a co.uk or a .co.nz, whilst a
.com.au can involve setting up a business entity in Australia.
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Specify your country association in Google Webmaster
Tools: Google Webmaster Tools offers a facility
whereby you can specify a country association for your content. You can do this
on a domain, sub-domain and directory level. More detailed instructions can be
found on Google's Webmaster Tools Blog.
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Local Address & Phone Number on All Pages: Another good signal to search engines is a local street
address and phone number on all pages. Most businesses will place this
information in their website’s footer. Be sure that it is actually in the text
and not in an image. This is good for search engine bots and for people on
their mobile phones as your phone number will be clickable!
§
Location-Specific Pages: Have more than one
location but only one website? That’s not a problem. Just create a page on your
website specific for each physical location. This way, anyone searching for
your business in a particular region, city, state, or country should be
directed to the appropriate page.
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Local hosting: Depending on who you ask, you'll get
different answers as to whether the geographic location of the web host makes a
difference in terms of ranking. I have .com.au, .co.nz, and .co.uk sites,
hosted on US servers, and they rank well on the appropriate local versions of
Google. Other people feel that location-based hosting is a must. Still others
say the location of the name server is most important! It's fair to say that if
you have a choice between hosting locally and hosting offshore, then it might
pay to host locally. It certainly can't hurt, and there might be additional
benefits, such as increased download speed. If you go this route, one thing to
check is the servers physical location. Often, web hosts have a local office,
but their servers are located in a different country. Use an IP lookup tool to determine the exact
location of a server.
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Spelling & Language: Ensure you use the appropriate spelling
for your chosen region. There is a difference between "optimization"
and "optimisation". Keep in mind that searchers will use the local
vernacular. For example, if you are optimizing a travel site in the US, you
might use the term "vacation". However, searchers in Australia, the
UK and New Zealand, amongst others, tend to use the term
"holiday".
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Tone: Copy that works well in one geographic location may not
work in another. For example, the sales language used in the US is usually
more direct than that typically used in the UK, Australia or New
Zealand. Familiarize yourself with local approaches to marketing, or
engage local copywriters.
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Inbound links: Seek out local links. All links are good,
but inbound links from local TLDs are even better. Approach your local chamber
of commerce, friends, suppliers, government agencies, business partners, and
local industry groups and ask them for links.
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Local directories: Get your site listed in local
directories. Local directories still feature well in geo-targeted search
results as the depth of content, in terms of sheer volume, isn't as great in
the local TLD space as that published on .com. Obviously, you stand to gain
from the local traffic that the directories send your way, and any local link
juice the directory may pass on. Here are some top local directories:
§
The
local Yellow Pages: i.e. Yellow Pages Australia, Yellow Pages New Zealand, and Yell
(UK). Keep in mind that some of these directories may not pass link
juice, however you can weigh this factor against their value in terms of local
reach. You could also seek listings in the regional sections of the following
global directories: DMOZ, Yahoo,
and BestOfTheWeb.
Recommended
regional directories:
Press
releases: Try to come up with a local angle
for your press releases, and submit them to local news and information
channels. Small, local news outlets are highly likely to run local interest
stories, which in turn may help your brand exposure and get you more local
links.
Avoid
Duplicate content: If you market is in one country,
then it makes sense to use the country-code TLD for that country. However, if
you target multiple countries, consider creating different content on
each domain. Placing the same content on multiple domains may risk duplicate content
penalties.
Off-line
marketing: Don't forget to get your name out
locally. If people search by you by your brand or business name, you'll always
be well positioned in the serps.
Embed
a Map: If you enter an address on Google Maps, you can get HTML embed code to add the map
to your website. Just click on the link icon to get the code.
You can also click on the
customize link to choose sizing and other features for your map before
embedding it on your website.
This is a great way to help
visitors to your website find your location easily and who knows – it might
tell a Google search bot more about your location.
Create
a Geo Sitemap: Want
to make absolutely sure Google knows where you are? Then create a geo sitemap
and KML file for your website. Geo
Sitemap Generator makes
it easy. Just fill in your company details, download the files, and upload them
to your website’s root folder.
Then go to Google Webmaster Tools, add your website (if you
haven’t already), verify it using your Google Analytics code (other options
available), and then add your geo sitemap’s URL under Site Configuration >
Sitemaps. Instead of waiting for Google to find out where you are, this will tell them where you
are!
Local
Search Directories: Once you have optimized your site for local search, you should
begin to start some off-site optimization. The first places to begin are
applicable local search directories.
The above graphic shows
the current landscape of local search directories and how they feed into each
other.
The following are seven of
the top local search directories.
Google Places: The
ultimate goal is to have the best Google Places listing. For local businesses,
it could mean having your business show up on the first page above some of the organic search results.
To get started, add or claim
your business on Google
Places. When you create your profile, be sure fill out as much
information as possible and add up to 10 supplementary photos. You can even
link five videos from YouTube about your business.
Also note that you can hide
your address on your listing by selecting that your business serves customers
at their location. When you select that option, you will get a checkbox to not
show your address.
This is a great option for
home businesses that target local clients. Once you have completed your profile
and hit submit, you will need to choose a way to verify your business. Some
will have the option to verify by phone immediately – others will have to wait
two to three weeks for a postcard by mail to the business address.
Once your Google Places
profile is live, be sure to encourage your customers to review your business.
Be sure to also monitor your business reviews. You can respond good or bad
reviews as the owner – this is a great way to demonstrate your customer service
skills publicly!
You can even use your
responses as a way to advertise your friendliness to potential customers as the
above business has done. And don’t worry if customers review you on other sites
as many of them feed into Google Places.
The only unfortunately part
is off-site reviews won’t count towards the number of reviews and stars shown
in Google search results.
While Google Places one of
the most important places to get listed on, you have to also build profiles on
other sites to build citations for local
SEO. The more consistent listings you have on additional local
search directories, the better your local rankings will be.
Yahoo Local: Yahoo Local should
be next on your local search listings and citations quest. You can add or claim
a basic listing for free which includes the vital information (contact
information, link to your website, hours, payment options, email address,
products, and services) or you can choose the enhanced listing for $9.95 per
month which allows you to add photos, coupons, a 3,000 character company
descriptions, and a 150 character company tagline. You can also run a report to
see the number of impressions and clicks you have received with an enhanced
listing. The nice part about Yahoo Local compared to Google Places is that
verification is done on Yahoo’s end and takes a couple of days to go live.
Bing Local: Bing Local allows you to add or claim a free
listing with up to nine photos for your business. Their submission system (the
Bing Business Portal) is currently in beta and not the most user-friendly
compared to Google or Yahoo. Verification is done by mail and can take two to
three weeks. One nice thing about their local pages is that they pull in
reviews from a variety of other local search sites and, unlike Google, the
total number of ratings and stars from all sites are listed in Bing’s local
search results.
Yelp
Yelp is
one of the most well-known local search directories. You can add or claim your
business listing for free and add photos and lots of additional details beyond
just your contact information. Business owners can respond to reviews on their
page, which is a plus for demonstrating customer service skills. Yelp also
offers pay per click advertising within their network so you can get your
business listing in front of more people.
Merchant Circle
Merchant Circle is
another popular local directory that allows businesses to add or claim free
listings with an extended description, profile picture, and link to your
website. They also offer free basic statistics about your listing including
keywords driving traffic to your listing and the amount of visitors your
listing has received in the last thirty days compared to average businesses and
the top business on Merchant Circle in your category. You can click on the who
is this link to find out who the leader in your category is to learn more about
your competitor’s local marketing strategy.
Superpages
Superpages allows
businesses to add or claim free listings that include an extended description
of their business, multiple categories, a listing of products and services, one
related business image, and a link to their website. You can add or claim your business listing here.
Yellow Pages
Yellow Pages allows
businesses to add or claim free listings that include an extended description
of their business, multiple categories, and a link. You can also add additional
photos for the business listing.
Additional Local Directories
Looking for more? You
can use tools like Whitespark Local Citation Finder which will help you find the best
local directories for your business. You can also search for the names of your
main competitors to see what sites they are listed on and make sure you get
listed there as well.
Why It Is Important to Claim
Your Listings
If a business has been around long enough, there is a good
chance that the business is already listed with their address and phone number.
With that in mind, is it important to claim your business listing? Absolutely!Many
local directories do not have any verification method to prove that someone
editing a listing actually belongs to the business.
If you take the initiative to claim your listings on major local
directories and networks, it prevents other people from modifying (or even
completely removing) your listing.
Getting Local Reviews
Once you’ve claimed your business profiles on local search
directories, the most important thing you can do to boost your visibility is
get reviews. Having a positive rating can help your elevate your business in
search results, especially on sites that allow visitors to sort businesses by the
number of positive ratings.
Here are some tips to getting great social local search reviews.
- Add Buttons / Badges to Your Website – Let your website visitors know they
can rate your business on directories like Yelp by adding links to your
business listing on your website.
- Encourage Reviews in Your Store – If you have a store or restaurant,
encourage local reviews by simply putting a mention or link to your Yelp
or other business listing on receipts.
- Encourage Reviews via Emails – Does your business have an online
ordering system? Do you encourage people who buy from your website to sign
up for your mailing list? If so, email people after they should have
received their purchase and ask them to rate their experience with your
business on the business listing of your choice.
- Simply Ask – If you
interact with people on a daily basis in your business, simply ask people
to add a review on your business listing. Most people will be happy to
oblige.
No matter how great your business is, you still might encounter
the bad review. As I mentioned previously, many sites like Google Places and
Yelp allow business owners to respond to their reviews individually. Be sure to
regularly monitor your reviews and respond to them as necessary. Leaving bad
reviews unanswered does not make the go away… it just makes visitors to your
profile wonder what, if any, resolution your unsatisfied customers received.
By responding to your bad reviews, you show potential new
customers that your goal is to make sure everyone is happy no matter what.
Link Building for Local
Keywords
Once you’ve built your local business listings up, the next
thing you should start doing is building links to your website. Keep in mind
that you don’t want to over do things as Google is hard at work on an over optimization penalty as we speak. That said, there are many
great ways to acquire links.
Since I’ve already discussed 10 hard-hitting link building tactics andleveraging link blending to maximize rankings, I won’t go into
any more general link building strategies here. Instead, lets look at some
local linking options including the following.
- Related Local Businesses – Look for businesses that are in the
same industry, but are not competitors. See if those websites have
resource pages that link out to other businesses similar to yours. Then
see if you can strike up a dialog with the business owner and convince
them why they need to have your link listed as a valuable resource their
visitors.
- Local Bloggers – Find bloggers that are in your
region whose audience might be interested in your business. See if you can
arrange to do a guest post for them, or get them to sample your products
or services in exchange for a review on their blog.
- General Local Resource Pages – Search for local business resources
that may not have come up in your local directories search and find out if
you can get your site listed.
- Competitor Backlinks – Using tools like Open Site Explorer, find out what backlinks your
local competitors’ websites have to see if you can get yourself listed on
them as well.
- Local Events – Be on the lookout for events in
your area, such as industry conferences, expos, or shows. Check the
event’s website to see if they link to their exhibitors and sponsors. If
they do, invest as an exhibitor or sponsor of the event so you can get
your link on their site as well.
- Local Charities – Give back to your community by
sponsoring and donating to local charities. Many will have websites that
thank their local sponsors and donors, linking back to the sponsor’s and
donor’s websites.
Now that we’ve covered most of the local search marketing bases,
let’s take a look at some local social marketing strategies.
Local Marketing on Facebook
With 845 million monthly active users, you’re bound to find some
of your target audience on Facebook. Here are some ways to make sure your
business gets found by Facebook users in your area.
Optimizing Your Facebook
Page for Local
The best way to optimize your Facebook page for a local audience
is to make sure it is set up as a Local Business. If you haven’t created your
Facebook page, make sure to create your page as
a Local Business.
If you have already created it, you may be able to change the
category, depending on your number of fans. To check to see what category your
page is listed as, go to Admin Panel > Manage > Edit Page and then Basic
Information. Here you will see a category and sub-category for your business.
Once your Facebook page is set up as a local business, be sure
to enter all of your local details including your street address, local phone
number, and business hours. If you don’t want to list your exact street
address, you can just enter the city, state, and zip code to give users an
approximation of your location.
One thing to mention in regards to the new Facebook pages design is the About information for your
business. It will generally show your business category, location, phone
number, and business hours.
You can make the area show your website by removing your phone
number and business hours from your page’s details. You just have to decide
which is more important for your visitors – seeing your phone number on your
Facebook page or having the ability to click through to your website. If you do
want your local business information to stay intact, you can also add a status
update with a link to your Facebook page, then pin the status update to the top
of the page so it shows in the top left column.
Connecting with a Local
Audience on Facebook
Once your Facebook page is locally optimized, you will want to
get your page in front of a local audience. Some simple ways to do this are as
follows.
- Invite Your Friends – Go to the Admin Panel > Build
Audience area and use the Invite Email Contacts option to invite your
email contacts to become a fan of your business page. Then use the Invite
Friends option to invite friends on your personal profile to become a fan
as well. Be sure to invite contacts in your region to get the most
targeted audience for your page.
- Become a Fan of Local Businesses Pages – Again, you will want to avoid
competitors, but become a fan of related local business pages by using
Facebook as your page and liking the page. Once you become a fan, you will
be able to interact on the local business page as your page in comments on
the page’s updates. This will get you exposure with your target audience
and will hopefully lead to new local fans of your page.
- Target Status Updates by Location – Send status updates only to people
in specific locations by changing the dropdown for your status update from
Public to targeted by Location / Language. There, you can specify an
audience within a particular country, state, and/or city.
- Use Facebook Ads – Facebook Ads are
a relatively inexpensive way to target Facebook members in your region.
Select your Facebook page as the Destination for your ad, and then use the
local targeting option to show the ad to only people in a specified
country, state, province, city, or zip code.
Local Marketing on Twitter
While Twitter may not have as large of an audience, it does have
100 million active users. It is also much easier to gain followers since you
can interact with people without them even following you. Here are some ways to
make sure your business gets found by Twitter users in your area.
Optimizing Your Twitter
Profile for Local
With Twitter profiles, you don’t have to worry about
properly categorizing them from the start to make them local friendly. All you
have to do is a few minor edits to your Twitter profile. Be sure that you
include a specific location in your Twitter information as well as a local
keyword phrase in your Twitter bio.
This will help anyone searching specifically for local
businesses on Twitter to find yours easily.
Connecting with a Local
Audience on Twitter
As previously mentioned, remember that on Twitter, you can
interact with anyone regardless of whether they are following you by simply
mentioning their @username in a status update. Here’s how you can grow a local
audience on Twitter.
- Connect with Local Twitter Users – There are several ways to find
local people on Twitter, thanks to Twitter lists and directories. You can
start with TwitterCounter, Twitter Grader, and Wefollow to find the top users
in your area. Or you can use Twitter directories like Twellow and Follower Wonk to
search for users in specific locations by keyword.
- Check Out Followers for Local Businesses – Look for local businesses on
Twitter in your industry (including competitors), and take a peek at their
followers. Chances are, they might be interested in your business as well.
- Follow Local Discussions – Use Twitter Advanced Search to monitor conversations based on
specified keywords from users near a particular place which can be
specified by name or zip code.
- Try Twitter Maps App on Bing – Bing offers several apps to enhance
the functionality of their maps including
a Twitter app. To access this app, go to explore map apps and select
Twitter Maps. Zoom into your location on the map and see tweets that are
were sent in your region.
Once you find some people that fit your targeted, local
demographic, be sure to follow them on Twitter. Don’t just click the follow
button though, be sure to actually follow
their updates and interact with them. The second part is key if you
expect to get any local followers to your Twitter profile in return.
Local Marketing on LinkedIn
LinkedIn is the top social network for professionals, therefore
it’s the perfect network for business professionals. Here’s how you can grow a
local audience on LinkedIn.
Optimizing Your LinkedIn
Profile for Local
To ensure that your profile comes up for anyone searching for
professionals in your area, just make sure you have entered your correct
location in your profile’s basic information settings. Then, for keyword
optimization, include your location in your profile’s headline. Also be sure to
list locations in your current and past job experiences.
Connecting with a Local
Audience on LinkedIn
LinkedIn only wants you to connect with people in real life as
opposed to networks like Twitter where you are encouraged to follow anyone you
are simply interested in. To get more local connections on LinkedIn, be sure to
do the following.
- Invite Email Connections – The best way to start building your
LinkedIn connections is by importing your email connections into LinkedIn.
LinkedIn will then allow you to invite anyone who is on LinkedIn to your
network.
- Connect with Colleagues & Alumni – After you have connected with
everyone in your address book, you can then connect with current and past
colleagues at your jobs as well as alumni from the college you attended.
- Open Networkers Groups – LinkedIn Open Networkers (LIONs)
are people who want to connect openly with as many people as possible on
LinkedIn. Search for open networkers in LinkedIn groups, join a few
LION groups, and then start perusing the member’s list. You will be able
to use the group as how you know the person on the LinkedIn connect form.
Then just include a private message explaining why you want to connect
with them, such as you are trying to make more local connections on
LinkedIn.
- Local Networking Groups – When searching groups, be sure to
also search for local networking groups. After you have spent some time
engaging in the local groups, you can start to connect with other members
you have interacted with.
- Email Your Local Contacts – Remember that LinkedIn contacts are
not meant to be spammed. That said, you can go to your connections and
filter them by location. Then you can select one or more people in a
specific location at a time to email. You should probably email everyone
individually and personalized if possible, but if not, this could be a
good way to get an important message to lots of local contacts
simultaneously.
Local Marketing on Google+
Although Google+ doesn’t have nearly the amount of users as
Facebook or Twitter, they do corner the market in influencing search results.
There are lots of reasons you should use Google+ such as the fact that businesses that
might not normally show up on the first page of results will thanks to having
the right Google+ connections.
Google has even incorporated Google+ people and pages above Google AdWords ads for some searches.
If you want to reap the search and social benefits of Google+,
here is what you need to do.
Optimizing Your Google+
Profile for Local
If you want your Google+ profile to appear in search
recommendations for local searches, be sure to include your current location in
your Google+ profile in your Places Lived section. Also be sure to add locally
optimized keyword phrases in your profile’s headline, introduction, and
occupation.
This should help people find you both on Google’s main search
and Google+’s internal search.
Optimizing Your Google+ Page
for Local
For Google+ pages, be sure to set up your page as a local
business from the start. You can even use your Google Places information to
populate your page’s data.
This is especially important now that Google mixes people and
pages in their main search results and within Google+’s internal search.
Connecting with a Local
Audience on Google+
Google+ is similar to Twitter in the fact that you can follow
anyone you choose, assuming that they share public updates. If they do share
public updates and have it set that anyone can comment on them, you can comment
on them without having to wait for them to follow you! Here’s how you can grow
a local audience on Google+.
- Make Sure Your Google+ Profile is Publicly Visible – Click on your profile’s Edit
Profile button and check to make sure that each section of your Google+
profile is publicly visible. If your profile is not set to public, it will
not show up in search results.
- Add Local Google+ Users to Circles – Use the Google+ internal search to
find local Google+ users that might be interested in your business and
connect with them by adding them to circles using your personal profile.
Be sure to create a separate circle for local users so you can target status
updates directly to them.
- Interact with Local Connections – Interact with your local
connections regularly. For those that share their public updates and allow
everyone to comment upon them, this is a great way to gain additional
exposure with a local audience.
- Suggest Your Google+ Business Page to Local Followers – Once you’ve built up a good local
following, you can suggest your Google+ business page to them through a
status update targeted to your local connections’ circle.
- Follow Your Local Connections Back on Your Business Page– Show your
local connections that you value them on Google+ by following them back as
your page. One of the perks to Google+ pages over Facebook pages is that
you interact with personal Google+ profiles as your business page once
people are following your page. Be sure to use this to gain even more
exposure for your business to a local audience.
Local Marketing on
Foursquare
Last but not least on the social circuit is Foursquare, the
ultimate social network for local businesses. If you have a location that you
want to share with the public, you will definitely want to add
or claim your business on Foursquare.
Optimizing Your Foursquare
Profile for Local
Foursquare business pages are as locally optimized as they get,
so nothing to worry about there. Just be sure to take advantage of adding extra
details about your business, including your other social profile links and a
link to your website.
Connecting with a Local
Audience on Foursquare
The best thing you can do on Foursquare is encourage people to
check-in to your business. One of the top ways of doing this is by offering
incentives such as discounts or coupons for people who check-in often at your
business. You can offer perks by creating specials for newbies, friends, swarms
(when lots of people check in during the same time period), loyalty, and mayors
(the person who checks-in the most at your location).
The reasons check-ins are so powerful is that most of the time, users
will not only check-in on Foursquare but also share their check-in with their
Twitter and/or Facebook audience. This is great word-of-mouth marketing as
people are more likely to go places their friends have been or recommended.
Promote check-ins at your business location by putting a
Foursquare window cling on your business’ window to remind people to check-in.
Also be sure to advertise your Foursquare presence and specials on your website
so people will know they are getting a great deal to check-in when they arrive.
More Local Social Media
Optimization Tips
The following are general tips that fit almost any network in
terms of making sure your social media presence is locally optimized and you
are ready to build an even larger local audience.
- Include Social Links in Your Emails – Anytime you send out emails,
whether they are to your general mailing list or just regular emails to
contacts, be sure that your email signature includes a link to your top
social profiles.
- Include Social Buttons on Your Website – Add social media buttons or badges
to your website so that visitors will be able to connect to your business
easily. You can add them in the header, sidebar, or footer of your
website.
- Add Social Mentions to Printed Materials and Advertisements – Do you have a brochure in your
store, business cards, or advertisements in local magazines or newspapers?
Be sure to add a simple “Follow us on Twitter” or “Find us on Facebook” to
these items (and direct links if possible).
- Stay Active – Staying
active on your social networks will help greatly in encouraging engagement
with your current audience.
- Encourage Sharing – If you create content on your
website in the form of articles, newsletters, or blog posts, be sure to
encourage that your audience shares them socially. This should help lead
new traffic to your website and connections to your social profiles.
Looking at Local Analytics
To make sure that your local marketing strategies are getting
local results, be sure to check out the following analytics.
Google Analytics
When reviewing traffic to your website, you will want to look in
yourGoogle Analytics’ Audience Demographics data.
Here, you will be able to see if local visitors stay on your
site longer than other visitors by analyzing time on site, bounce rate, and
pages per visit. If you have set up goals on your website, such as when a
person makes a purchase or signs up for your mailing list, you can see if
people in particular regions are completing these goals more often than others.
You might find additional regions that you will want to target your local marketing
efforts towards through use of your analytics.
Facebook Insights
Want to see if you are getting likes from the right audience?
Check out your Facebook page’s Insights to see demographics information for
your page’s likes, reach, and people talking about your page content.
If you notice that you are getting more likes outside of your
targeted location, you will need to figure out better ways to encourage
audience growth in your desired region such as creating more location-specific
content or specials on your Facebook page.
Conclusion
If you follow the steps I mentioned above, you should start
seeing an increase in foot traffic to your business. But the thing to keep in
mind when doing local search and social optimization is that it takes time to
see the results. Don’t expect for miracles in the first 30 or even 60 days.It will take months, if not a
year before it really kicks in.
Keyword Research for Local Search: Before
you can optimize your website, social media profiles, or anchor text for link
building, you have to know what keywords you want to use. When it comes to local search marketing, you are not only targeting
industry-specific terms, but geo-specific terms as well.
Let’s look at an example of
a local plumbing business that might have several locations in Washington. When
planning their optimization strategy, the first thing they might do is take a
look at some geo-specific keywords + plumbing to see how many times they are
searched using Google AdWords Keyword Tool.
1. Use your region in keywords
Trite? Yes, but many don't do that! Specifying a region
essentially you cut not only costs for keywords promotion but also increase
conversion. Agree that the query “Minnesota rentals” quite clearly expresses
visitor's interest than just the query “rentals”
2. Title
and Meta Descriptions: When
it comes to search results, people are going to see your website’s SEO title
tag and meta description or other related snippet from your website first.
Note that, when searching for air
conditioning repair seattle, those keywords are bolded in both the title
and snippet about the website. Make these two areas count for local search by
doing the following.
- Locally
Optimized Title Tags –
The SEO title tag is still one of the most important elements for on-site
optimization, even if Google sometimes chooses
alternate titles for search results. Regardless, you
should still assume that Google might choose your specified title tag to
link to your website in search results. Hence, you will want to make sure
it not only includes your primary keywords, but your location as well within
70 characters.
- Locally
Optimized Meta Descriptions –
Again, Google might choose a snippet of text from your website instead,
but it never hurts to have an optimized meta description. Make sure it
includes your primary keywords, areas your business serves, and phone
number if possible within 165 characters.
3.
Specify the region in the content of pages
Too corny, but it's necessary! Tell your potential customer that
you offer services or sell goods in his native city and he always will call
you!
4.
Search engines features – it's your help!
Add your business to Google Places. This will help search
engines locate your site to the desired region.
5.
Make anchors in backlinks also regional
Make part of anchors regional, using appropriate keywords.
Often, tit's much difficult to make such links natural (when commenting on
blogs, for example), but for link exchanges – it is quite possible.
6.
Local targeting for contextual advertising
Avoid the major mistake – to fill a large number of visitors.
What is important is the conversion, rather than an absolute number. Only a
local target will give a high conversion.
7. Periodically
check and correct keys
This operation is recommended every few months. See conversion
statistics, analyze conversion and leave only the best regional key queries.
8.
Use social networks
It would seem that this item should be listed first but the
value of social networks should not be exaggerated. The use of social media –
another way to raise traffic to the site, the method is very effective!
9.
Testimonials and reviews at your service
Traditionally, reviews were excellent way to promote your business.
And now they can't be written off. Be sure to click on the site reviews section
and publish reviews of your products on special “review” sites (preferably in
your region).
10.Optimize
different pages (or subdomains) for different regions
If your business has outgrown the local
stage, it will be great option for optimizing pages for different regions and
promoting them in these regions.v
As you see, SEO optimization on a regional scale is the simple
actions, but their use can be achieved very good results!
Advantages of regional optimization are to find a narrow focus when there is
an opportunity to find to users in the region, it's an additional regional site
advertising, low competition, especially if in this segment in the region your
resource is one of the few, audience doesn't perceive request as additional
regional advertising, they just looking for something in the region, relying on
a reputable search engine.
Among the disadvantages can be noted a small audience, lack of
rankings when displaying the results, absence of strong regional advertising,
inability to predict audience, which may be covered by the search, as well as
small business development, compared with global search.
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