“Local Search will become the golden child of marketing for small businesses in 2011.”
That is the headline above a very lengthy blog entry by SEO and website promotion expert Rebecca Gill of Web Savvy Marketing.
She goes on to characterize local search as the little brother of social media and urges small business owners to pay attention and not get left behind. Local search is very time intensive, she warns, so outsource it if you don’t have the time or training to handle it yourself.
We are barely three weeks into this new year and you can expect to hear that same tune repeated incessantly in the coming weeks and months. Like all new developments on the world wide web, the early movers are going to get the biggest rewards and latecomers are going to wish they’d sat up and taken notice sooner.
To illustrate her point, Gill lists more than 25 online directories that businesses need to be listed in to help their local search ranking, and this is just one of many tasks associated with getting any kind of prominence for your small business. There are literally hundreds of similar directories, from product or service specific to regional, national and global, making directory listing a continual work in progress.
Footnote
Mike Blumenthal, one of the most brilliant minds in matters of local search, was quoted in an interview this week as saying: “Examining and perfecting the basics seems critical for many (small businesses). For me that means a well optimized website, a well implemented local search campaign and a decent email plan. The new Places Search really puts an emphasis on having not just a website, but one that is tuned for search.”