Google locations question for organic search...
-
If you set your Google location to "Dallas, TX" and you do a search for "web design dallas", my client shows up #4. If you change your google location to anywhere else in the US, he is #1. How can I be #1 in Dallas and the US?
(My client is not really in Dallas but I didn't want to give away the city, their site, etc)
-
Hi Trey,
Sorry I wasn't able to offer you a better response on this one. And that is definitely tough when clients are overly preoccupied with rankings.
One other little question for your consideration: In terms of the 4 top businesses' distance to the Dallas city centroid, how close is your client? Again, my standard thinking would be that this would only affect true local results, but who knows? Is the business ranking #1, perhaps, closer to the center of the city than your client?
At any rate, I'm glad you have a few ideas to follow and wish you good luck. Happy New Year!
Miriam
-
Thanks, Miriam.
My original thinking was that I didn't have enough local citations, links, etc. So I concentrated more on that. Then I tried to get only high pr backlinks. Then worked on social marketing knowing that plays a bigger role nowadays. According to the links analysis tool provided here, I am in significantly better seo shape than the competition. There is one site, however, that has significantly more backlinks than I do. Maybe that is the reason...but then again, why am #1 everywhere else? Who knows?
I believe you are correct in that there is no simple answer to this. Just one of those things, I guess.
I will take your advice and see if Bill has anything about this.
My client (who is a web designer - just not in dallas) is one of those "gotta be #1" type guys. We had the biggest argument over this because me, rank tracker and everything thing else said he is #1 but his location is set to "dallas" and he is #4 there.
Thanks, again.
Trey
-
Hi Trey,
I'm sorry you've been on the trail of this puzzle for months to no avail. I want to assure you that I do understand what you are talking about in regards to the setting of location within Google, etc. I have a feeling the reason asking this question in fora isn't yielding a simple answer is that there isn't a simple, standard, across-the-board reason for the ranking variations that you've observed.
I believe that, as the SEO on the project, your best shot will be to use whatever competitive analysis tools you prefer (we have awesome ones here at SEOmoz) to see if you can spot a meaningful difference that would explain why Google feels one site is more relevant to the query than the other, if the person is searching from within the city in question. It may turn out to be something as simple as a title tag structure that favors the local term to something as complex as the authority or locale of the links pointing to one site or the other. It will take some digging and is not something that can be answered at a glance.
That being said, I'd like to throw a couple of notes in here for your observation.
Using your hypothetical query (I understand this isn't really your client's industry or city), I see slight variations in rankings when I search for 'web design dallas' from my own city in California, 'web design dallas tx' from my own city in California and 'web design dallas' when setting my location to Dallas, TX. The top 4 businesses are all moving around slightly within the top 4 positions for these very slightly different searches.
What makes me curious about this situation is that 'web design' is one of the few local queries for which Google refuses to show local results. Their policy is not to treat web design firms as local, but looking at the little ranking variations, I have to wonder if some of the local search ranking factors are being applied under the surface. Now, what I don't know is if your client is actually a web design firm or in one of the other few industries that are barred from inclusion in local search. If they are, I wonder if Bill Slawski at SEObytheSea has written about any patents that might speak to these observable variations. It might be worth contacting him directly about this. He's very good.
There are also the effects of personalization to consider, and whether this is causing any of the ranking variations.
The upshot is, I can't provide a simple answer because I believe in-depth analysis will be required to discern the differences, however large or small, that might be causing Google to handle the results this way. It's probably going to be slightly different in every case. I think you've got a big challenge to surmount...and I hope you don't have one of those difficult clients who pins all expectations on rankings instead of conversions.
Sincerely wishing you good luck in your work and I would be very happy to hear from you if you managed to discover what you feel the solution is!
Miriam
-
Yes, I know. Thank you for your reply.
I understand all that. I have watched that video and a hundred more just like it. Maybe I'm not explaining myself well enough.
I'm talking about how you can set your location on google. After you do any search, if you look to the left, halfway down, you will see a place where you can set your default google location. If you set that to Dallas, TX and then do a search for "web design dallas" you will get different search results than if you set it to San Diego, CA (example) and do the same search for "web design dallas".
I got the #1 spot but not if your default Google location is set to Dallas, TX. So if you set your google location to anywhere else in the world and do a search for "web design dallas", I am #1. If your google location is set to Dallas and do the same search, I am #4. Can't figure it out.
I have asked this question for months and nobody knows what I am talking about or can't give me a straight answer. Thought for sure someone here might have a clue.
Thanks, again.
-
Hi Trey,
I'm the Local SEO Associate here in Q&A and just wanted to pop in to mention that Google does not show Places results for web design companies. They haven't since January of 2010, if I recall correctly. Definitely check out the tutorial JP has mentioned, but bear in mind, your efforts to rank organically for any term are pretty much going to come down to the old standby's of how the site is optimized, linked within, linked to, marketed and used by humans.
Miriam
-
Thanks for the reply.
I'm talking about organic search - NOT Google Places. I understand the differences but my keywords don't show a Places listing when searched.
And yes, my keyword shows up #1 in the rank tracker tool.
-
Are you talking about coming up in Google Places as the #1 position or in the regular organic search? Rand just put up an awesome tutorial on local search - go to Learn SEO, then Pro Webinars and look for the one about local content. I just finished watching the video, and it was awesome! Tons of ideas.
Did you use the seomoz.org/rank-tracker tool? Does it show you rank #1 for this term? My guess is that it doesn't....I'm interested to know.
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
-
Domain and urls aren't showing up in Google search
Hi, Moz community, I hope you are staying safe, I have been trying to search our website in Google by using the whole domain name, but it's not showing up. For example: https://www.example.com/
Competitive Research | | ksmith88
https://www.example.com/inner-page.html
Or if search brand name: Example, doesn't come up But when I try example.com, it comes up along with other pages. Neither the inner pages are being come up in the search nor the home page with https://www.example.com. I have checked with Site:example.com, it is showing all the pages, but it is weird on the other hand that it is not visible in the search, what could be the reason? Any tool to check it? I thought it was because of the latest core update from Google. But, there are many keywords in the rankings, so I am sure the website hasn't been impacted. I checked penalties or issues through many tools and even in the search console, everything is fine. Any help would be appreciated.1 -
Can an https: impact (not provided) keywords in Google Analytics? Meaning if I make my site https: will it provide any more keywords. If not how can I get this data?
I have a site that I'd love to have more keyword data on. Can making my site an https: site give me more keyword data than leaving my site an http: site? Thanks!
Competitive Research | | mattdinbrooklyn0 -
Majestic gives me a 24 situation and 24 trust flow. Seomoz just a total number of 7\. How come the difference? My ranking is still bad, so is Majestic crawling faster then google?
Hi, my total domain value number on SEOmoz is 7. In Majestic it is 24 situation and 24 trust flow. My ranking is still bad (page2) and my competitors have a lower trust/ situation flow in Majestic. But in Seomoz the're better. Is the conclusion that Majestic is more up to date then Google itself and that Seomoz is more inline with the google crawling? Because Majestic doesnt reflect my ranking. (ps I started with the domain for a month, and I only have some history in registration)
Competitive Research | | remkoallertz0 -
Why do keyword competition rankings differ between Google and SeoMoz?
I am a novice at keyword ranking etc. so I appreciate your patience! I checked a longtail keyword - how do i get out of this relationship - in Google AdWords and it came back 'low competition.' When I entered it in SeoMoz it came back as 'very competitive.' Any thoughts? I appreciate your help.
Competitive Research | | UncleTodd0 -
Absolute vs Relative URL Interlinking Observation & Question
So I've read a few articles about this here on SEOMOZ and other sites. I understand the benefit of relative url linking from a developer's point view. I've also read that using either internal linking methods doesn't really have any real SEO benefits or cons that would impact your rankings greatly. (Except with the slight chance of getting traffic and backlinks from a scraper site.) But I'm seeing examples where this may not be true. I did a search for 5 star hotels in Vegas in google. Some of the top results were Hotels.com and Expedia.com Priceline.com was on the second page. I used the search operator link: to Hotels.com, Expedia.com and Priceline.com vegas hotel pages respectively: Hotels.com: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbo=d&site=webhp&q=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.hotels.com%2Fde1504033-st5%2Ffive-star-hotels-las-vegas-nevada%2F&oq=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.hotels.com%2Fde1504033-st5%2Ffive-star-hotels-las-vegas-nevada%2F&gs_l=serp.3...3650.7043.0.7972.8.7.1.0.0.0.90.363.7.7.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1j2.4kALxt0jpxI Expedia.com: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbo=d&site=webhp&q=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.expedia.com%2F5Star-Las-Vegas-Hotels.s50-0-d178276.Travel-Guide-Filter-Hotels&oq=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.expedia.com%2F5Star-Las-Vegas-Hotels.s50-0-d178276.Travel-Guide-Filter-Hotels&gs_l=serp.3...1681.3746.0.4076.6.6.0.0.0.0.100.348.5j1.6.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1j2.KxqwbH-YFV0 Priceline: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&tbo=d&site=webhp&q=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.priceline.com%2F5-star-hotels-las-vegas-nevada-NV-filter-tk-s5-c291680-hl.hotel-reviews-hotel-guides&oq=link%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.priceline.com%2F5-star-hotels-las-vegas-nevada-NV-filter-tk-s5-c291680-hl.hotel-reviews-hotel-guides&gs_l=serp.3...11265.12321.0.12767.5.5.0.0.0.0.0.0..0.0.les%3B..0.0...1c.1.HYtfct4MS7M The results were that priceline had no backlinks internally or externally to their vegas page. Whereas their competitors did, most of which were from their own internal pages. Looking at priceline's linking structure and architecture, they use a relative url structure and sessions ids to link to various pages. Their competitors don't. Wouldn't you argue that this may be adversely affecting their rankings. I know other things are to be factored in if you dig deeper. But that seems to be a major difference. It just seems that their content management system or how their site is coded isn't really passing link juice.
Competitive Research | | workathomecareers0 -
Tracking competitors in search engines
Hi Mozzers, I'm using Advanced Web Rankings (AWR) to track my site and a number of competitors in Google - seeing how rankings and brand visibility change from week to week. I didn't set this up from scratch and I'm worrying with all of the recent algorithm changes that I might well be tracking the wrong competitors. Is there a tool or methodology I can use to find the biggest players in the market? I'm in the travel market so there's lots of choice and I track the large sites but want to be sure I'm aware of smaller/mid-sized sites gaining visibility without me tracking them via a platform like AWR. Many thanks!
Competitive Research | | panini0 -
Another how the *%#^ is this site ranking question
I saw a question posted by someone a while back asking how a certain (in their opinion crappy) site was ranking in the top then. It happened that there were some good reasons for that site ranking. Well.... I have stumbled on a site that seems to be ranking for (almost) no reason at all: relatively low DA/PA very few inbound links (none seem to be that special) thin content The only thing I can think of, is that the site has the keyword in the domain name. But looking at the search results, there are other domains with exact match keyword in URL and somewhat stronger metrics that don't rank.
Competitive Research | | inhouseseo0 -
Advanced yahoo search
Is it possible to see backlinks to a particular site with the parameters: only .edu backlinks page updated in the last 3 months I've tried using the yahoo advanced search at http://uk.search.yahoo.com/web/advanced?ei=UTF-8&fr=siteexplorer&p= but it just redirects me to yahoo site explorer and doesn't give the results I ask for. Cheers, Peter
Competitive Research | | PeterM220