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With the advent of Google
Local, a service that helps Web users find local
businesses by typing in a search term and a city name,
many questions arise concerning its impact on Natural
Optimization.
Google Local tracks down
local stores and businesses by searching billions of pages
across the Web, and then cross-checking these findings
with Yellow Pages information to locate the local
resources Web users wish to access. In addition to local
business listings and related Web links, Google Local also
provides maps of the desired region and directions made
available by MapQuest. This makes Google Local convenient
for Web searchers and extremely useful for local
businesses, if their sites are optimized for
local-searches. If not, some businesses could be missing
out on a tremendous increase in local site visibility and
traffic.
Case-in-point: The Home
Depot, whose Web site features its own Store Finder with
zip code-accessed location listings. Type "Home
Depot" into Google Local and while a list of local
stores appears, no related local landing pages come up. In
fact, none of the related Web links even direct Web users
to Home Depot's home page. Most large sites that have
retail stores have a search feature or "enter your
zip" option. Google and other Search Engines will
never be able to index this content. For retailers looking
to increase sales and traffic from their Web sites, this
could prove to be a big problem.
The Home Depot is not
alone. Countless other large and small businesses alike do
not have city-oriented pages accessible through local
search sites. Many are not listed in the top 15 return
results for related keywords for Google Local, despite
their location in the immediate proximity to the search
location. Google Local ranks listings based on their
relevance to the search terms the user enters, not solely
by geographic distance. This means that unless your site
has a city and/or county-oriented landing page for each
location, Google will not be able to access your contact
page, no matter how relevant your site is to a search
term, or how close you are in geographic distance.
Natural Optimization
specialists never really focused on the optimization of
contact and location pages on websites, but now it's
becoming a vital tool to drive more qualified traffic to
the sites. In order to make sites local search-ready, they
should start creating sitemaps that include every store
location and then build individual landing pages for each
specific location with a brief overview of the store along
with a map and detailed directions. Without this, Google
does not have a path to index the pages and information.
Doing this small step will increase your qualified traffic
as well as increase sales in your retail store or
business.
By making your keywords
city-specific and including more location-specific
information on your site, Google Local can access your
contact information and, as a result, drive more related
traffic to your site.
Take Hard Rock Café. Their
Web site is an ideal example of a site that is perfectly
optimized for local Search Engines like Google Local. When
entered in as a search term, Hard Rock Café's number one
listing links to their home page's restaurant location
page. Search users can instantly access information on
Hard Rock Café in general, as well as learn more about
location and contacts.
Local search is one of the
most hyped areas of development in the Search industry
today. Other Search engines including Yahoo!, Ask Jeeves,
MSN and CitySearch are hot on Google's tail to perfect
their own versions of local Search Engines. Soon, not
having your site optimized for local Search Engines will
make your business's site obsolete. The impact of local
search is already apparent, and it is still only in its
infancy.
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About
The Author
Rob
Young, Manager of Natural Optimization and
Creative Director of full-service
interactive marketing and advertising
agency UnREAL Marketing Solutions, has
been with the company since its inception
in 1999. Young oversees the Natural
Optimization and Creative departments. www.unrealmarketing.com
rob@unrealmarketing.com |
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