{"id":5112,"date":"2022-05-01T12:10:29","date_gmt":"2022-05-01T17:10:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sourcelinemedia.com\/?p=5112"},"modified":"2023-04-28T13:07:57","modified_gmt":"2023-04-28T18:07:57","slug":"how-does-google-rank-local-businesses","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sourcelinemedia.com\/how-does-google-rank-local-businesses\/","title":{"rendered":"How Does Google Rank Local Businesses in 2023 and Beyond?"},"content":{"rendered":"\n\n\t

Over the past 5 years,\u00a0 Google changed how they would rank local businesses dramatically. I’ll go over a quick history and then cover the major search ranking factors. I’ll also explain why optimization is actually a continuous process. Gone are the days of hiring an SEO guy to get your business website ranked and then do nothing for 10 years. The game has changed.\u00a0 Find out more below.<\/p>\n

SEO – The Early Days<\/h3>\n

The core factors for SEO have always been keywords on the website and links from external sites. From 2000 to 2010, Google (and other search engines) consistently fought spam from SEO services trying to game the system. SEO’s would buy thousands of links from low quality websites and use black hat techniques to spam keywords all over their web page. This worked for a short time.<\/p>\n

From 2000 to 2010, Google made a lot of changes, but SEO professionals often stayed ahead of Google and could usually find ways to help clients rank. Soon, Google found more effective (and complex) methods to rank websites that made it much harder for people to “game the search engines.”<\/p>\n

Google Panda and Penguin<\/h3>\n

Around 2011, Google implemented the biggest change in its history. Two major algorithm updates known as Panda and Penguin. The history of these changes is well documented. The easiest way to explain the impact of Panda\/Penguin is that poor page layouts and bad quality external links would penalize sites.\u00a0 Your website would drop in rankings. Even websites that did nothing wrong got hit hard because it shifted the way Google viewed websites. The end result is that site quality made a bigger difference than before.<\/p>\n

Local Search Changes<\/h3>\n

From 2012 to 2014, to rank local businesses, Google started changing results based on “local intent.” If someone was searching for “roofing service near me” they saw local results<\/a> instead of a list of shingle manufacturers and Amazon products.\u00a0 In 2014, Google implemented the Pigeon update,<\/a> which was the major shift in local business search.<\/p>\n

Also in June 2014, Google launched the Google My Business (GMB)<\/strong> program, which published information about local companies. This allowed them to claim their business listing<\/a> and add information, much like a Facebook business profile.\u00a0 GMB changed the game for several reasons. Your website use to be the only way Google could learn about your business, and it would factor in the majority of search signals. GMB and local search algorithms added new core ranking factors, such as:<\/p>\n