Include Location in Keywords?
-
I understand Google's local search automatically searches keywords with the location you are searching from. For example if I'm searching from Calgary and query "best shoe repair", Google knows I'm searching from Calgary and presents Calgary based results.
I'm using Google's new Keyword Planner tool which allows for city based search results, meaning I don't have to include "Calgary" in the keywords I submit.
The question I have is should I be attaching "Calgary" to my keywords for on-page optimization, and why or why not?
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
-
I just want to ask more questions regarding location in keywords.
Can we treat these two keywords differently?
"Calgary's best shoe repair" vs "best shoe repair in Calgary"
or
"Canadian shoe repair" vs "shoe repair in Canada"
Searchers' intent is pretty much the same. but we should target two different keywords? if they are both popular?
-
Great discussion here with many excellent points covered by everyone who has responded. I will only add, because I think this is something that may come up frequently, Google's new Keyword Planner Tool only changes the way you might do keyword research - not the way you optimize a site. It is still vital to locally optimize the website. The only difference is that you hopefully now have more and better insight into important terms to include in your optimization.
-
Great thanks a lot Paul!
Those search volumes were just made up, although I did see something similar with my research. Once I decide what I'm going to do I'll let you know what I've decided.
Thanks again!
-
Thanks very much Steve!
I discussed this issue last week with my Google Engage advisor and she recommended focusing on "shoe repair" instead of "Calgary shoe repair" since we'd be targeting the Adwords campaign to a specific city. My landing pages will be focused on my Houston equivalent of "shoe repair" and "Calgary shoe repair."
As an aside, it surprises me that "Calgary shoe repair" would have 1000 searches per month and "shoe repair" within Calgary would have only 750 searches. The keyword planner is supposed to include mobile searches and you'd think that most people wouldn't include Calgary in the search phrase in a mobile device search -- they'd just key in "shoe repair" on the tablet or smart phone. My impression is that search volumes Google publishes for "Calgary shoe repair" and "shoe repair" within Calgary are not exact and should be considered as kind of "order of magnitude" estimates of search volume. Please let me know what you decide to do in your campaign and what results you see.
Thanks again, Paul
-
Hey Paul,
Thanks for the in depth response, that makes a lot of sense. Perhaps you can answer my next question...
I've received monthly search volume from Google's Keyword Planner tool on a bunch of keywords. With this tool I returned search volume within Calgary as a filter. Some of these keywords include the word Calgary. For example lets say I have two keywords that look promising...
- calgary shoe repair - 1000 searches / month , low competition
- shoe repair - 750 searches / month , low competition
Both of these search volumes only include searches in Calgary. Am I correct in assuming I can choose both "calgary shoe repair" and "shoe repair" as two separate keywords? Or would it be wise to only choose one of the two?
-
Hi Steve,
If I understand your question, yes you should include the use of the city name - Calgary - in your on-page optimization efforts. You want to make it very clear to the search engines where your local business is located so you want your NAP: name, address, and phone number displayed in text prominently on multiple pages of your website. You also want to make sure that the NAP you use on your site is consistent with the NAP information submitted to online business listings and local business directories like the Chamber of Commerce and the Better Business Bureau.
For a local business, I'll always use a location keyword in the page titles and meta description tags. However, in using any keywords on-page in text, Alt tags, and headings, you want to be judicious in avoiding overuse. So in talking about shoe repair, I wouldn't attach "Calgary" to the keyword phrase "shoe repair" every time I used it.
Remember that Google and the other search engines associate a location with a search phrase by associating a location with the IP address used to originate the search. In many cities with substantial suburban populations, that means that people located in the suburbs and looking for shoe repair in the suburbs will be counted in the city search volumes because their IP addresses are associated with the city. So if your business is located in the suburbs, you might want to think of using location keywords for the major city and for your suburb location too.
I hope this helps!
-
If you don't use the word "Calgary" on the page, how would Google know your website is related to Calgary for it's location-based results? They have a location option in the keyword tool so you can see how much traffic that term has in Calgary, as well as the average CPC in Calgary, if you're planning on running an advertising campaign in Adwords.
As an aside, for Adwords you no longer have to include "Calgary" in your keywords if your campaign targets the location Calgary. For your "best shoe repair" example, Adwords default location setting would show ads for "best show repair" for people searching that in Calgary, but also people searching for "Calgary best show repair" around the world. There is a sub-setting to make it target only people physically in Calgary if you only want locals seeing the ad.
-
I would say yes, include your location in your on page text.
If I am searching for shoe repair I would most likely search "city shoe repair"
If your shoe repair shop does pop up and you have NOTHING about where you are actually located, I might go to the next site that has a location.
And location will just reinforce the location shoe repair that Google has already started on.It also would help if I am out of town and a bit lost, knowing exactly where this show place is without having to go to googlemaps or places or another map site...
Many times I actually use Yelp (Yelp always has address right easy to find, when websites hide their address)
It might not rank your location-shoe repair SERPS that much, but it SHOULD help your buyers conversion...
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
-
I have two keywords. If I combine them do I get credit for both keywords?
For example I have a keyword - IPA Beer, and I have a keyword - IPA Beer Kit. If I use the keyword IPA Beer Kit will I get the benefit of the IPA Beer keyword as well as the IPA Beer Kit keyword? Hope this makes sense. Thanks in advance for the help!
Keyword Research | | brewngrow0 -
Keyword Plan Of Attack
We have looked up our direct competitor to see what keywords they rank #1 for (aside from their own company name). We have narrowed it down to 3 that we want to focus on. Our plan is to build internal landing pages, external landing pages and beef up our content. Is that a good strategy to start or are we missing something?
Keyword Research | | IcarusSEO0 -
How to check the competition value of a Keyword.
Hi, How to check the competition value of a keyword in 2017 and how to get the low competitive keywords.
Keyword Research | | green.h1 -
On-page optimization for closely related keywords or acronyms of keywords
We are in the process of on-page optimization for a site that sells one kind of software. We are trying to optimize each page for a target keyword and variations of the keyword, however we have more pages than keyword variation types, so I'm looking for feedback on whether the below plan would be keyword cannibalization. Examples: URL: www.domain.com/product
Keyword Research | | seo_1234b
Tarket Keyword: device imaging software
Title Tag: Device Imaging Software | Company Name URL: www.domain.com/solutions
Target Keyword: device imaging solutions
Title Tag: Device Imaging Solutions | Company Name URL: www.domain.com/products/product-name
Target Keyword: dis (acronym)
Title Tag: DIS Software | Product Name | Company Name My question is are these keyword too closely related for each of the pages? Will they be considered duplicate title tags? Keyword cannibalization? etc. Thanks!0 -
Google Keyword Planner - Just PPC?
Morning Mozzers, Please help a layman learn. This is probably a silly question but when I look at keyword search data in Google's Keyword Planner Tool and I see "COMPETITIVE" or "LOW" am I looking at all searches inclusive of organic and PPC? I have been a bit confused by logging in through an Adwords account? At the moment to get my keyword research I am using a combination of Moz, Webmaster Tools, Keyword Planner. I have had a look at the free version of SEMrush which looks really cool. Is my approach right using these tools? Am I covering all bases / missing key opportunities? Regards Ben
Keyword Research | | Bendall0 -
Tag usage based on Google keywords
We are making a site that will be a database of publicity stunts. We used the Google Keyword tool to find a bunch of words related to this. The term itself has similar keywords such as [pr campaigns]. And also there are some derivative keywords as [bad publicity stunts], [famous publicity stunts], [celebrity publicity stunts]. Each bringing in 20-50 monthly searches for the exact term. Some concepts appear slightly differently such as [famous pr stunts] and [famous pr campaigns]. We'd love our pages to appear on as much of these keyword searches as possible (overall we expect about 3k-4k searches /month on exact matching). And we're planning to use these keywords as a our taxonomy for our post tags. That way the keyword appears in each stunt page AND there is a page for each type of publicity stunt. As a general policy, what would be the best way to write our tags?
Keyword Research | | davhad
1. 'crazy', 'famous', 'bad'.
2. 'crazy publicity stunt', 'famous publicity stunt', 'bad publicity stunt'
3. 'crazy publicity stunt', 'famous pr campaign', 'bad marketing stunt' Thanks for sharing your expertise.0 -
Optimizing for two nearly identical keywords.
Hi Mozzers, So in one of my campaigns I'm trying to optimize for "Personal Trainer Minneapolis" and "Minneapolis Personal Trainer". Would the best tactic be: Develop and optimize two pages. One for each of these similar keywords. (Clearly not the best UX). or Try to optimize a single page for both. Thanks for your thoughts!
Keyword Research | | JesseCWalker0 -
REAL demand for a keyword?
I once read there is a way to use google adwords to see the REAL demand for a specific keyword, google adwords tool and other tools seem to be not-so-accurate. I just don't remember the exact method, can you please remind me?
Keyword Research | | jest0