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Tag Archive for: Local SEO

Before You Move Your Business

July 16, 2014/1 Comment/in Local Maps and Local Listings/by M

You are a business owner and you have decided to relocate your business to a better situated spot in town.

Everyone can agree moving is not fun but moving an entire business can be especially daunting. Amidst the boxes and bubble wrap, there is something really important you might not be remembering— your local listings.

If you don’t have a good handle on your business listings, this might be a lengthier process for you. Claiming your listings on directories allows you to change and update information as needed. These changes are usually approved within a few days. At TastyPlacement, we do all this for you. However, each directory has informative FAQs that will let you know how to complete the steps to claim your business listing.

You might be thinking, “I don’t have time for that.” It might sound like a great idea and an easy fix to create new business listings. Do not do this. In the long term, it will hurt your business tremendously if you have hopes for ranking on Google Maps. It will create duplicate listings with outdated information and since your business name, address and phone number don’t match up to the rest of the information online, expect your business listings to end up on the dark void of map search results. Most importantly, you will make it incredibly difficult for clients to find you, especially on mobile and local searches. If clients can’t find you, they don’t pay for your services.

So keep in mind this short list before your next big business move:

1. Narrow down a solid reopening date. If you’re a TastyPlacement client, make sure to let us know and we’ll work on getting your listings updated as soon as possible.

2. Update all your listings with the new address as soon as the new address is officially determined. If you are not able to receive mail at the new location, contact the United States Postal Service to place a hold on your mail. Many search engines like Google, Yahoo and Foursquare require postcard verification to update the address on your listing.

3. Focus on the big directories: Google, Yahoo, Yelp, Localeze. Changing your information on larger data aggregates will eventually trickle down to lower-authoritative directories.

4. Place a banner on your website informing clients of the anticipated move either in the footer or as a static image on the home page. After the official move, leave the banner on for at least eight more weeks.

5. Update your social media accounts with images of your new location. Seeing these images will prompt clients to better visualize your new location.

Happy Moving!

 

How to Get a Google Maps Business Panorama, a Step-by-Step Guide

December 21, 2012/1 Comment/in Local Maps and Local Listings/by Michael David

Awesome New Google Business Panoramas Extend Street View Technology

We recently noticed business panoramas appearing on Google Places/Maps pages for a number of businesses in Austin, TX. These business panoramas operate just like Google Street View, and in fact, in some cases you can follow the street view right through the doors of a business and into the inside. You can try it by visiting local restaurant J. Blacks Google Places Page (just follow the arrows out the door!).

Here’s a screenshot of our new panorama, and it links to the panorama itself:

Google Maps Panorama

 

How to Get Google Business Panoramas for Your Places Listing

We got our panorama up in about 8 days from start to finish–you’ll need an outside vendor to do it. Here are the steps you’ll need to follow:

  • Start with a Google Places page. You’ll need a verified Google+ Local/Google Places/Maps listing. If you’ve got duplicate listings, you’ll want to clean that up first. Also, if you have multiple locations, you will need to secure (and pay for) separate panoramas.
  • Find a Google-authorized provider. You can’t shoot these panoramas yourself. You need to select from a list of authorized providers (“Trusted Photographer”) and make your own deal with them. You can go here to find a Google Trusted Photographer in your area.
  • Arrange your photo shoot. You’ll arrange a time and price with the Trusted Photographer. We got an appointment the next day from Olive Tree Photography in Austin (sadly, as of 2015, Olive is no longer offering this service), and they came out the next day.
  • Your Photographer does the rest. Your Trusted Photographer has a special camera, special software, and back-door access to your Google+ Local page, so they’ll make the upload to your page on their own. Ours was posted in 6 or 7 days after the shoot. We also got about 20 high-quality still shots for our local page. Check with your provider, this service might be optional, but ours was included in our price of about $270, we opted for a bare-bones service. The range will generally be $250 to $650.

About the Photo Shoot

We were obviously interested in the technology involved, and were expecting a camera more like the spaceship-shaped cameras used on Google’s mapping vehicles, but the camera setup was surprisingly compact and ordinary looking:

 

Google-Photo-Shoot

 

Pictured above is the Olive Tree team at work. The entire shoot took about 25 minutes.

The SEO and Marketing Benefits

We see the business photos as obviously beneficial to a company’s marketing program. Google Maps is still the king within the world of local listings, at least for the time being, and having a view of your business available to new customers is a great way to introduce yourself.

Furthermore, we surmise that adding this feature to a Google+ Local page serves to enhance the listing, which is always beneficial for ranking within the local system. It may also serve to give the listing further verification and authority.

In short: it’s a no-brainer.

Embedding the Panorama

More good news: you can embed the panorama just as you would embed a map. You simply browse to your panorama and play with it until you have the exact orientation you want and then click the link icon at the upper left of the panorama window. You’ll see the familiar link menu pop up. You can see our panorama embedded on our TastyPlacement team page.

If you do choose to go forward with a panorama, good luck with your photo shoot!

 

Google 7-Pack Replaces 10-Pack

October 8, 2009/7 Comments/in Local Maps and Local Listings/by Michael David

Google 7-Pack Replaces 10-Pack

Want to improve your maps search ranking? Click here to read our comprehensive guide to how google local orders its search results.

As a firm with multiple local clients, we constantly monitor Google’s local map results.  Well, as of yesterday, the familiar local map with 10 listings begin (familiarly called the 10-pack) now yields seven listings; so now, a new SEO term is born: the 7-pack. Note however, that selecting the “more results” link at the bottom of the map results is unchanged: it still takes the user through successive lists of 10 results. There is some chatter in Webmaster forums that seems to indicate that the change is being implemented worldwide. Certainly, the seven pack is fully in place in the United States and Australia.

The Ranking Order Appears Largely Unaffected by 7-Pack

Naturally, we wondered if the fundamental ranking algorithm was altered along with this change; ultimately, it’s the ranking order which concerns online marketers. Along with the 7-pack change, we examined several key phrases for which we monitor local results.  It appears that the order of local Google listing results is largely unaffected from the rankings of a week or two ago, although read on for some other changes.

Welcome Change: Multiple Listings Reduced to One

We also wondered about several businesses in markets that we monitor that had submitted, successfully, multiple listings in the Google maps section.  These multiple listings have consistently been a frequent complaint about Google local.  In at least one keyword family in our local market of Austin, Texas, we have monitored one of these unscrupulous advertisers that obtained three listings on the front page results of Google maps, and through the use of obviously fake reviews, was able to maintain those listings consistently. The recent change appears to have filtered out these multiple results.

Technorati wants: 6XUBGTNSNM4Y.

How to Get “Show Map of” Tag to Appear in Google Results

August 20, 2009/21 Comments/in SEO/by Michael David

[This Article is Deprecated due to changes in Google’s search results pages]

Today we’ll be covering a very advanced topic, but it’s so powerful and beneficial comment it’s just too good to be ignored. TastyPlacement has been able to get a lot of use out of this tool

How to Get the Coveted “Show Map of” Tag

I learned this device from a power blogger in the search engine optimization business, and through some research reading Google’s Webmaster documentation. What the trick does is it enables a show map tag to appear within a Google result.

So what’s different about this Google result? if you look closely, you’ll see a cross with an invitation to show the map of the business’s location. This extra line in the search result can distinguish the result from other results on the page. And, as always, distinguishing factors in search results yield higher click rates.

Also, when a user clicks on the cross a map of the location is expanded to reveal a map of the location, the full address, and phone number. Again, this will yield a high increase in visitor conversions.

So How to Get the Tag?

The way to get the shell map tag is easy, but it’s a bit technical. First of all, the show map tag will obviously be of more value to a local business. In fact, a company has to have a Google local listing (a listing in the map section) as a prerequisite to displaying the show map tag.

Step One: Geo Sitemap

But a Google local listing alone will not activate the show map tag. Once the Google local listing is set up, one must also install what’s called a KML geo site map. A geo site map is a very small file, only a few lines long, which contains specially formatted information about the location of the business.

Here’s some sample data, a generic KML file:

<kml xmlns="http://www.opengis.net/kml/2.2"
xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
<Document>
<name>Company Name</name>
<atom:author>
<atom:name>Author Name (may be company name)</atom:name>
</atom:author>
<atom:link href="http://www.domain.com/" />
<Placemark>
<name>Name Of Location</name>
<description>
<![CDATA[
<address>
<a href="http://www.domain.com/">Company Name</a><br />
Address: [street city, state zip]<br />
Phone: [phone]
</address>
<p>A small company description.</p>
]]>
</description>
<Point><coordinates>latitude,longitude</coordinates></Point>
</Placemark>
</Document>
</kml>

Now, you’ll notice from the sample code above that the coordinates tag requires you to know the latitude and longitude of your business address as it appears in your Google local listing. You can obtain the latitude and longitude values, as well as generate a very simple but technically acceptable KML site map by going to one of my favorite new sites, http://mygeoposition.com/. You simply type in your address and click the KML tab to get the latitude and longitude numbers. Place those numbers in the coordinates tag, modify the file to include your name information, and you’re done.

Step Two: Register KML File in Google Webmasters Account

Next, the file must be registered in a verified Google Webmaster account. If you don’t have a Google Webmaster account already, it’s an absolute must for any website owner and offers tremendous search engine optimization benefits. Registering your Geo site map in your Google Webmaster account will activate the show map tag anywhere your result shows in a Google search.

Additional benefits

In addition, the show map tag will also display on Google adwords advertisements, which can be a further boost to that program’s effectiveness.

Your KML site map will also generate a location marker in the Google Earth program. In fact, KML technology has its origins with Google Earth.

There has also been some mention, although not a universal consensus, but a Geo site map can improve the rankings within the map display in Google local results.

Good luck from TastyPlacement

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