Local SEO Practice: Creating a Fictitious Business?
-
Has anyone tried fabricating a fake, brick-and-mortar store as an SEO experiment? Sort of along the lines of what Starwood is doing (check out this Wikipedia experiment with the Test Galaxy Sheraton), but with a legitimate physical address and all?
Was it useful? And are there any potential legal troubles that could arise from borrowing a vacant address?
I'm thinking this could be helpful for my Intern to gain practical experience in local SEO, without the politics of working for a client But I wouldn't want to blight that address for future occupants if the experiment went horribly awry.
We could instead offer pro bono services to a small business with a limited web presence – that would be useful to her, and constructive. But I'd like to have a better understanding of what signals Google looks for when deciding whether to index a website in local search, and see whether possible to dupe those algos.
What are your thoughts, Mozzers?
.
-
Duplicate post, sorry!
-
Thanks for your input, Keri! I think we're going to go the pro bono route.
Starwood's a curious case, and I also wonder to what extent those pages exist for SEO reasons. Some of their test properties look innocuous, like sandboxes for translation plug-ins or new templates, but the Wikipedia citation on the 'List of New York Hotels' is really interesting to me. When I was working in-house for a New York hotel chain, I also picked up on weird affinities between that page and rankings in local search. Back in May I noticed that the Magic 7 for "NYC Hotels" exclusively listed hotels with Wikipedia pages, and decided to create one for one of the properties. Bingo! Within a few weeks, we were usually among the top local results for "nyc luxury hotels", "nyc 4-star hotels", and "nyc 5-star hotels" (yeesh, Google, it's either one or the other...)
At the same time, hotels with Wikipedia pages started receiving snippets and thumbnails from their articles on the far right of the screen, adjacent to the map. This seemed to be exclusive to the hospitality vertical, and I didn't notice the same SERP formatting in other cities. You would also see thumbnails of related hotels (which as a rule, also had Wikipedia pages), and a list of features that it seemed to be cross-referencing from multiple sources, like:
Hotel Class: 4 Stars
Architect: Steven Jacobs
Style: Modernist
My hunch is that Starwood was testing two hypotheses with the Test Galaxy Sheraton:
- Does inclusion on Wikipedia's list of hotels in New York City influence rankings, either local or web?
- Does Google source a hotel's 'features' from lists and structured mark-ups on a hotel's own website?
In any case, Google did away with the Wikipedia-heavy SERPs a few months ago but I suspect it continues to inform local search. It makes sense from a business perspective that Google would want to use use open-source data whenever possible. They could crunch its geocoordinates and with their algorithms without paying license fees, I would think, no?
-
I'd totally avoid doing anything like this as well, and think that offering pro bono services would be much better all the way around.
My guess is that Starwood didn't realize that those URLs were live and indexable on the web. I must say that http://www.starwoodhotels.com/preferredguest/property/features/attraction_detail.html?propertyID=588&attractionId=1000027215 provided my ROFL of the morning though!
-
Think I needed this, Daniel. Thank you!
My conscience says that you're right. I've gone back and forth on this today, and whatever educational value there might be seems outweighed by the potential to confuse people and affect livelihoods.
There are things that I'd like to test that go beyond the standard on-page/off-page process of citations, schemata, and KML—things like EXIF data, geocaching, and Wikipedia mentions—but it doesn't seem fair to test any of them without having some skin in the game.
Ah, if only there were a sandbox for real company stuff...
-
Yikes!
No, no, no.
A thousand times no.
And once again: no.
Fakery is always and everywhere wrong. It's not complicated.
If that means nothing to you, consider the consequences of exposure.
As a former TV news director I can assure you this is a helluva story:
"Company in the sleazy SEO business is caught red-handed in the cynically calculated use of deceit to intentionally mislead the public by creating a fake business; calls it an "intern experiment" and says it did nothing wrong. Consumer advocates disagree and call for regulation and licensing of SEO industry. Part two tomorrow, as our series on the death of privacy and birth of web big brotherism continues. Are your children safe?"
Sheesh.
Few issues are black and white.
But this is one.
-
Thanks,
Let me know what you think of my post, I am trying to start establishing myself in the blogosphere, though that particular post is really is a high-level recap of Search Love, though I had a lot of points made in David Mihms Presentation, which was amazing.
In response to the local algos, they seem to be, in my opinion, even more neurotic than the organic ones. I mean they are ALL over the place, it is also VERY hard to track local rankings.
-
I agree with Zach and I would suggest going with the other option you already have in your head.
"We could instead offer pro bono services to a small business with a limited web presence – that would be useful to her, and constructive. But I'd like to have a better understanding of what signals Google looks for when deciding whether to index a website in local search, and see whether possible to dupe those algos."
In my opinion, that's the best way to go. @Zach, thanks for posting those links. I will check out your post.
-
You'd be treading in some murky water there. I had a conversation last week at SearchLove Boston with David Mihm, one of the most reputable local SEOs, and we had a conversation about creating fictitious addresses for businesses, the problem is that you cannot use a PO box, which leaves you to use things like UPS store mailboxes. Google can obviously tell that if your at a UPS Store and will take it down; David Mihm explained it as a Wack-A-Mole game.
Also, if you use fictitious addresses, what stops competitors from reporting you? Again, you could try it, but it's real tricky to do, and successfully get away with. I'm much more of a fan of #RCS.
Some good resources to learn from
http://protechig.com/seo/search-love-boston-2012-takeaways/ (not to toot my own horn, but I have a good amount of local tips in this post)
Hope this helps!
Zach
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Setting up a remote business with their Google Business Account
Hi all, I have a client who operates a remote business and I need to get her Google business/ brand account set up. She doesn't want it listed under her home address (for obvious reasons) but that is where her business is based out of. Apart from getting a PO box and listing her business under that for Google, does anybody know of any other options or best practices? Thanks!
SEO Learn Center | | Zx30 -
Trying to rank my personal business website
Hi, Guys I run a small company in england. I've been constantly ripped off by other seo companies. Im have my 1st child and really cannot afford the cost of a company to do this. I have just joined SEO mom look like a really great platform. Is there any advice on how i can rank my website. I am willing to put the time in myself and can devote late nights to try and succeed. Any advice on where to start links etc would be really greatly received. Thank you all.
SEO Learn Center | | letsrent0 -
Best practice to consolidate two Google accounts
Hello, I have two Google accounts. Account1 is XYZ@gmail.com - This account is used for Gmail, Blogger, Google Photo etc... Account2 is YXZ@companyname.com - This account is where Adword, Google Analytics, Webmaster etc.. I'd like to know the SEO best practice and how to use these two accounts. I know that Google currently don't have account consolidation feature. What are my options to merge these two account? I already have the blogger site in GA and webmaster.
SEO Learn Center | | LCEComm0 -
Basic skills for correcting and tweaking SEO issues
Is there an online resource that has good video tutorials for the basic skills someone would need to make code corrections for SEO related tasks? We would like to make use of some of our internal resources in slogging through some of the tasks of making the corrections. Is there a good training resource online to achieve this?
SEO Learn Center | | rhgraves651 -
How can get inffo on all in one SEO plugin
I have the plugin All In One SEO. I do not know how to use it. How can I get instructions telling me how to use it. I have gone to the website but there does not seem to be a way to contact anyone.
SEO Learn Center | | RQB0 -
Is ASO The End of SEO?
App Store Optimization (ASO): Is It Really the New SEO? Which type of technique we have to follow in ASO? Is it same in different App store or every APP store have same technique?
SEO Learn Center | | afycon1 -
First Time SEO Online Store
Hi All, I have recently launched a new online store selling mobile phones and accessories. I have always found SEO to be one of those foggy areas, after all I see things through curly braces. However, as the director of the new online store I do need to get myself involved in SEO and all its wonders that it has to offer. I was wondering if any of the Pro SEO guys at there have any tips for an almost newbie in the world of SEO... Can it be made fun?? I find it at times to be a right slog and I do question whether I'm actually getting anywhere etc. Any responses or advice would be greatly appreciated. Regards Rob
SEO Learn Center | | stu567blue
Newbie to SEO ;o)0 -
Is SEO Certification.org Worth Having?
I am new to SEO and I am trying to get properly trained. Have the SEO Certification.org professional is worth it? What's your think? Are there any other certifications to have that will properly train you? I know google has one.
SEO Learn Center | | AppleCapitalGroup0