Why does my website not rank better for the keyword i am going for?
-
My website is www.canadafloraldelivery.com. I just can't seem to get my webpage ranked well for the keyword " Flowers Edmonton " . Also I can't seem to get my Google local listing on the map for many keywords. Is there something obvious that I am missing? Any help would be very appreciated.
-
You are very welcome, Christopher! I will PM you.
-
Hi there and thank you so much for the detailed response. I have tried to implement the changes that you posted above. I can not get the www.51blocks.com to work as we are in Canada and it does not seem to work for us northerners.
I have reworded the content of the home page to read more fluently. and am in the works of rewording all my title tags as well.
As for the suite #205 I do put it in the dashboard of Google places but it just doesn't seem to show on my +page.
I am encounter a problem with Google not fully recognizing that I have a Facebook page. I am pretty sure it is public and I have a few likes but I just can't seem to get Facebook to give me more credit for the page that we have done.
I have had an Audit of my website done by the BDC (Business Development bank of Canada) And is showed that I should be doing better than I am for Local search terms. Does your company offer in depth Audit? Getting organic traffic in Edmonton Alberta really means a lot for me and my shop.
-
Hi Christopher,
Keri has made sure I stop by, and I see you've already received some good advice on this thread. I'll add what I know and see. I break this down into numbered points.
1. The floral industry has historically been one of the tougher ones, due to heavy spamming. Things are better than they were a couple of years ago, but like locksmith and auto dealer results, floral results can often be odder or tougher to break into than the results of less competitive, less spammy verticals. California florist, Cathy Hillen-Rulloda (http://www.avantegardens.com/) actually ended up becoming a participant on David Mihm's Local Search Ranking Factors (http://www.davidmihm.com/local-search-ranking-factors-2012.shtml) in previous years due to her coverage of issues specifically affecting the floral industry. She might be a good person for you to be aware of, if you aren't already.
2. Yes, your website is over-optimized. Your title tags really need help. The Homepage title contains the word Edmonton twice, and though Google will tolerate this, it is my opinion that it is not an ideal thing to do. Word has it that you can use a keyword up to 2 times without being penalized, but I would not advise using any keyword more than once in the title tag of any page on your website. See this discussion on Linda Buquet's Local Search Forum regarding this statement from a former Google spam team member (http://localsearchforum.catalystemarketing.com/local-search-general-discussions/984-local-search-engine-optimization-warning-city-title.html). Title tags should read naturally. Rand's Whiteboard Friday that includes his advice on this topic is a must-view: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/6-changes-every-seo-should-make-before-the-over-optimization-penalty-hits-whiteboard-friday In addition to your title tags being over-optimized, there is broken code in the title tag of your About Page. So, bottom line, a compete rewrite of your title tags should be step one for you.
3. Keri mentions seeing a different address on your About Page. Perhaps you've removed that since she wrote this? I don't see it. I do see, correctly, that you have placed your complete NAP (name, address, phone number) in your website footer and that you have partial NAP on your contact page. You should put your business name at the beginning of the chunk of text displaying your address and phone number. Further, I would highly recommend that you encode this data in Schema. If you've never used Schema before, you can use this Schema creator tool: http://schema-creator.org/ Choose the 'organizations' tab from the left-hand menu. I would encode both the footer and contact page NAP in Schema, and be 100% sure that you are only publishing one address and one local phone number on your website, if you only have one shop.
4. Now let's do a phone number lookup in maps.google.com. Good. This is pulling up only one listing at the moment. Good to see. However, it looks like '205', which I believe is your suite number' is missing from your Google local listing. Is it in your dashboard? Google has had some odd bugs in recent times regarding suite addresses. The rule is that your suite address must be consistently published everywhere. It's on your site, but not on your + page. Is it entered in the dashboard?
5. The same search for your business name is showing just one listing for Canada Floral Delivery, but I do note some other florists on the same street as yours. Just want to double check with you that Grower Direct and other florists apparently located on 41 Avenue are their own companies and have nothing to do with your business.
6. Now let's look at your + page here: https://plus.google.com/110941434141977888287/about?gl=US&hl=en-US. Your description is problematic. It reads:
“Send Flowers Edmonton. Best Florist in Edmonton. Send flowers for any occasion. Sympathy Flowers. Local Florist in Edmonton Alberta. Flower Delivery to Edmonton, Sherwood Park & St Albert”
You should never put geographic terms in your business description and you've got Edmonton in there multiple times as well as other geo terms. Should definitely be edited.
7. Competitive analysis is different for every business. I recommend that you run your site through this tool: http://www.51blocks.com/online-marketing-tools/free-local-analysis/ This will show you how you stack up against your competitors on a local level. This will assess the quantity and consistency of your citations which is a giant ranking factor.
8. Hmm...here's a good clue. I just checked your address against the proximity/centroid cluster of your competitors and it appears you are pretty far away from the cluster. The bulk of your competitors are located north of the river in the area Google Maps is designating as 'Downtown'. You are apparently some miles away from this, so this can definitely affect your ranking abilities.
So, these are some thoughts. What I've written here cannot take the place of an in-depth formal audit. You have many opportunities for improvements, Christopher, only some of which can be covered by a first-glance impression like mine.
-
After quickly glancing at your site my only suggestion would be to be careful how much you stuff your keywords into your content. Don't get me wrong, it's important to integrate your keywords in the content of your website but here is an example of a bit too much and can easily cause Google to flag your site as spammy.
"Flowers Edmonton, For Flower delivery Edmonton AB. Our Edmonton flower shop will ensure that your delivery are fresh and beautiful every time. Our Edmonton flower shop is a part of the FTD flower network and we have made great relationships with florists all across the country. Send flowers in Edmonton or Canada wide with our same day delivery guarantee. 100% guarantee on all our products and gifts. Edmonton flowers done right.
Click here to see a page all about our Flower Shop in Edmonton!"I would work with a copywriter that has experience with SEO best practices to improve the content on your site, I think this would really help with your on-page optimization.
With regards to your local SEO, again make sure that you are careful with using too many keywords. Here is the current description on your local listing:
"“Send Flowers Edmonton. Best Florist in Edmonton. Send flowers for any occasion. Sympathy Flowers. Local Florist in Edmonton Alberta. Flower Delivery to Edmonton, Sherwood Park & St Albert"
This is suppose to be a description of your business or a message from the owner and it's just filled with keywords. Google is very good at identifying and penalizing these practices.
Improve your content, build quality links = improve your SEO.
Good luck
Mike
-
I've asked our local expert to step in, but my first couple of comments are this:
Home page is way overstuffed for Edmonton. The text isn't very natural, and there are a bunch of keywords at the bottom.
Second comment is I can't tell what is your address. The footer has one address, but the about page has a different address (even the internet address), and then when I search your phone number on Google, I see yet a different suite number and address. Consistent, accurate citations are real important in local search.
-
Hi Chris,
Brad makes an excellent point re regular organic rankings. RE local listings, assuming you've verified and done all the standard on page work to your Local page, it's time to start building citations. These are Name Address & Telephone references. The more places Google sees you're address the more likely you are to rank in local listings.
Here is an awesome resource for finding places to get citations...
http://searchengineland.com/top-50-citation-sources-for-uk-us-local-businesses-104938
Hope that helps.
Iain - Reload
-
Hi Chris,
Your on site optimisation seems pretty good. However, when I ran your site through OSE and looked at the number of domains linking to your site, well you'll see the issue:
http://www.opensiteexplorer.org/anchors?site=www.canadafloraldelivery.com%2F
You need to work on building more links. 47 overall linking domains isn't that many, I'd try and build that number up.
Thanks
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
-
Is it better to find a page without the desired content, or not find the page?
Are there any studies that show which is best? If you find my page but not the specific thing you want on it, you may still find something of value. But, if you don't you may associate my site with poor results, which can be worse than finding what you want at a competitor site. IOW maybe it is best to have pages that ONLY and ALWAYS have the content desired. What do the studies suggest? I'm asking because I have content that maybe 1/3 of the time exists and 2/3 of the time doesn't...think 'out of stock' products. So, I'm wondering if I should look into removing the page from being indexed during the 2/3 or should keep it. If I remove it then my concern is whether I lose the history/age factor that I've read Google finds important for credibility. Your thoughts?
Search Behavior | | friendoffood0 -
A Sudden Drop in Keyword Ranking but why?
Hi, I wondered if anyone has ever experienced anything like this before, one of our customers has a website JDB Events (http://www.jdb-events.com/). When he first came to us he was using Fast Hosts and he was experiencing down time pretty much every day in periods of up to an hour. The first step before carrying out any SEO was to place the website on our VPS so that the downtime issue was resolved. It did resolve the issue and the speed of the website was also increased. My next issue was to address the length of the Title on the home page because it was 157 characters, I usually keep these to 70 characters. This is the old Meta Title: JDB Events Limited - Event, Production & AV Hire Specialists | The West Midlands Dance Floor Hire, LED Furniture, DJ, Disco Hire & Event Services Specialists Here is the my new Meta Title: JDB Events | LED Furniture Hire for Parties and Corporate Events I have attached a screenshot of the drop that I have experienced, would anyone recommend that it's ok to keep the title longer so that I can cram more search terms into it, I use Woo Rank as a bench mark and this recommends shortening the title but I would be interested in hearing anyone's views. Other steps that I have taken: Shortened the home page description WWW Resolve Added Robots.txt Crawled all of the pages for 404 errors etc The next step I'm thinking of taking is replacing the amended meta title and description for the old one and monitoring that, other than that I can't see why I have taken such a hit. Thanks NewServerSpeedTest.png OldServerSpeedTest.png Rankings.png
Search Behavior | | chrissmithps0 -
Image ranking in Google but not in Bing and Yahoo search results
Hello, I have one image from my blog post which is ranking well (ranking in first page for all related keywords) in Google web search as well as image search. Getting pretty good visits from the image result itself for past few days. But this image doesn't appear/rank anywhere in Bing and Yahoo search results. Can anyone tell any specific reason for the same? Any methods to follow? Any solution? Please guide me.
Search Behavior | | zco_seo0 -
Why is my client ranking no.3 for a competitive keyword?
Hey guys, I'm doing a bit of detective work and I'm trying to understand why my client is ranking no.3 for the keyword "office desks" on google.ie. https://www.google.ie/search?q=office+desks&aq=f&oq=office+desks&aqs=chrome.0.59j60l2j62l3.10127j0&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 The strange thing about this is that 'office desks' is not in the 1. title tag 2. url 3. h1 tag 4. anchor text of the internal links 5. anchor text of the external links 'Office furniture' however is the optimised keyword here however this appearing no. 35 in SERPs for the same url. Any ideas what this might be? Regards Rob
Search Behavior | | daracreative0 -
Google Places rankings go away, but organic rankings stay the same / get better?
Hello, I hope you all can help me out here with the information I could provide. Anyways, the past number of months I have had 1 of our clients rank extremely high organically and on Google places. For example: My client is a law firm so if you search “CLIENTS-TOWN Attorney” they would come up organically on the first page and if you were in that town and search “CLIENTS-TOWN Attorney” or even just “Attorney” they would also come up in the Google Places list. Now for some reason starting a week ago I noticed they have completely disappeared from Google Places. No changes have been done to their site and everything is the same as it was. Their organic searches are the same if not better than before. Do you guys have any clue as to why this happened and how I could possibly turn this around? Thanks for your help in advance!
Search Behavior | | WhiteHat120 -
Location specific keywords when your not in the location
Hi, I've been reading lots of great stuff on location optimisation and have picked up some new SEO knowledge on this area. Usually I target UK wide terms but this is a new beast for me. From what I have read if you was going after 'Ironing Services Essex' you would setup google places, include your address across your website and submit to local directories using the same uniformed address. BUT what happens if you live in a town 10 mins outside of Essex, your address doesn't contain Essex or Essex postcode on your website, the Google places pin is outside of the Essex area etc, well hopefully you get the idea. Basically Lets say your company is 10 mins from the area you want to rank for, it's easy for you to get into the location and do business but your address is different to the location you want to target because you live in a village 10 mins outside of the area (city) you want to target.
Search Behavior | | activitysuper0 -
Interesting keyword ranking issue
Hello Everybody, Thanks for taking the time to read this post. Without further ado, I'll jump straight to it: http://www.dataclinic.co.uk is the web site of a UK based data recovery company. Historically the site has always ranked well for popular data recovery keywords in the UK, with page 1 rankings for most things data recovery related. However, lately things seem to have changed for our most important phrase "data recovery". We noticed several months ago that Google had started to favour the page http://www.dataclinic.co.uk/data-recovery.htm instead of http://www.dataclinic.co.uk/ when a search for "data recovery" (and similar) was performed. This didn't concern us that much as our rankings remained good. However now, neither of these pages seems to be ranking well when a search for "data recovery" is performed (I gave up at Page 5 - who looks past there when searching?). I would appreciate your input on this please - especially about the following points: 1. Why have these two pages now seemingly disappeared from SERPS when a search for "data recovery" is performed ? 2. Why has Google chosen http://www.dataclinic.co.uk/data-recovery.htm rather than http://www.dataclinic.co.uk ? 3. Is this just something to do with UK results ? 4. Other sites I would expect NOT to see in the top results have started appearing - despite their link profiles etc remaining poor - perhaps Google is doing a bit of reorganisation with SERPS related to data recovery at the moment ? 5. And perhaps, most importantly - do you think we need to do anything about our current lack of visibility ?? As I mentioned, we've always ranked well, so these results are puzzling... Should search results revert "back to normal" in a day or so, or am I missing something and need to take action ?? Thanks for any input on this - we would be very grateful indeed for you help ! Kind Regards, Sue
Search Behavior | | 3Amigos0 -
Have you seen any good articles on implementing customer reviews on an E-commerce website
Looking for a great article on implementing customer based review system with the ability to feed that data to Google with rich snippets.
Search Behavior | | WebResource0