Posts Tagged ‘Google Places’

Internet Marketing Trends for 2012

By admin - January 5th, 2012

  1. Value Based Marketing. It’s not just about rankings and traffic; it’s about leads, sales & measurable results that prove ROI.
  2. Rich Snippets. Google will provide more information about your website to searchers without them having to click to the site. This hurts your marketing efforts because it reduces page views and makes your sales funnel a bit smaller.
  3. Vanishing Data. Google will hide more information about your website in Google Analytics. This makes it more challenging to sift through the pertinent data to find the Key Performance Indicators that matter.
  4. Mobile Marketing Grows Up. Mobile marketing will continue to grow at an amazing rate. Customers are now using mobile search to do their shopping, especially for local products and services.
  5. The Rise of Local Search Marketing. Local search and Google Local in particular will be more important than ever. Google will continue to make local results a more crucial component of its search algorithm.
  6. Social Media Merges With Search. Google will impact search engine rankings. Overall, social engagement across all platforms is important for a balanced SEO campaign
  7. Video Content Matters. Video is more important as the web moves mobile and becomes more interactive. Videos are now a bigger part of Google’s search results as Google learns to index video content.
  8. Don’t Let Others Tarnish Your Reputation. As the Internet becomes more valuable, so does your company’s online reputation. This is because your business can be harmed by the reviews and comments angry customers post online. 90% of consumers trust online reviews, and 78% search a company online before buying product or service.
  9. Nurture New Leads, Don’t Waste Them. As your online market becomes more competitive, leads are harder to come by and more valuable. Every lead must be nurtured via email marketing. This is because 50% of qualified leads aren’t ready to buy immediately after being contacted. Meanwhile, lead nurturing emails have 10x the response rate as do stand-alone email blasts.
  10. Your Linking Strategy Must Evolve for SEO. Linking remains a pillar of your search engine exposure, but link diversity is now more crucial than ever.

Courtesy of National Positions

http://nationalpositions.com/

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Google Places Local Search Results

By Susan Shultz - April 20th, 2011

Recent data released shows some significant figures on how consumers use Local Search.

The objective of the survey was to try and answer the following questions:

  1. From what websites do typical local businesses receive most of their website visitors?
  2. Where should you focus your local-online marketing efforts?
  3. How regularly do Local Consumers use Local Search Services to find Local Businesses?
  4. Do local consumers find Google Places and Local Search services useful?

Survey Results:

  1. Google Places drives the most visits and Google.com came in second with a combined 58% of visits to Local Websites
  2. 31% of consumers report they use Google weekly to find Local Businesses
  3. 71% of consumers value the information contained within local search results.
  4. 60% of consumers responded that images included in the Google Places Listings made them more likely to consider and or contact that business.

Mobile users did not take part in this survey
Survey conducted by BrightLocal.com

From a local business perspective, these results are significant in showing the power and importance of not only claiming your Local Listing on Google Places but having that listing optimized.  Adding accurate categories, correctly using the description text, and including images all help in consumer’s consideration to contact your business.

IQnection has Local Search submissions and optimization services available.  Contact our Web Marketing Department for more information.

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Google Makes Major Changes to Local Search Results

By Nicole Diehl - November 30th, 2010

Google has recently rolled out a new format for their local search results. They have changed the way search results are displayed when the search term includes a city and/or state, which will have a direct impact on your business if you target search terms that include physical locations.

Now called Google Places, the local listings are more like directory listings in which a business owner can “claim” the page on Google and enter information. For those who don’t claim their listing, Google automatically generates a Place page based on info it finds in databases. Local results have been shortened and consolidated in a “Places for… “ list that follows the paid listings at the top of the page. These results are richer, showing your business address and phone number, an image, a snippet from a review and links to reviews on other sites. Since these changes are rolling out gradually, you may or may not see them yet or only see them on some searches depending on the search term and the location.

What to be aware of:

- Google Places has become a new way to search. The first page of results will show a list of options for refining the search on the left-hand side of the page. The list may include images, videos, or books and will now include Places as one of the options. This should help speed and refine some searches.

-The traditional grouping of local results at the top of the page has been eliminated. The map now resides in the right sidebar and additional local listings have been integrated into the search results.

- In many cases, the Places listings have displaced organic results, pushing top 10 listings on to the second page of the search engine results.

- While Google doesn’t divulge how it selects which businesses show up in the top local results, even if you’ve done an excellent job of search engine optimization, you may find your company has dropped off the list of top search results. Experts think that reviews have become much more important to rankings in the new Google Places. It used to be your location that was most important, now it’s more the quantity and quality of reviews.

- AdWords is getting more competitive for local businesses because paid ad visibility is, to a certain degree, replacing local listing visibility. Local business owners will be more inclined to fight for the coveted top spots since the paid ads are now the most visible aspect of the local results page.

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