by Miriam Ellis
If David Mihm's Local Search Ranking Factors left you longing
for more local fare, Mike Blumenthal takes the cake by Cracking Google's Local Algo. Visit
Mike's site for the presentation he just gave at SMX Local, and stay tuned there for a more in-depth
report on our findings.
Have We Cracked The Code?
No, not yet. But we're working on it.
Over the past couple of months, my husband and I have been working with Mike, David, Dave Oremland,
Will Scott and Tim Coleman on a project which basically
involved collecting and analyzing oodles of data about local businesses and their standings within Google Maps.
Our purpose in this work has been to improve our understanding of the multiple factors that influence Maps rankings. By increasing our knowledge, we increase our ability
to offer the very best local search advice to our clients. It's helpful for our own private projects as well, of course!
Local Search is still relatively new, but with experts opining that some 40% of searches are local in intent, the importance of understanding local search
best practices is clear. This is truly the most exciting collaborative project I've had the pleasure of
participating in, and through the course of the work, a picture is beginning to come clear.
As Mike's slideshow illustrates, we are dealing with a variety of apparent factors in Google's Local Algo, including:
- Distance from city centroid
- Business name
- Business category
- Trust
- Citations from other websites
- Explicit anchor text
- Traditional SEO factors
We feel that there are many unknown factors pulling rankings this way and that, as well, but we've made
what I believe is a very good start in identifying some of the most important signals here. There is
still so much to study and learn, but we've begun to crack the code.
Local Search - Wagons, Ho!
Back in the day, it took a bunch of SEOs working independently and together to realize just how much
title tags count in Google's organic algorithm. Meta tags became the subject of heated debate, and
forum wars were waged over pagerank. The permanent documentation of these fascinating discussions
and findings is available for all to see - the fruits of ingenious labor that now enable a new SEO
to progress quickly from total novice to reasonably educated, if he or she has a taste for reading.
An oft-voiced refrain one encounters these days wherever SEOs congregate is that the pioneer days
are over. No one really needs to have another discussion about links or content being king,
queen or what have you. SEOs have grown with the evolution of the Internet - in fact, I don't think
it's putting it too strongly to say that they have pulled the Internet their way in some cases.
There's a little bit of irony somewhere in the fact that while the need for SEO basics is far from over, (yes,
scary websites continue to multiply unabated) the SEOs themselves seem to have discovered they
need more. Search Marketing has expanded to encompass a tremendous variety of areas of specialization
from social media to video production.
Take a glance at Sphinn any day of the week and it quickly
becomes apparent that so many of the hot topics have nothing to do with the optimization of web pages.
The bright ones are talking about marketing - traditional marketing sprouting in new, interesting
ways in the 'new' medium of the web. It's engrossing, it's au courant, but I don't think it can
really be called SEO, and I sense a sort of repetitive motion fatigue in the industry whenever
someone new shows up to ask about meta tags, don't you?
And then, there's Local Search. No one is yawning here. I sense in my Local colleagues an enthusiasm,
a hunger for information, a yearning to experiment, test and study. There is the kind of camaraderie
and generosity that has always been the hallmark of the best SEO circles. It's the kind of frontier
living that the first SEOs throve on and there is still so much to be learned. Right now, I'm finding
that I literally can't wait for my Local colleagues to post on their blogs. I get really excited
when they send me emails. Working with them is stimulating, rewarding.
If it's been awhile since you've felt like that about the industry you work in, maybe now is the time to expand your interests.
Maybe you'll get really into Social Media, or maybe offline conversions hold special charms for you.
Or, maybe, Local Search is just waiting for you to discover it. With groundbreaking documents like
Mihm's and Blumenthal's hot off the presses in this virtually uncharted new territory of SEO,
it's getting pretty exciting around here.
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Source: Why Local Search Is Where It's At