Best practice for a business with multiple locations on Google Places?

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Im making a list of potential clients to contact today and out of curiosity I looked up my favorite little pizza place. My suspicions were correct, poor guy dosnt even have a title or meta description, let alone claimed his Google listing.

I found he has 3 different locations in town, all of them have Google Listings. I know this is bad, but what is the best practice for a business like this? Claim one listing? I was gonna help this guy as more of a case study in exchange for a few pizzas a month thinking he wouldnt have a ton of money to throw at marketing but now that I know he has 3 locations I think I'll just take him on as a regular client Anyone have any experience with multiple business locations?
#offline marketing #business #google #locations #multiple #places #practice
  • From what I have read its not bad to have multiple listings if you have more then one location. You just need to make sure the information is accurate on all the listing as far as address and phone numbers.

    You can probably get more reliable information by just searching for that question on Google though.
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    • I actually just got back from my google search about this Rus lol. According to a response in Google:

      You can create a new Places Page for your new restaurant location by selecting "add another business" within your Google Places dashboard. The new page will take a couple of weeks to show up in search.

      Very helpful. I also see that NONE of the other pizza places in the A-G spots have claimed their listing. WTH? My guy is on the 5th page but I think just claiming his listing should help the rank slightly. The onpage SEO and map optimization should knock him out of the park though
  • If a business has multiple locations then they certainly can have multiple listings! What about Dominos, do you think they have multiple listings? Just check and see! As long as your location is real and the information accurate then you should have no problem at all.
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    • Yep, you're right redlegrich! If you dont do it correctly though, following Google Places rules, they penalize you, and thats what I was trying to avoid. I found my answer just by googling though ironically
  • Ha ha, go get 'em adriver! BTW, in regards to pizza places. I live in Redmond WA and a favorite northwest pizza chain is Papa Muprphy's Take and Bake (great pizza). I did a search for them once in Places because I could not remember the address. Well non showed up even though there are at least a dozen around. Upon closer examination their Places listing did not have "pizza" in the title of the listing. So every other pizza place showed but them! Go figure. No biz opp though, they are a corporation based 150 miles away.
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    • Thanks redlegrich!

      Haha, we have a Papa Murphys that just moved into town here! Im still not sure I understand the appeal? I mean the prices are really comparative to other pizza places in town and you still have the added inconvenience of baking it when you get home. Ive never never bought a Papa Murphys but I can tell you my oven gets no where near as hot as a pizza oven so I doubt its gonna taste as good as my local pizza joint's either. Who knows? Its like...I must be missing something with this "Take and Bake" approach? :rolleyes:
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  • Scott's link should actually point here: Google Places Best Practices | Local Marketing Source
  • Places pages pull a lot of information off of backlinks, directories, etc so it's important to be consistent in your listings (NAP) across the web.

    But what concerns me is if you are handling multiple locations for a small business, how can you choose which address to submit to various directory services (which don't normally allow multiple listings)?
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    • Submit multiple listings with different landing pages for each listing. I've never seen a directory that will deny a listing if the URL, phone, and Address are different.
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  • From Google Places Quality Guidelines:
    "Businesses with multiple specializations, such as law firms and doctors, should not create multiple listings to cover all of their specialties. You may create one listing per practitioner, and one listing for the hospital or clinic at large."

    According to Matt Cutts (and my experience), best practice here is having a dedicated landing page for each location. http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/give-each-store-a-url/

    For example, listing 1 points to: joespizza.com/locations/newyork
    Listing 2 points to: joespizza.com/locations/newjersey

    Each landing page would have the second location address on it.

    For lawyers or doctors, give each person their own landing page and you can setup a listing for each person.

    I know this is an old post but the blog by Matt Cutts gives a definitive answer.
    • [ 2 ] Thanks
  • It is the entrepreneur's responsibility to check whether he has multiple listings as this might affect the searches. It can be hard especially when they let the optimization be handled by people offshore (outsourcing has become quite a fad to internet marketers nowadays.) So just check whether the customization done by your PHP programmer is not wasted, in the sense that the SEO strategies you apply online as well as offline are effective.
  • Places pages pull a lot of information off of backlinks, directories, etc so it's important to be consistent in your listings (NAP) across the web.

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    Im making a list of potential clients to contact today and out of curiosity I looked up my favorite little pizza place. My suspicions were correct, poor guy dosnt even have a title or meta description, let alone claimed his Google listing. I found he has 3 different locations in town, all of them have Google Listings. I know this is bad, but what is the best practice for a business like this? Claim one listing? I was gonna help this guy as more of a case study in exchange for a few pizzas a month thinking he wouldnt have a ton of money to throw at marketing but now that I know he has 3 locations I think I'll just take him on as a regular client Anyone have any experience with multiple business locations?