How can i optimize my pages for local areas if we are not in that area?
-
Hi Mozers!
So I watched a video about Matt Cutts he talks about creating multiple web pages just for one keywords is an absolutely no go. So I was wondering we serve a clients in NZ Australia and USA, If we target phrase like
Psychic Readings California, Psychic Readings San Diego etc (USA)
Psychic Readings Melbourne, Psychic Readings Sydney (AU)
Psychic Readings Auckland, Psychic Readings Wellington (NZ)
What is the best practice or right way to go about structuring my pages to do this without going against googles guidelines.
Many thanks
-
I do assessments of existing articles by looking at their traffic. If they are pulling in very little traffic I look at their optimization and see if I can tweak them towards better keywords. I also look at traffic growth over time. For my sites a new article might not start drawing representative traffic until it has been on the site for at least a year.
-
Hey EGOL,
Thanks mate for your awesome feedback! I really draw to the idea of creating the best kickass content out there for noobs lol (love the way you put it) this to me would make a lot of sense, especially for our audience, also I have found many competitors write for the sake of writing and enjoying the writing rather then what the clients enjoy reading if that makes sense.
So I have been trying to find a way to come up with good topics articles from my customers own questions and experiences. I really like the idea of "psychic reading bogus" as it draws in skeptics as well, psychic scams etc.
Yes it does take a lot of work, and patience. I have just recently done a whole make over of the site and will be reviewing all the content. Seeing some positive results after this latest change, but my focus is now on producing good engaging and quality content that is also unique.
If you have any advice around how to come up with these and how to eliminate the existing articles on the that would be much appreciated.
Thanks again
Justin
-
Hi Kristina,
Thank you so much for your response and taking the time to provide me some great feedback!
That clears everything up for me. I had this advice given to me by an SEO that I hired a while ago and found out some things didn't really stack, so I guess this is another one I'm finding, so I'm here trying to fix everything
Thanks again for this I really appreciate all your guys input to helping me get to the bottom line
Cheers
Justin
-
Adding to Kristina's comment. If you have an informational page you can often rank in the local SERPs with no mention of any geographic location. I have lots of informational pages about products and services. Many of them rank on the first page of Google across the United States and many countries.
To do this you must write kickass content for noobs on the topic of "psychic readings". I am talking about several articles that are the best for their topic that exist on the web, better than anyone anywhere. If you are willing to do that, and can do that ("can do it" and "willing to do it" are very different things), it is possible to get it on the first page of Google. If you happen to also offer that product or service, you can run house ads on that page that direct visitors to your sales pages.
Often, the competition is not as steep as you expect. People who sell stuff are so focused on promoting sales pages that they totally ignore writing content that is so basic that a noob would want to read it and be able to understand it. They are focused on sell sell sell. And, Google, like a good search engine, will often mix informative content onto a page full of sales, just so people who are simply curious can learn about that topic.
So, I might write a dozen or two articles like these and post them on my site....
What to expect from you first psychic reading.....
Are psychic readings bogus?....
How can a psychic give accurate readings?...
How to know if my psychic is giving me a good reading? ....
Then, after I have a great library of articles about psychic readings, I would make a category page that contains "the first article that anyone consulting a psychic should read". That article will occupy the left column of that page. The right column of that page would link out to all of the general "psychic readings" articles that I have along with some of the best that are out on the web - even if they are on my competitors websites.
No guarantees on this, but if you write all of these articles and do a fantastic job they should pull in some visitors and give you one of the most awesome libraries on the web. I have ranked for some really difficult queries using this approach. It takes a lot of work, you got to be patent before you see results, but if you can bust into the national or English language or global search results the traffic can be awesome.
Good luck if you try this.
-
Hello Edward!
I work for a site that has a lot of physical locations, so Moz asked me to step in.
Let me start with this: you don't have to call out locations if Google can establish you as an online service. When I was working for Distilled I had multiple clients with online ecommerce sites, and they ranked well in most locations in the US without specifically calling out any city or state. The key, I think, was that Google saw the "buy now" and "shipping" buttons and understood that this was accessible to anyone in America.
Your site is similar. You have "get started" or "call now" buttons that show that the whole of the transaction can be done wherever you are in the US, Australia, or NZ. You have different CCTLDs, so Google knows which countries you're relevant in.
My question for you is - why do you want to optimize for local? Do you have clients who can't find you because they're searching for local terms? Did you find a lot of local keyword volume? Because my gut response is, you probably don't need to worry about this.
Best,
Kristina
-
My pleasure! And wishing you best of luck!
-
Hi Miriam
Thanks so much I appreciate your advice and thanking you for taking the time to go out of your way and look into this. It didn't really make sense for me to put all cities in one article, so I'm looking for the right way to do this - so I wanted to make sure that I wasn't doing anything to cause myself any issues with google later down the line. Will sit tight. Thanks again
Justin
-
Hey There!
I totally get how this can be complex. While I think it's important to mention the areas which you virtually serve, what I, personally, don't find to be a good strategy is one in which any business that serves nationally tries to create a page for every city. The services they are offering across the country are the same, and the only reason to create a page for each city would be if the services are somehow different from city to city. This is different than a local business that has to describe their services in a small handful of cities to make it clear where they will travel to. For a virtual/national/international business, I don't know of a way to create unique content for hundreds, thousands or millions of cities and towns when the service is the same for all.
There needs to be another approach to clarifying countries served than a city-by-city approach. But, I wouldn't be the expert on this, because I work primarily in the Local SEO field. I could see, if you serve 3 different countries, having a unique page for each country explaining hours or operation, languages spoken, etc., ... but not every city. It doesn't seem scaleable or realistic to me to do this this way for a virtual business.
I'm going to ask for some additional input from our team from staff members with more experience in national/international SEO than I have. Please stand by, and thanks for asking a good question!
-
Hi Mariam,
Thank you very much for your response, I appreciate this and your options here. I wanted to ask with regards to the organic. Is it okay to mention areas we cover in one article? For eg: I wrote this page here http://bit.ly/1JSap8j I put the area as the title and local areas into the article, is it okay to do this? But then again, I think i'm repeating myself not with the local areas but by adding another page that talks about psychic readings in general as I already covered psychic readings on the home page and psychic readings is a category of its own. I'm a little confused at how I should be adding these, keeping in mind I want to be keeping everything unique, and also not overlapping content after reading this from moz https://moz.com/blog/content-audit-tutorial
Cheers for your help
Justin
-
Hi Edward!
Thanks for the further details. So, yes, you are correct. In order to participate in typical local search marketing activities, you must have both a physical location and make in-person contact with your customers, whether at your location or at theirs. Barring this, you have 3 main options open to you:
-
Organic SEO - creating content, earning links, optimizing pages, etc. geared to toward various regions for which you are hoping to rank organically, because you will not be able to rank in the local packs of results. It's critical here that anything you create be of the highest possible quality and unique. No duplicate content, spammy links, doorway pages, etc.
-
PPC - Paying to appear with ads in various regions, in which case, you can appear in any city or state for which you're willing to pay.
-
Social Outreach - gearing your social campaigns toward specific regions for visibility on social platforms.
Hope this clarification is helpful!
-
-
Hi Miriam,
The business is a virtual business offering advisory/psychic readings online from anywhere in the world. I have 3 top level domains to focus on specific countries. So to use local am I right in thinking or understanding that you need to be in a physical location offering your services?
Cheers
-
Hi Edward!
Would you be able to fill in with a bit more detail here? Are you talking about a local business that makes in-person contact with clients in specific cities in AU, NZ and USA? Do you have an office anywhere in these countries to which people come and have face-to-face contact with staff? Or, is this a virtual business, perhaps providing services via the web or phone?
The more detail you can provide, the better help the community can give. Thanks!
-
Hi there
If you have physical locations in those areas that would be fantastic from the standpoint of being able to list address / contact information (marked up with Schema - you can also attach organizations to a brand) to your site on a locations page, utilize Moz Local (for US) and Whitespark (for Australia and NZ) listings, and also build out Google My Business profiles for each.
If you don't have physical locations in these areas, or you work with service providers in those areas, the best you can do is again build a locations, partners, or an "Areas We Serve" sort of page on each regional domain and list specifically what areas you work in with a link to the page of the service provider, or their contact information. That way you're telling users the areas you work in and have a way for them to reach out to those specific providers.
Google My Business also provides Service-area businesses map building which you can look into as well.
Don't get too heavy into optimization for local specific content or tagging - sometimes people do this and go way overboard and create spam issues.
Hope this helps! Good luck!
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
-
Ranking for keywords locally with multiple locations
If we have a company with multiple physical locations across multiple states, but selling the same products, what would be an optimal strategy? All local locations have been claimed, but the site is not coming up for searches with local intent. If the corporate site focuses on the "products", what is the best way to get that associated with the individual locations as well? When implementing json+ld, would we put the specific location on the specific location pages and nothing on the rest? Any other tips would be great! Thanks in advance,
Local Website Optimization | | IDMI.Net0 -
Weird SEO Problem - No Longer Ranking in Some Areas
Hi Everyone, I’ve got a weird SEO issue that I hope you’ll be able to help with. I’ve broken it down in to the key points below: Impressions for our primary and secondary keywords dropped dramatically on 02.10.17. Impressions have only dropped on non geographical keywords. “UK” variants are still ranking well. Investigation shows we’re not ranking outside of London at all for primary and secondary keywords. Primary and secondary keywords are still ranking well in London, the city where we’re based We’ve looked at our competition who do rank for the primary keyword both in and outside London. We noticed we have our “postaladdress” in our schema. The competition don’t have their address in their schema. We updated our schema 2 weeks ago and now use the Yoast schema which is the same as our competitors use. Approx 1 week after removing the schema we started showing up for primary and secondary keyword again, but very low - fluctuating between page 15 and page 24. It’s been 2 weeks now and no improvement. AHREFS and google webmaster, both incorrectly detail that we rank top 5. Which is true to a degree, but only in London. Thank you in advance!
Local Website Optimization | | rswhtn0 -
Are local business directories worth the effort? Eg. White pages, Yell.com, Local.com?
Hi Guys, Im new to Moz and very keen to do SEO right without upsetting Mr. Google too much. Are local business directories worth the effort? Its a laborious job, but happy to do it, if its effective and won't be considered spammy by Google? Thanks
Local Website Optimization | | Fetseun0 -
Is this local guide best to follow?
Today I found below guide, Is this best guide to follow for the website and service pages content, layout design? http://www.ducttapemarketing.com/blog/guide-to-local-seo/
Local Website Optimization | | Michael.Leonard0 -
Can PPC harm SEO results, even if it's off-domain?
Here's the scenario. We're doing SEO for a national franchise business. We have over 60 location pages on the same domain, that we control. Another agency is doing PPC for the same business, except they're leading people to un-indexable landing pages off domain. Apparently they're also using location extensions for the businesses that have been set up improperly, at least according to the Account Strategists at Google that we work with. We're having a real issue with these businesses ranking in the multi-point markets (where they have multiple locations in a city). See, the client wants all their location landing pages to rank organically for geolocated service queries in those cities (we'll say the query is "fridge repair"). We're trying to tell them that the PPC is having a negative effect on our SEO efforts, even though there shouldn't be any correlation between the two. I still think the PPC should be focused on their on-domain location landing pages (and so does our Google rep), because it shows consistency of brand, etc. I'm getting a lot of pushback from the client and the other agency, of course. They say it shouldn't matter. Has anyone here run into this? Any ammo to offer up to convince the client that having us work at "cross-purposes" is a bad idea? Thanks so much for any advice!
Local Website Optimization | | Treefrog_SEO0 -
Localized Search Results
I'll try to setup this question: I go to Google.com and set the search tools to a particular city that I am not in (say I live in Nashville but set the search tools for Rockville MD). I do a search for a specific term without a location modifier such as "chrysler town and country" and I don't see the website I'm looking for in the first 100 results. Then I keep the search tools the same, but change the specific search to "chrysler town and country rockville md" and the website I'm looking for is now the #1 result. What would affect the difference? I would have expected the website to have a similar ranking in both situations.
Local Website Optimization | | perkfriday0 -
Is it worth it having different cities in your footer, each with a separate page?
I have been looking at the website of local web design companies and every single one in my area has a footer with links to a separate page for that local city. This seems like a bad idea to me, but everyone in the local pack has it. Does it work?
Local Website Optimization | | EcommerceSite0 -
Do more page links work against a Google SEO ranking when there is only 1 url that other sites will link to?
Say I have a coupon site in a major city and assume there are 20 main locations regions (suburb cities) in that city. Assume that all external links to my site will be to only the home page. www.site.com Assume also that my website business has no physical location. Which scenario is better? 1. One home page that serves up dynamic results based on the user cookie location, but mentions all 20 locations in the content. Google indexes 1 page only, and all external links are to it. 2. One home page that redirects to the user region (one of 20 pages), and therefore will have 20 pages--one for each region that is optimized for that region. Google indexes 20 pages and there will be internal links to the other 19 pages, BUT all external links are still only to the main home page. Thanks.
Local Website Optimization | | couponguy0