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Google’s first search results page is the place where everyone wants to be. Nothing translates to more visibility, more customers, and more revenue like a well-ranked website. But the Google content universe is vast – you can write amazing content and build a high-quality website and yet miss the mark when it comes to showing up where it matters the most i.e. Google search results.
Suppose you’re a local business or marketing agency owner who specializes in Local search engine optimization. In that case, you’re probably losing sleep wondering how to get your website noticed by 83% of all internet dwellers who use Google. Countless resources are available online – so much so that every other website you visit wants to drown you in the endless information and repetitive fluff that actually does nothing for your rankings.
That ends here. In this article, we’ve covered the most helpful (and more importantly – actionable) tips to get your website found on Google and present in the most important places.
Local businesses have historically relied on offline channels to grab eyeballs. This worked – probably in the past when your ideal customer would shuffle through a bouquet of flyers or fat yellow page directories to call up your store.
That’s a naive dream today.
Here’s what the customer journey looks like instead-
Let’s say you’re a bakery with multiple stores across your state/nation. Your ideal customer, call her Sarah, has this sudden urge for croissants. Sarah won’t spend time driving around or trying to recall top bakery names off the top of her head. She’ll instead type in Google “Best Crossaints near me”. And voila! Some great suggestions will show up. She looks at reviews, photos/videos of the place, checks if it’s open, and off she goes!
As a bakery, you really need to be the first thing Sarah sees when she goes on Google. Multiply this one search to thousands of daily searches relevant to your business. And you can see the vast potential of Google for local business marketing.
Your website ranking plays a significant role in where you stand in search engine results & Google Maps. Google considers it a major signal when deciding which businesses are relevant to the search queries.
To be more specific, here are other reasons why your website should show up on Google:
On the contrary, NOT having a well-ranking website on Google also does a lot of damage. You lose credibility in the eyes of your customers and opportunities for brand awareness every time they search for relevant content.
Now that we’ve nodded our heads on the importance of website visibility for your business, let’s talk about what you can do right away to get your website visible on Google.
The top three websites listed on Google’s SERP get 75% of all traffic, according to a study by FirstPage. It means your website needs to be on the coveted spots in Google to attract your next potential customer. Up next, we’ll discuss how you can make your website appear on Google.
Having Google properly index and list your website is mission-critical. After all, Google drives over 63,000 searches per second! Without getting your site into Google's good graces, you might as well not have a website at all.
Submitting your site to Google's index is the first step to search domination. It tells the Googlebot to start crawling all your pages and content, bringing you onto its radar. Don't leave it to chance, and hope Google eventually finds you. You can submit your website on your own.
The process is simple. Here’s an overview:
Once indexed, your focus shifts to SEO and high-quality content to drive organic search rankings. But none of that matters if Google hasn't indexed your website in the first place. Just take 5 minutes to submit your sitemap and open the door to vast search engine visibility. It could be the difference between a site seen by dozens versus millions!
Once you have a rank-worthy website and have ensured that Google is indexing it, you can get started by optimizing your website for the search engine. Here are some no-BS, directly-implementable tips to get your website to show up on Google.
Optimizing your website pages for local SEO can help drive more traffic from searches for products/services in your geographical area. By targeting relevant keywords, you can go from local search obscurity to appearing right at the top (okay, I’m exaggerating a bit here. But keyword targeting will play a major part in it).
Here’s what you can start doing from day 0:
Research Initial Keyword Ideas
Include Local Intent Keywords
Review Search Intent
Organize Keywords ByTheme
Refine with Long-Tail Keywords
Audit Accessibility
The flow of your web page and how well your website is structured gives you two-fold benefits:
Spend ample time planning and structuring your website structure. Some quick tips -
57% of all local searches happen on a mobile device. Your website should be well-set to function on mobile for a good user experience. Here are a few things you can do to make sure your website is mobile friendly:
Read More: Optimize your website for mobile
Your website should reflect clearly that you cater to the area your customer is present in. You can do this by creating locally relevant content such as events/festivals happening in the area, local product/industry guides, and partnerships with other local businesses/influencers that your customer engages with regularly.
Local keywords and locally relevant information about your business (address, link to directions, open hours, area code, etc). Make sure when a user lands on your website, they have access to such information (in noticeable places like footers/home page). Now, these are also good signals to Google – so your website is more likely to rank better.
Having a well-ranking website isn’t a one-time effort. You want to ensure you’re always present in the conversation and talking about topics/issues relevant to your customers. One good way of doing this is running an active blog on your website.
Make sure you’re consistently sharing new content that is perspective-driven and highly relevant to your customers. Maintain a good mix of locally relevant information along with a broader scope of topics that interest your readers.
Local directory listings aka citations also act as backlinks to your website and reflect positively on local SEO (but don’t overdo it, it’s not a hack!)
Read More: List of 50+ directories to list your business on
Managing information across a vast number of local listings for each of your business locations is quite a headache. But only if you do it manually. Synup helps you list all major directories and create/manage content in a few clicks.
For local businesses, the Google Business Profile is central to local SEO success. It’s the first thing your customers are likely to see when they search for your brand or relevant services/products.
It also serves as a critical ranking factor in Google’s local pack. So make sure you have a verified Google Business Profile complete with the most up-to-date information about your business.
You can grab a few coveted spots on Google’s first page. But how do you make sure the searchers actually click on your content and not someone else’s? That’s where metadata comes in.
Use compelling titles and descriptions that grab attention and highlight the value of your content at a glance.
For meta titles,
For meta descriptions,
If you’re using media such as images and videos (as you should) on your website pages, you need to make sure they are well-optimized for a good user experience. Keep the videos short and focused (1-2 minutes) and include keywords in the description/titles. Provide anchor texts or captions for both images and videos for easy accessibility (this is an important signal to Google).
Another important thing – optimize the size of your media files. Larger files will bulk up the page and it will load slowly. As we discussed, page speed is a critical factor, especially on mobile.
This is not an organic growth hack but rather a short-term plan for getting initial exposure for your business. You can run Google ads and local campaigns to target users searching for your services. Search campaigns are great for driving traffic directly to your business. And local inventory ads will help you get more foot traffic and consequently sales.
Please note: Running paid campaigns has no direct effect on your organic rankings. Treat it as a separate channel to get more leads and revenue.
Happy customers are not as vocal on online review sites as unhappy customers. And disproportionately negative reviews on your local listings are a major red flag for Google.
We don’t need to go on and on about the importance of providing excellent service to your customers. But one thing where most businesses lag behind – collecting positive reviews. Don’t be afraid to ask your loyal & satisfied customers to leave good reviews on your listings. Incentivize them for speaking positively about your brand and the product/service they purchased from you.
And at the same time, manage negative reviews well. Be quick to respond and solve issues so it shows you really care.
Did you know? Synup helps you collect and respond to hundreds of reviews across all your listings in one place.
Social media creates more opportunities for links and mentions of your brand, which search engines count as signals of popularity and authority. Sometimes social media content may itself show up on Google SERP, thus driving more traffic. You can also share content from the website directly on social to grab more eyeballs.
Les gens adorent partager du contenu actuel, pertinent et impressionnant (humour, surprise, choc, etc.).
Identifiez les journaux, magazines et blogs locaux qui couvrent les actualités pertinentes pour votre entreprise. Présentez-leur des idées d'articles liés à votre expertise ou des articles de profil sur votre entreprise. Dans la mesure du possible, obtenez un lien vers cette couverture. Des backlinks de haute qualité, provenant en particulier de sources pertinentes, y compris des sites Web locaux réputés, peuvent faire des merveilles pour votre visibilité en ligne.
Les fonctionnalités des médias locaux sont un excellent moyen de montrer votre autorité locale et de diffuser du contenu local lié à votre entreprise.
Plus vous vous intéressez au référencement local, plus vous vous rendez compte qu'il y a des milliers de rouages qui font que tout fonctionne. Vos réseaux sociaux améliorent l'apparence de votre site Web, votre site Web influe sur le classement de votre profil Google Business et votre classement affecte directement vos résultats.
Travailler sur chaque canal de manière cloisonnée ne vous permettra pas d'obtenir les meilleurs résultats de vos efforts marketing. Vous devez faire la promotion multicanal de chaque nouveau contenu diffusé sur vos réseaux sociaux, votre site Web ou vos annonces.
Vous avez une nouvelle rubrique dédiée aux médias locaux ? Super, écrivez un article sur votre site Web. Maintenant, partagez-le sur vos réseaux sociaux. Et puis mettez-le à jour sur Google Posts. Bref, soyez la voix la plus forte de votre marque dans la salle. Cela aidera également Google à évaluer l'autorité de votre marque et, indirectement, à donner plus de visibilité à votre site.
En améliorant la présentabilité et l'utilité de votre site Web pour votre utilisateur final, vous pouvez améliorer considérablement votre classement dans les résultats de recherche Google. Suivez vos progrès dans la console de recherche Google et continuez à affiner les pages en fonction de vos mots clés cibles.
Suivez ce mantra : tout d'abord, optimisez pour votre utilisateur. Ensuite, pensez à Google.