Local Searching: Where is your business? What does it do? What do you offer?
by Jonathan Marshall Mary Bowling from ClickZ wrote a great blog about optimizing your Web site to tell Google and your visitors where you are and what you do. Another online place where it's critical to clearly identify where you are and what you do: your local business profile on Google Maps, Yahoo Local, and Bing Local. She goes on to more specifically discuss some tips marketers can use to become more visible to local searches.
Categories In Google Maps, you may classify your business in up to five categories. These may be standard categories provided by Google Maps or those that you create yourself. Use one to two of the standard categories that best fit your business, and then create three to four that contain your best keyword terms plus the location terms for which you most want to be found. For example, as a plastic surgeon in Denver, you should classify yourself in the established categories of Physicians & Surgeons, and Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery. However, it may be hard to find other existing categories that apply to what you do. In that case, for the other four categories, use the keyword phrases for which you would most like to be found. These categories may be based on any criteria important to you. Some suggestions are the number of searches made for the terms, your most profitable procedures, and the categories in which your strongest competitors have chosen to place themselves.
Or the categories may be based on some other criteria known only to you. Examples of terms a Denver plastic surgeon might use are Breast Implants Denver, Denver Tummy Tuck, and Colorado Rhinoplasty. Use a geographic term in your chosen categories to make it very clear to Google where you do business. Using the names of nearby areas in which you are not located may help you to rank better for those searches, too. For example, if your office is in Cherry Creek, but most searchers use "Denver" in their queries, you could use Denver terms in your categories instead of Cherry Creek terms. Yahoo Local and Bing Local do not permit you to create your own categories. Therefore, choose as many categories as you are permitted, selecting those you feel are the most appropriate and important first.
Descriptions Also use location terms within the description area of your profiles, where you have complete control of what is written. These descriptions are crawled and indexed by the local spiders, so make certain they find your most important geographic terms within them.
Attributes Attributes, which are only in your Google Maps profile and not in Bing Local or Yahoo Local, allow you to go hog wild with terms to tell spiders and humans what you do and where you do it. You essentially create and name a field whatever you wish and then populate it with terms describing that property. Nearly every business pulls people from both its immediate location and surrounding areas. So, you could create a field named Locations Served and list the towns and neighborhoods near you and from which your business typically draws customers.
