Previously, I wrote an article unveiling some of the most
common myths I see in the Local SEO space.
I thought I’d do a follow-up that specifically talked about the myths
pertaining to citations that I commonly hear from both small business
owners and
SEOs alike.
Myth #1: If your citations don’t include your suite number, you should stop everything you're doing and fix this ASAP.
Truth:
Google doesn’t even recognize suite numbers for a whopping majority of
Google business listings. Even though you enter a suite number in Google
My Business, it doesn’t translate into the "Suite #" field in Google
MapMaker — it simply gets eliminated. Google also pays more attention to
the location (pin) marker of the business when it comes to determining
the actual location and less to the actual words people enter in as the
address, as there can be multiple ways to name a street address.
Google’s
Possum update recently introduced a filter
for search queries that is based on location. We’ve seen this has to do
with the address itself and how close other businesses in the same
industry are to your location. Whether or not you have a suite number in
Google My Business has nothing to do with it.
Darren Shaw from
Whitespark, an expert on everything related to citations, says:
“You often can’t
control the suite number on your citations. Some sites force the suite
number to appear before the address, some after the address, some with a
# symbol, some with “Ste,” and others with “Suite.” If minor
discrepancies like these in your citations affected your citation
consistency or negatively impacted your rankings, then everyone would
have a problem.”
In summary, if your citations look great
but are missing the suite number, move along. There are most likely
more important things you could be spending time on that would actually
impact your ranking.
Myth #2: Minor differences in your business name in citations are a big deal.
Truth:
Say your business name is "State Farm: Bob Smith," yet one citation
lists you as “Bob Smith Insurance” and another as “Bob Smith State
Farm.” As Mike Blumenthal
states:
“Put a little trust in the algorithm.” If Google was incapable of
realizing that those 3 names are really the same business (especially
when their address & phone number are identical), we’d have a big
problem on our hands. There would be so many duplicate listings on
Google we wouldn’t even begin to be able to keep track. Currently, I
only generally see a lot of duplicates if there are major discrepancies
in the address and phone number.
Darren Shaw also agrees on this:
“I
see this all the time with law firms. Every time a new partner joins
the firm or leaves the firm, they change their name. A firm can change
from “Fletcher, McDonald, & Jones” to “Fletcher, Jones, & Smith”
to “Fletcher Family Law” over the course of 3 years, and as long as the
phone number and address stay the same, it will have no negative impact
on their rankings. Google triangulates the data it finds on the web by
three data points: name, address, and phone number. If two of these are a
match, and then the name is a partial match, Google will have no problem associating those citations with the correct listing in GMB.”
Myth #3: NAP cleanup should involve fixing your listings on hundreds of sites.
Truth:
SEO companies use this as a scare tactic, and it works very well. They
have a small business pay them for citation cleanup. They’ll do a scan
of your incorrect data and send you a list of hundreds of directories
that have your information wrong. This causes you to gasp and panic and
instantly realize you must hire them to spend hours cleaning all this
up, as it must be causing the ranking of your listing on Google to tank.
Let’s
dive into an example that I've seen. Local.com is a site that feeds to
hundreds of smaller directories on newspaper sites. If you have a
listing wrong on Local.com, it might appear that your listing is
incorrect on hundreds of directories. For example, these three listings
are on different domains, but if you look at the pages they're identical
and they all say “Local.com” at the top:
Should
this cause you to panic? No. Fixing it on Local.com itself should fix
all the hundreds of other places. Even if it didn’t, Google hasn’t even indexed any of these URLs. (Note:
they might index my examples since I just linked to them in this Moz
article, so I’m including some screenshots from while I was writing
this):
If
Google hasn’t even indexed the content, it’s a good sign that the
content doesn’t mean much and it’s nothing you should stress about.
Google would have no incentive or reason to index all these different
URLs due to the fact that the content on them is literally the same.
Additionally, no one links to them (aside from me in this article, of
course).
As Darren Shaw puts it,
“This one really
irks me. There are WAY more important things for you to spend your
time/money on than trying to fix a listing on a site like scranton.myyellowpageclassifieds.biz.
Chances are, any attempt to update this listing would be futile anyway,
because small sites like these are basically unmanaged. They’re
collecting their $200/m in Adsense revenue and don’t have any interest
in dealing with or responding to any listing update requests. In our
Citation Audit and Cleanup service we offer two packages. One covers the
top 30 sites + 5 industry/city-specific sites, and the other covers the
top 50 sites + 5 industry/city-specific sites. These are sites that are
actually important and valuable to local search. Audit and cleanup on
sites beyond these is generally a waste of time and money.”
Myth #4: There's no risk in cancelling an automated citation service.
People
often wonder what might happen to their NAP issues if they cancel their
subscription with a company like Yext or Moz Local. Although these
companies don’t do anything to intentionally cause old data to come
back, there have been some recent interesting findings around what actually happens when you cancel.
Truth: In one case, Phil Rozek did a little case study for a business that had to
cancel Moz Local
recently. The good news is that although staying with them is generally
a good decision, this business didn’t seem to have any major issues
after cancelling.
Yext claims on their site that they don’t do anything to
push the old data back
that was previously wrong. They explain that when you cancel, “the lock
that was put in place to protect the business listing is no longer
present. Once this occurs, the business listing is subject to the normal
compilation process at the search engine, online directory, mobile app,
or social network. In fact, because Yext no longer has this lock in
place, Yext has no control over the listing directly at all, and the
business listing data will now act as it normally would occur without
Yext.”
Nyagoslav Zhekov just recently published a study on
cancelling Yext
and concluded that most of the listings either disappear or revert back
to their previous incorrect state after cancelling. It seems that Yext
acts as a sort of cover on top of the listing, and once Yext is
cancelled, that cover is removed. So, there does seem to be some risk
with cancelling Yext.
In summary, there is definitely a risk when
you decide to cancel an ongoing automated service that was previously in
place to correct your citations. It’s important for people to realize
that if they decide to do this, they might want to budget for some
manual citation building/cleanup in case any issues arise.
Myth #5: Citation building is the only type of link building strategy you need to succeed at Local SEO.
Many
Local SEO companies have the impression that citation building is the
only type of backlinking strategy needed for small businesses to rank
well in the 3-pack. According to this survey that Bright Local did,
72% of Local SEOs use citation building as a way of building links.
Truth: Local SEO Guide found in their
Local Search Ranking Factors study that although citations are important, if that’s the
only
backlinking strategy you’re using, you're most likely not going to rank
well in competitive markets. They found also found that links are the
key competitive differentiator even when it comes to Google My Business
Rankings. So if you're in a competitive industry or market and want to
dominate the 3-pack, you need to look into additional
backlinking strategies over and above citations.
Darren adds more clarity to the survey’s results by stating,
“They’re saying that citations are still very important, but they are a foundational
tactic. You absolutely need a core base of citations to gain trust at
Google, and if you don’t have them you don’t have a chance in hell at
ranking, but they are no longer a competitive difference maker. Once you
have the core 50 or so citations squared away, building more and more
citations probably isn’t what your local SEO campaign needs to move the
needle further.”
Myth #6: Citations for unrelated industries should be ignored if they share the same phone number.
This
was a question that has come up a number of times with our team. If you
have a restaurant that once had a phone number but then closes its
doors, and a new law firm opens up down the street and gets assigned
that phone number, should the lawyer worry about all the listings that
exist for the restaurant (since they're in different industries)?
Truth: I reached out to Nyagoslav Zhekov, the Director of Local Search at
Whitespark, to get the truth on this one. His response was:
“As
Google tries to mimic real-life experiences, sooner or later this
negative experience will result in some sort of algorithmic downgrading
of the information by Google. If Google manages to figure out that a lot
of customers look for and call a phone number that they think belongs
to another business, it is logical that it will result in negative user
experience. Thus, Google will assign a lower trust score to a Google
Maps business record that offers information that does not clearly and
unquestionably belong to the business for which the record is. Keeping
in mind that the phone number is, by design and by default, the most
unique and the most standardized information for a business (everything
else is less standardize-able than the phone number), this is, as far as
I am concerned, the most important information bit and the most
significant identifier Google uses when determining how trustworthy
particular information for a business is.”
He also
pointed out that users finding the phone number for the restaurant and
calling it continually would be a negative experience for both the
customer and the law firm (who would have to continually
confirm they're not a restaurant) so there would be added benefit in
getting these listings for the restaurant marked closed or removed.
Since Darren Shaw gave me so much input for this article, he also wanted to add a seventh myth that he comes across regularly:
Myth #7: Google My Business is a citation.
“This
one is maybe more of a mis-labelling problem than a myth, but your
listing at Google isn’t really a citation. At Whitespark we refer to
Google, Bing, and Apple Maps as 'Core Search Engines' (yes, Yahoo has
been demoted to just a citation). The word 'citation' comes from the
concept of 'citing' your sources in an academic paper. Using this
conceptual framework, you can think of your Google listing as the
academic paper, and all of your listings out on the web as the sources
that cite the business. Your Google listing is like the queen bee and
all the citations out there are the workers contributing to keep the
queen bee alive and healthy.”
Hopefully that lays some of
the fears and myths around citations to rest. If you have questions or
ideas of other myths on this topic, we’d love to hear about it in the
comments!