Map Pack Tip - Spy on Your Competitors to See Why They Have the Edge in Local Search Results
It's not difficult, nor is there anything shady about keeping an eye on your competitors'. Whether it's their website, or Map Pack results & the details on their Google Business Profile. You can copy their success & gain new ideas along the way.
How can I spy on my local competition and copy their success online? Do I need expensive SEO tools to do it?
There's a number of things you can easily do to spy on your local competition, and it doesn't necessarily require any expensive SEO tools. It's true that you will glean a lot more information if you do have those tools, but they aren't necessary for entry-level online spying. Before we continue, keep in mind we do offer competitive analysis here at Golden Oak Local SEO. We charge money for it, but it's an incredible amount of information.
Let's first go over the main categories you'd possibly want to consider for your spy campaign.
1) Map Pack results in Local search
2) Website strength/performance
3) Social Media
Even without any fancy SEO tools, you can pretty easily get an idea of what your competition is up to. Let's elaborate.
Map Pack Local Search Results - How to size up the competition
We'll start with the most important thing, your local search map pack results. A couple important things to keep in mind about this process are: 1) It's important to search using incognito mode (or private browsing) while doing research to avoid your search history influencing results. And 2) Repeat these searches on both PC and mobile platforms. While local mobile search results are more important than PC based, the local search results and business profiles display differently on PC vs mobile platforms, and it's important to see everything possible.
Find relevant keywords to search in these "incognito" searches, look no further than your Google Business Profile (GBP). In the performance tab you can see which keyword searches bring users to your GBP in the local search results. Use some of the most commonly used keywords to see who's crushing those results. Let's spy on them!
Some things to look for on their GBPs are: Do they have search keywords & location names in their business name? Are they legit? For instance, a company named "Knoxville Towing" will perform better on search than another towing company named "Doug's Mobile Rescue" because it has the main keyword + location in the name.
If their business name with those details is legit, it just means they're smart. However sometimes a local business will try to game the system, and add keywords & locations that don't reflect the real business name. If your competitors are doing this, you can report it as an incorrect business name and possibly get the name changed back to it's actual name. If you're doing that yourself, just know anyone can easily change that.
Moving on from business name, click on the services tab and have a look at the business categories, services offered, and the descriptions for those services. Often times you will have ideas on how to change those details on your own profile to copy or even outwit your competition.
Pictures are also important, a business that has a steady stream of relevant and interesting pics being posted to their profile will be rewarded by the search algorithms. Work in progress, staff, or before & after pics are all fantastic and should be added regularly. How many do your competitors have posted? How many do you have?
Pictures being posted in customer reviews are one of the best things. Google loves to see that. Do your competitors have lots of reviews with pics? Do you? How can you think to possibly get more? On the topic of reviews, don't get discouraged if your competition has lots more. Reviews are important, and you want as many as possible, however the total number isn't critical. Every day I see search results where the top result consistently has less than those that follow. Do not, under any circumstances, buy Google Reviews.
Another thing to check out is, are your competitors using any of the GBP features that you're not? Scheduling links? Menu link? Product listings being used within the GBP? Social media accounts linked? They're likely getting a leg-up on you in the local map pack search results because of that if they're the only ones doing those.
Profile Update posts on GBP is a contested topic. Most local SEOs think it's not worth the time, however in a recent article we did, we showed the very in-depth study that proves otherwise. Do it. Here's our formula that we've used very successfully. Post original pics on each post. Make the pic and the post highly relevant to a specific blog topic or service that you can point to on your website. Use the "Learn More" option on the post, and enter the URL of the blog post or page on your website that compliments the topic of the post. Use relevant keywords in the very first sentence of the post text and throughout the rest as well.
You can also share those GBP posts. They each have a specific URL. Share those links, post them on other social medias. Try to get some traffic!
Spying on Your Competitors Website - What to Look for if You Don't Have SEO Tools
Spying on your competitors' website without any SEO tools can be a bit like feeling around blind, but you can pretty easily get an idea of several things very easily just by being observant.
While you may not care to count them one-by-one, get an idea of how many pages your competitor has on their website. You can click through all the pages on most local business sites in a matter of minutes, whereas in a very competitive industry, or a very densely-populated area it may require more effort.
Look on the pages themselves also, do the URLs of the page have keywords and/or locations? Copy & paste the text on the page into something like this word counter tool. It can show you word density. For instance in our previous towing example, word counter can take a whole page & break down how many times, and at what percentages certain keywords such as "towing" or "Nashville" were used.
Are they using website features you're not? Online ordering? Helpful guide download? How-to videos? Take it all in, Google is looking at all these things, and at user behavior. If they see an increasing number of users going to your competitors website to order online, and a decrease in users interacting with the other business profiles that don't offer online ordering, are you really surprised they're crushing you in the local map pack search results?
Frequent content adding such as blogging has shown to produce massive results as well. Especially if you're leveraging the technique I mentioned earlier. Basically write content whether it's service pages on the website, blog articles, or ideally both. Write a lot about the services you offer, the location you're in, and post about it constantly on your GBP while linking from those posts along the way. This builds fantastic local relevance and keeps you in the good graces of the Google local map pack search result overlords.
I'm not going to get into the details of spying on your competitors social media habits. That should be pretty self-explanatory.
