Is Your
Website Ready For Local Search Engine Traffic?
I suppose the real reason for a
local small business to have a website at all is to provide
information for the local market, generate leads from local
shoppers. Up until now too many small businesses have created
websites more like monuments to their company name. If someone knew
the name of the company, they could probably find the website. That
was good to a point but what about those people who just know they
need what you sell but they don't know anybody who sells
it?
What if, instead, local
businesses began to think about their websites more like a listing
in a phone directory. What if they began to build and optimize
their websites with the primary intent of being found in their
hometown as the leader in a category. Someone looking for "Farm
Fresh Tuna in Upper Cutbank, Montana" is going to enter just such a
search, right?
Google and Yahoo both announced
this month their model for tapping into the local search traffic.
In other words they are now going to make it easier for web surfers
that want to find an accountant in their home town to do
so.
Everyone knew they would
eventually get around to this very lucrative market so now more
than ever you need to prepare your website to be found in your
town.
More about local search at
these sites.
http://www.google.com/lochp -
Beta site
http://www.google.com/help/faq_local.html#what
FAQ
http://local.yahoo.com/u_s__states - yahoo
local
What I'm talking about today is
"local" search engine optimization. In one sense the principles are
the same as everyday regular search engine optimization but the way
of thinking about them is a bit different.
gEEk Term definition: Search
Engine Optimization (SEO) is the science of making sure web pages
are "designed" in such a way that search engines can find, index,
and rank them according to the value of their content. For those of
you who don't know, there is an entire industry built around this
science.
In the old day the mindset was
to create a website and optimize it for anyone looking for a
certain topic.
Local SEO focuses first on
being found in your town....for a certain topic. Geo targeting is
the key. When someone is looking for a veterinarian, they don't
search locally (at the moment) for the name of your firm. Think in
terms of a Yellow Pages directory. They go to city they are looking
for and then the category and then the name of the firm to
call.
Local search is structured much
the same. People who are looking for an auto mechanic online will
search "Kansas City Auto mechanic" In order to win the local search
game you must be able to win that type of search.
There are no hard and fast
rules and even if there were they would change but here are some
things you need to begin to think about to bury your competition in
the local search game.
Title tags - Probably one of
the most important info on your page anyway so make sure your title
reads something like "YOURFIRMNAME Kansas City's oldest
bakery
H1 tags - Make sure that your
keywords for your site and your geography have H1 tags - The Best
Baked Brioche in Peoria, Il
Content - Add your address and
phone number early and prominently (not a bad thing for every page
really)
Meta tags - Opinions vary on
the usefulness of these but there are some tags that may gain
usefulness depending on how the search engines refine their
methods.
meta name="zipcode"
content="64105,64113,64112,64110,64106,66207,66208,66210
meta name="city"
content="Kansas City"
meta name="state"
content="Missouri, Kansas"
meta name="ICBM"
content="39.10246, -94.59009
City, State, and Zip code tags
are pretty self explanatory but the ICBM one is a bit out there but
kind of cool too.
If you go to the GEOUrl Address
Server you can locate the exact latitude and longitude of your
business. That's what those two numbers after the ICBM tag are. (Of
course I think that is the same system they use to target
bombs.)
Linking - Make your internal
links local friendly - Instead of "Remodeling Projects" use "Omaha
Kitchen Projects"
DMOZ - The Open Directory
Project is a directory of sites that are listed by human
volunteers. It seems that getting listed here gives you high marks
with search engines so you need to do it but make sure that you go
for the Regional listings all the way down to your town. It is
unlikely (and not very useful) that you will get listed for a broad
category, particularly if you don't provide world-wide service. Go
for the poodle clipping section of your town and you will have
better luck.
Other Directories - Another
good reason to get listed in DMOZ for your town is that other local
directories like Verizon's Smart Pages and SBC's Yellow Pages rely
on these listing as well. By the way, get listed in as many of
these phone book type of directories like Smart Pages as you can.
Some are free and there is speculation that initially the big
search engines will rely on these already built local
directories.
There...that should keep you
busy
Copyright John
Jantsch
About The Author
John Jantsch is a marketing
consultant based in Kansas City, Mo.
He is veteran small
business marketing consultant and creator of Duct Tape Marketing -
a turn-key small business marketing program.
|