How should I structure a site with multiple addresses to optimize for local search??
-
Here's the setup: We have a website, www.laptopmd.com, and we're ranking quite well in our geographic target area. The site is chock-full of local keywords, has the address properly marked up, html5 and schema.org compliant, near the top of the page, etc. It's all working quite well, but we're looking to expand to two more locations, and we're terrified that adding more addresses and playing with our current set-up will wreak havoc with our local search results, which we quite frankly currently rock.
My question is
1)when it comes time to doing sub-pages for the new locations, should we strip the location information from the main site and put up local pages for each location in subfolders?
1a) should we use subdomains instead of subfolders to keep Google from becoming confused?
- Should we consider simply starting identically branded pages for the individual locations and hope that exact-match location-based urls will make up for the hit for duplicate content and will overcome the difficulty of building a brand from multiple pages?
I've tried to look for examples of businesses that have tried to do what we're doing, but all the advice has been about organic search, which i already have the answer to. I haven't been able to really find a good example of a small business with multiple locations AND good rankings for each location. Should this serve as a warning to me?
-
Hi Arthur,
I'm glad my response was helpful and - ouch - I hear you on the merging headache! Don't forget, help has improved in the Google Places Help Forum, which is actually moving to a new location. In case you don't have the new link, here it is:
http://groups.google.com/a/googleproductforums.com/forum/#!forum/maps
You may already have tried this, but if you haven't, the Top Contributors there or even Vanessa Schneider of Google might be able to manually help you with troubleshooting the merging issue. Note - I say 'might' because merging issues are really hard to remedy and you can get them fixed only to have them come back again.
Here's some good news. There is a chance that with the recent Venice update in Local, your organic rankings may be becoming even more powerful. You might like to read this:
http://marketing-blog.catalystemarketing.com/google-venice-update-local-seo.html
I sincerely wish you luck with disentangling merges. I do Local SEO, but I confess, I don't take on merges because they are such a pain in the neck. If you get into a position where you need help, you may be able to hire a Local SEO who specializes in dupes and merging. Just a thought.
Cheers!
Miriam
-
Thanks, Miriam, for an excellent and thorough response.
Regarding some of the points you brought up:
-
We are planning to have the central location remain the flagship store, at least for now, so you're right, it does make sense to keep the focus as is right now, although we're busy tinkering away at a dynamic solution that pulls the address closest to the searcher.
-
One of the new locations is not in state, but is in the same metropolitan area, while the other one is half a country away.
-
Our biggest concern, and the source of our paranoia, is the fact that we have had a massive headache with Google Places for the last year and a half. We initially launched our first expanded location late 2010, and the minute we put the address on our main page, the two listings merged in google places. Since then, we've had nothing but problems with local. Our listing has merged with multiple other listings, has disappeared entirely and come back, etc. In fact, the reason you didn't find it locally is that we're currently trying to disentangle two profiles, one of them being correct and the other created automatically by google with an amalgam of our info and that of other businesses in the area.
Our fear is that if we add multiple addresses and location information to the website, our places issue will magnify a thousand-fold, and in a walk-in business like ours, a single local result is worth 10 first place organic rankings.
Thanks again, and I hope this clarifies our gripping terror somewhat.
-
-
Hello Arthur,
Thank you for coming to Q&A with your question. I'm the Local SEO Associate here in the forum and will do my best to give you my thoughts on this.BTW, nice website!
I want to clarify with you your statement: "but all the advice has been about organic search". You are clearly very conversant with Local, so I'm just making sure we're talking about the same thing, namely, the blended local/organic results. I did a quick search for 'laptop repair ny' and see you at #1 in organic, though not in the A-G blended results below. I'm searching from California. I switched my location to NY and saw basically the same thing - you are #1 organically for what I'm assuming is one of your key terms, but not appearing in the pinned results below. So, are we talking about your organic rank or your local/blended rank here? Perhaps you can provide a little more information on that.
That aside, let's get to your questions, some of which I'll have answer with more questions :)!
1. Are the two new locations going to be equal in importance to your original office? Or, is your original office going to remain as headquarters for the business.
If the first, I can see why you would consider taking location info off the homepage, etc., because you are then dealing with 3 different geographic terms and may not be able to get equal 'bang for your buck' if you try to optimize for all of them on each main page. That being said...I would be loath to make this decision, because you have achieved a level of organic dominance for your main location. (As an aside...are all 3 locations in NYC or are you branching out into other parts of the state?)
If the second scenario, the choice becomes much easier. If the original office is your headquarters, then I would leave things as they are, build onto the site with new content for the new locations and also make a few mentions of your other locations on the main site pages. You would be doing this with the intent to keep the main thrust of your site's overall SEO focused on that original location, while building out new stuff as your two new locations grow.
Even if your business model dictates that all 3 businesses are of equal importance, I think I would still be inclined to go with this plan. I would hate to see you lose what you've gained. And, as you are dealing with just 3 total locations (not 20 or 100) I think you can effectively optimize the site for all three without taking away what you have already established for office #1.
1a. This question is one I've seen asked and argued over frequently. People take different sides. Matt Cutts basically said years ago that Google doesn't see much difference between subdomains and subfolders. See http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/subdomains-and-subdirectories/
I really don't think the situation has changed since then. In my opinion, subfolders offer greater ease of use for the site owner/web master. So long as your code is crawlable, I honestly don't think Google cares what you do in this regard and I wouldn't worry about confusing the bots. I would personally go with subfolders if given a choice between the two...but again, this seems to be a personal preference thing rather than a genuine SEO issue. ***A confession: I've gotten local landing pages to rank just fine putting them all on the root directory, so really, don't sweat it!
2. Do not, not, not make the content on your city landing pages duplicate. Yes, this is something to sweat! Devote the funding/energy/time to writing excellent unique copy for each landing page. If no one in the organization can do this, hire a copywriter with a strong knowledge of Local. Pay handsomely for this service if you have to, because it is your best bet for getting Google to see the pages as relevant, useful and distinct. To read more about this, checkout Eric Enge's interview of Carter Maslan:
http://www.stonetemple.com/articles/interview-carter-maslan-032710.shtml
Specifically, read this part:
Eric Enge: Let’s say you have more than one location, 100 for example. In your view, is it helpful to have individual pages on the website for all of the locations? Also, is it helpful to have the Google local business center linked to each of those individual pages rather than having 100 locations that point to a single web address?
Carter Maslan: I can tell you what I think the ideal end state is, and there are various levels of getting there. Ultimately, we would like to have the store-specific page known so that people can just click through and see today's specials and any kind of adjustments for that particular day. We would love to have all of that information on a direct click to the most specific page for that location.
That’s what we encourage, but there are still a lot of chains and things that just link to their top-level domain. I guess it's a split answer. We want to get to a store specific page, but we are not uniformly there across all of the businesses.
Eric Enge: Could that potentially be encouraged by making it a ranking factor, for example?
Carter Maslan: Yes. I guess there are two sides to it. If you create a store-specific page that really just has an address, it wouldn't be as helpful as having some genuinely good content on the page that the user would really appreciate having as the first click-through experience. That’s what I think we need to work through.
We don't want to arbitrarily tell people that they must create a store-specific page, because we are really just trying to find the most useful page for that business. That’s why I am not so definitive on the store-specific page or not. I really just want what’s best for the retailer, store or businesses, first and foremost giving the user what he would want to see when he clicks on that business.
Eric Enge: Say you have a store-specific page that lists specific and individual things about just one store location. Depending on the kind of business that could be an inventory list that shows you've got extra stock?
Carter Maslan: There is a chain of stores that carries yoga equipment that my wife really likes. They have special yoga instruction, carry special brands, and host lectures on some special days. There are all kinds of things that the retailer does that relate to that specific store location, and there is also a general corporate catalogue page. So this is not black and white, and even though we want to encourage it, it's not that there is a definitive guidance saying companies need to have that page.
Eric Enge: Obviously it’s good if there is a quality page with information unique and specific to each location.
Carter Maslan: Yes, that's great. If we know that there’s good information about that page, then that helps on search and the snippets that we can show on the search results, because we know that the page is referencing that place. It does help even if it ends up not being the page that you list as your primary homepage. If there is good content that we know is content about that place, then it helps us do a better job with query results.
If a company has a page that's store-specific and talks about its class schedule, and there is one that says its holding Tai Chi class tonight and someone is searching for places to do Tai Chi, then that helps us to score it. If a lot of people have found that page helpful about the Tai Chi class, then when people search for Tai Chi we would know that that location has something to do with Tai Chi.
Hopefully, Arthur, these tips will get you off to a good start. Congratulations on the expansion of your business. That's really exciting, and don't skip my advice in question #2. This, plus correctly claiming your local business profiles for the news locations, is going to be totally critical to your success.
Good luck!
Miriam
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
-
Poor Site Performance
Hello, A couple of months ago, this site was dropped from google due to a noindex, nofollow tag thewealthymind(dot)com It's back up, but performing poorly. Take for example the term "The 4 step belief change" in the home page title tag. This site is the #1 authority on that and yet it ranks 3rd below weaker pages. There's 180 404 errors in GWT, many from past versions of pages of the site but also including thewealthymind(dot)com/index.html and thewealthymind(dot)com/index.htm even though there is a rel=cononical tag on the home page. What's the process of getting this site back to health?
Technical SEO | | BobGW0 -
Lost with conical, nofollow noindex. Not sure how to use it on a dyanmic php site with multiple region select options
I have a site with multiple regions the main page after a region is selected is login.php but the regions are defined by ?rid=11 , 12, etc. These are being picked up as duplicate content but they are all different regions. As i hired external php coders to develop most of the site I am scared to start meddling with any of the raw code and would like some advise on how to not show these as duplicate content. should i use noindex nofollow or connical? if Connical how do i set it up on the main login.php page? p.s. i am an extreme nube to seo
Technical SEO | | moby1230 -
Why is my site jumping around in google search ?
Hi I've been trying to get my page up in google results and I was wondering why the constant fluctuation. For example, on one day the pages is nr. 26, the next day it's nr. 65 then jumps back on say 30 and then in a few more days it's going back to 50. What's the logic behind that ? Thanks Cezar
Technical SEO | | sparts1 -
Is there any evidence that using Google Site Search will help your ranking, speed of indexing, or traffic?
I am considering using Google Site Search on our new site. I was told... "We have also seen a bump in traffic for sites when using Google Site Search because Google indexes the site more often (they claim using the paid Google Site Search has no effect on search rankings but we have also seen bumps in rankings after using it so that may just be what they have to say legally)." Is there any evidence of this? Would you recommend using Google Site Search? Thanks David
Technical SEO | | DavidButler710 -
Traffic has dropped from my site.
Hello, I never had amazing traffic, but during the last week my site seems to have almost dropped of search engines. Nothing drastic has changed during this time that I can see would have caused this. The site is http://www.comparebestodds.com Does any one have any ideas that can help? Thanks
Technical SEO | | jwdesign0 -
Will 301 redirecting a site multiple times still preserve the original site value?
Hi, All! If site www.abc.com was already 301 redirected to site www.def.com, and now the site owner wants to redirect www.def.com to www.ghi.com - is there any concern that it's not going to work, and some of the original linkjuice, rank, trust, etc. is going to vanish? Or as long as the 301s are set up right, should you be able to 301 indefinitely? Does anyone have any experience with actually doing this and seeing good/bad/neutral results? Thanks in advance! -Aviva B
Technical SEO | | debi_zyx0 -
Which is more accurate? site: or GWT?
when viewing urls in google's index, is it more accurate to refer to site:www.domain.com or google webmaster tools (urls in web index)?
Technical SEO | | nicole.healthline0 -
What are the pros and cons of moving one site onto a subdomain of another site?
Two sites. One has weaker sales. What would the benefits and problems for SEO of moving the weak site from its own domain to a subdomain of the stronger site?
Technical SEO | | GriffinHansen0