TAKE NOTICE
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Paul Thordsen, Publisher
Toll Free 1-888-275-9840
P.O. Box 16084
Houston, Texas 77222
Click Here
To Find Out Why You Should Become a Member
Read - Think + Act
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If Your Are Willing To Spend a Little Time Doing it Yourself
You Will Save Thousands of Dollars
Using Images For Local SEO
Google's recent deployment of Universal Search resulted in the inclusion of content
drawn in from their other search verticals into the main web search results. As this
integration trend continues, and as Google further expands upon the 200+ signals they use
for ranking, it becomes increasingly important to diversify a site’s presence on
the web, and to work on ranking well in each of the various areas of vertical search.
We might reasonably expect that "diversification of signal" could also help with
ranking in each of the individual verticals as well. The lines are blurring and
beneficial ranking in one area can now leach over to affect another. For these reasons
I’m providing some suggestions for using images to achieve better rankings for
local businesses and for local search.
A recent Hitwise report indicates that usage of Google Maps increased significantly as
a result of more visibility from Universal Search. Another long-running, high-performing
vertical at Google is Image Search—until the acquisition of YouTube, Image Search
was Google’s second most-visited property. So, leveraging a combination of
optimizations for both local search and image search could provide some beneficial
synergies.
Most local SEO approaches have focused mainly on yellow pages directory information
elements and general search optimizations: using business name and locality in the
TITLE/H1/BODY-text; inclusion of business address on all pages of the site; updating of
business profile information in the many local directory and info sites; etc. Most of
these approaches seem a bit skimpily staid from my viewpoint—I think that local
search marketing needs to go further towards the broad enhancement of a business’s
basic information. Various image optimizations can do this.
A lot of small business websites I see out in the wild are pretty thin on content. As
a consumer, I find that unsatisfying. True, when I’m seeking a local business, I
may mainly want to see the basic stuff: where are they located; is there a map; what are
their hours of operation; and what’s their phone number. Though, if they were more
detailed in many ways, I wouldn’t have to call them, nine times out of ten…
a picture is worth a thousand words, so I see both SEO value and benefit to
user-experience in beefing up local biz sites’ image usage.
So, what are some of the potential search optimization benefits to various image
optimizations?
- Pages which are already formed well and which have plenty of text content might
benefit from containing images which also sing to the search engine on the page’s
desired keywords. If users are seeking "widgets in Peoria", having pictures of "widgets
in Peoria" increases the signal and page relevancy to the search engines.
- Having content available to appear in image search results may increase chances of
links or content appearing in regular web search results under the new Universal Search
paradigm.
- Increasing the reasons that users might visit your site and linger on its pages could
help drive up incremental traffic, giving the site more credibility in the search
engine’s eyes.
- Keeping users on your site a little longer once they arrive could help out with
beefing up the natural search quality score that Google’s undoubtedly using as a
ranking factor. Sites/pages where users bail out rapidly would likely generate a negative
ranking signal—it must be bad quality if a user leaves quickly, and search engines
can see when a user clicks the back button quickly and returns to their search
results.
- Providing more information such as images to prospective clients can increase the
chances of conversion. Not only does it help them select one provider out of the crowd,
but merely having the pictures available makes the business seem more open and inviting.
The implicit transparency automatically makes a business appear more honest and
trustworthy. So, having pictures in various online directories may help bring more people
to the business and to the website.
- Having a company’s logo icon associated with their listing in various
directories may enhance a user’s perception of the quality and trustworthiness of
the business.
Ways to use images for local SEO
Here’s a handful of image optimizations which can benefit the overall search
marketing and online marketing programs for local business sites:
- Provide a photo of your business facility location/building on your site. If
there’s a particularly beautiful or interesting view looking out from your
business, you might consider adding that as well. If you’re located near a
particular point of interest or other landmark, having the name of it on your site could
help in associating your business with that area.
- Provide photos of all your products on your site if you haven’t already. Or, if
you’re a service-based business, provide photos of smiling employees providing that
service.
- It’s very common to add in a map or link to a map on a local business’s
website. I think it’s beneficial for SEO to have the map image stored on the same
domain name as the site, though it’s preferable for users to pull in a map
dynamically through one of the major providers so that all the zooming and panning
controls can be available.
- If your local business has its own blog, add a blog map or FeedMap onto it. This will
add a local signal to the blog, and also bring it to the attention of other bloggers in
your local area who are also participating in he FeedMaps.
- Always add ALT text into image tags! Describe the images using valuable keywords. Do
not over-stuff keywords into ALT text! Make it brief, and naturally-written. Using ALT
text is also good for best usability and accessibility as well. For a map image, the ALT
text ought to include the business name and location. Ex: "Acme Hotel at 100 Elm St.,
Springfield, MO 65721"
- Try to also provide similar caption text just below or to the side of images (ideal
for the text to be in the same table cell as the image itself, for close contextual
association with the image). Visible caption text can be longer than ALT text, but it
should still be written in a natural-sounding manner, geared towards consumers.
- Throughout a local site, on all pages the logo image should be linked back to the
homepage with relevant ALT text. I suggest using only the business name, business type,
and city name. Ex: "Jane’s Clip Shop—Hair Salon in Seattle"
- For businesses such as restaurants, it may be beneficial to add photos of celebrities
who have visited the establishment. I see this in all the Asian food restaurants in my
neighborhood, since the Dallas Cowboys practice facility is nearby—those shops take
great pride in snapping photos of the football players and posting them at the checkout
counter. This could translate well for online, too—people perform tons of searches
on celebrity names all the time, so this could bring traffic to a business site which
could convert. The main thing is that it could drive up inbound links, and get users to
linger longer on the site, perhaps bolstering the quality scores.
- For larger companies, or companies involved in more stuff that’s of interest to
the general public, add a press kit on the site, including photos of your business and
products, and provide loose enough licensing to allow users to take and use those images
for their uses as long as they credit you with text below the photo, linking your
business name back to your homepage.
- Lots of online marketers have written articles about engaging with the blogosphere to
drive inbound links. I won’t go into details, but you could offer free products or
services to local bloggers and other reviewers—when you request them to review you,
and when you contact them you could provide them with the link to the press kit or to a
photo of your business, or to a picture of the specific product or service which
they’d be welcome to use in their reviews. Assisting and enabling people to review
you can help build inbound links and clickthroughs from the reviews. (You could do this
with no requirement that reviewers necessarily provide a positive review or
anything—positive or negative, you still win on the SEO front if they hyperlink
their posting back to you.) The link should be back to a related info page about the
product/service on your site, and having the picture included helps optimize the signal
on the blog post as well.
- National chain stores should try to provide a map and a picture of each location on
their store locator pages. There’s no reason why they couldn’t get each of
their locations to email them a digital picture.
- Submit your site’s images to Google’s Image Labeler program, (sign up
through your Google Webmaster Tools account). This will enable your site’s images
to get independently tagged with keywords by the Image Labeler game players. Adding more
trustworthy keyword signals may help your images rank above others.
- Enhance your business listings in major directories by adding images into their
profiles. A number of the main local directories allow this, though some may charge for
it. In other cases, any user could upload their pictures of your business—so I
suggest that you might want to manage your reputation by being first in line to upload
your best pictures before others do. Some of the images from other directories are
getting absorbed into Google Maps and displayed there, even though Google’s also
now allowing users to upload their own.
- Various directories such as Superpages and Yelp have reviews widgets which can be
added onto your site—adding these graphic elements to your site could further
enhance your conversions, if you have sufficiently positive reviews.
- Add Photos of the business facility and/or location into photo sharing sites such as
Flickr, Fotki and 23. Include links pointing back to your website in the image’s
caption text, where possible. When adding pictures of your facility and location into
Flickr, be sure to drag the image onto the mapped location for the address. Also, upload
a picture of each of your products into these photo sharing sites, and then link them
each back to the specific product page. Be sure to use all the available features of the
image sharing sites in addition to the caption text—enter in a title for the
picture, keyword tags, and associate them with any groups, albums, or sets which have a
related theme.
- eBay is chock full of images, and this can be leveraged as a sort of advertising
medium. I know that some businesses don’t consider eBay to be a worthwhile
distribution channel for them, but if you consider them as a promotional vehicle, they
can be quite a good value. All eBay auctions should have an image included in them, and
you should be able to format your product listing to link back to your site. What’s
the local flavor with this? eBay’s advanced search allows consumers to search for
products in their geographic area, so there is a bit of a local association, even though
I expect that very few people make use of this feature. Still, for providers of products
that are particularly heavy and expensive to transport, the local aspect may be very
strong in eBay.
- For reasons similar to eBay, upload listings of products to Google Base, including
pictures, so that your images will appear in Google Products (formerly known as
"Froogle").
- Include a picture in your email campaigns along with a link back to your site.
There’s a really great little Mexican food restaurant here in Coppell, Texas, which
sometimes emails out weekly special notices, and they will include a photo of the dish
that has the special, cheap price. I can tell you—the days they offer those
specials they fill up their restaurant! Of course, you should follow other best practices
for email marketing—only do opt-in for instance. The restaurant in question has a
jar at the front which says something like "Drop your business card in to be notified
about our specials."
- Get your suppliers to link back to you! I’ve seen a great many B2B sites out
there which include a page listing their clients/partners logos. Invite any/all of your
suppliers to do this—squeeze them into committing to it the next time you place an
order or re-sign contracts with them. Provide them with your logo image and ask them to
link it back to your company website in order to pass PageRank to you.
Once a site has accomplished basic SEO and basic Local SEO steps, increasing the
diversity of online signals will be the key to advanced SEO. These image optimization
tips for local SEO can help with promoting the business and ranking of the site through
diversity of signal.
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