How Local SEO Really Works in the Green Industry

How local SEO really works

The other day I got a phone call from a client saying that “my site isn’t ranking for ‘tree pruning’ in Miami”.

Ummm, well... The client is located in Orlando and only offers tree removal services.

However, they want to appear on the first page of the Google search results whenever anyone searches for ‘tree pruning’ anywhere in the country! And they believe that if I just did “better SEO” on their site, they’d rank better.

Which got me thinking about similar conversations I’ve had over the years with companies that are trying to rank for specific keywords in specific locations, regardless of where they’re actually located.

In some respects it’s like they say in Maine - “you can’t get there from here.”

Why? Because Google (and the other major search engines) is designed to show local results when someone is searching for a local service or product.

Let’s take a look at the search engine results pages (SERPs).

local seo returns ads at the top of the page

Ads Show At The Top Of The Page

At the top you have up to four ads. You have to pay to show up there.

If you have enough money and time to set up your AdWords campaigns properly, you can show up there for pretty much any keyword you want in just about any location. It’s going to cost you (probably a lot!), but it can be done.

local 3-pack for organic search results

The Local 3-Pack Is Next

Next we have the local 3-pack (also called map pack or local pack). You cannot pay to appear there.

It pulls information from Google My Business pages and shows the three verified local companies nearest you.

To appear there you must have a verified local business address (not a PO Box or one of those mailbox suites) and an optimized Google My Business page. If you’re not physically located in the town or city, you cannot show up in the local 3-pack for that town or city. Pretty simple.

Now For The Organic Results

organic search resultsFinally, we get to the organic (non-paid) search results. In our industry the top 3 to 6 spots are usually dominated by Home Advisor, Angie’s List, Yelp, Thumbtack, BBB and perhaps a local industry directory. Those are huge sites with a ton of user-generated, local content - trust me, you can't compete with them.

So that means you have 4 to 7 spots on the first page for your company website to be shown in. And you likely have pretty fierce competition for those limited spots from other local businesses who want to show up for the same things you do.

How Local Search Works

How does Google (and the other search engines) decide which websites to show in those limited organic search results?

First, it decides what the searcher is really looking for. Gone are the days of taking the words a searcher types into the search bar and simply looking for websites with multiple mentions of those words (which is why keyword stuffing no longer works). Instead, Google tries to decipher the searcher’s intent and then find sites that have content related to the general concept the person is looking for.

For example, if someone in Miami is looking for “tree pruning”, Google makes a few assumptions.

First, the search results should be specific to Miami. Even if the person didn’t explicitly say “tree pruning in Miami”, Google figures that tree pruning is a local service, just like “taxi” or “dry cleaning”, and so it will return results that are specific to Miami.

Second, Google assumes the person is probably searching for a business that can prune their tree, but they could also be looking for tree pruning advice, costs, techniques, tools, or anything else related to tree pruning. If the search was for “tree pruning company” or “tree pruning business” then it’s much clearer that the search engine results page should show local tree pruning companies.

No one (except some of the folks at Google) knows exactly how the search algorithm works. SEO experts try to reverse engineer it and then share their research findings with the SEO community.

The description above is the latest thinking on SEO but it’s always evolving. What worked yesterday may no longer work today.

Take the case of keyword stuffing (putting a specific keyword on a webpage as many times as possible). It used to be considered state-of-the-art SEO but will now get your website penalized rather than promoted in the search results. But clients still want me to “just put that word in a few more times so the page will get found by Google.”

What Can You Do To Get Found In Local Searches?

First, understand how the local search algorithm does and does not work.

Are you truly a “local” business?

If so, verify and optimize your Google My Business page (it’s free!) so you show in the local 3-pack. That’s the biggest bang for your buck right now.

Then look at your website. Instead of trying to optimize it for the major keywords in your industry and location (e.g., “landscaping Chicago” or “lawn mowing Minneapolis”), target medium tail keywords. These are words and concepts related to that primary keyword but having less reach and less competition. If it’s done well (e.g., using multiple different but related keywords, but without overdoing it), Google will show that page for searches on that term AND tons of similar keywords.

Then What?

SEO is an ongoing process – it’s definitely not a “one and done” job. Check your analytics regularly for downward movement on specific pages, take a look at older blog posts and pages to see if the SEO needs updating, and keep putting out new, well-optimized content on relevant topics.

And if you’re located in Orlando, don’t expect to show up in the local organic search results for Miami.

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2 Comments

  1. Kim Connolly on June 6, 2018 at 9:46 am

    Monica –
    Always enjoy your insight!

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