Content Marketing for Local Businesses
-
Hey guys!
As someone who works with a number of local businesses (with localized target markets) I find that developing ideas for content marketing can be VERY difficult. I like the idea of creating local guides, local event info etc, but what other ways can we create content for a localized target market? For example: I have an OBGYN client that we'd love to create content for that is related to their niche (women's health), but don't want to promote or create content for national audience. That would seem incredibly wasteful.
Would love to hear ideas on how to create targeted content for a local audience!
Thanks
-
Hi Ricky,
Egol's suggestion regarding interviews is really a good one and, if done with care, would produce some very high quality content.
Another suggestion: if the medical practice has a blog, how about a weekly or monthly roundup-type post of local women's health/fitness events? Things like marathons, free yoga classes, healthy cooking classes, free lectures on relevant topics, volunteer opportunities, breast cancer fundraisers, etc. If the blogger can set up alerts on things like this, he/she can aggregate the data and then go a step beyond this by adding something fresh to each roundup - a personal perspective on the week's/month's opportunities for better living for local women.
Just one idea, but something that could be added into the mix to improve the usefulness of the website to local women.
-
I was looking at it from more of a social media / inbound perspective. So, you might show up in the 7th-9th spot from Venice, but you wouldn't get much traffic organically - as you suggested.
One thing that have been successful for me locally is doing interviews with the event organizers. I ask them to post the interview on their social media, and link to it from their website. Most non-profits are more than happy to do that in turn for increased exposure. Running event organizers, especially for new events, are usually open to doing the same. I do this with car dealerships quite often, and pretty much everyone hates car dealerships.
You could do a mixture of local and informational content to get the best of both worlds.
-
Hi Cody,
I agree that local guides etc. won't do much in the way of building your reputation as an expert, but they are often great ways to attract relevant traffic from your target market while exposing them to your brand and brand value proposition. I know that the competition for local terms is less, but how do you put a local angle on a post relating to "What Age Should Girls Should Start Going to the Gynecologist"? If we create content like that, we'd be competing nationally. I know Google biases search to local business, but not for informational type content, right? That would leave us competing nationally vs top health sites that had content related to the topic. With Google Hummingbird I see less and less impact moving forward on creating content specifically for exact match long tail phrases.
I guess creating informational type content and publicizing the content locally could work, but I don't think we'd have a chance to attract much traffic from search doing that. It would have to be mainly a case of content publicity locally...
-
The intent for content marketing is to educate your audience, as well as demonstrate yourself as an expert in the field. Writing about the local dog park won't exactly do either for you.
I'd suggest writing about what people are actually interested in in relation to whatever your client does. You can get ideas for content by going through different Women's Health Forums, and Yahoo Answers.
Just doing some quick research I see that there are tons of searches for long tail variations of "How often should I go to the gynecologist." When you boil that down to just your city there is far less, but it is still something women have shown interest in. Just off the top of my head I would suggest writing content for things like "What age should girls start going to the Gynecologist," "What to expect at your Gyno examination" and "When should you go to the Gynecologist."
One of the Chiropractors I work with posted a few videos on a specific treatment he does that not everyone can do a while back. He has had people travel great distances to get that treatment from him, and it even helped him get a foot in the door to be a Chiropractor for some of the Winter Olympic athletes. All from creating content he knew his readers would like to see.
-
Women's health issues can vary geographically. Those of concern in your area can be different from those in other areas.
In most communities there are a few physicians, professors, social service workers, who are experts on this type of topic. They might be found at universities, hospitals, physicians offices, home health providers, county/city government.
You could develop a content plan that includes interviews with several of these types of professionals, each sharing his/her expertise on one or more issues in your area. The physicians or administrators at your client's office might be able to help select these people for a number of topics. Perhaps they would want to do the interview instead of you because they are conversant on these topics and familiar with these people.
The professional being interviewed can be a source of the questions because they know the issues and know what message they want to get out. This might even be done by questionnaire, asking them to identify a few important issues and elaborate. IMPORTANT: Each interview should conclude with "where to get help / more information" on the issues covered.
Their website could become a rich source of information. It could have charts/maps/time lines showing issues compared among age groups and other demographic variables. It might be referenced by government agencies, schools, health care organizations. If done superbely it would be a real white hat for the client to wear.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Deleting low quality content
Hi there. I have a question about deleting low quality content pages hopefully anyone could share your feedback on. We have a b2c ecom store and Product Pages are our target LDPs from search. We've built many information pages that are related to different products in the long past that are linked to related product pages. Problem is many of them lack so-called quality content in terms of volume and quality and they aren't helping. Especially since early this year, organic traffic started declining after having peaked in Feb. So I'm considering deleting those we and Moz consider low quality that are not receiving search traffic. Firstly, is that a good idea? Secondly, how should I go about it? Just delete them and put a redirect so that deleted pages will point to related pages or even homepage? Looking forward to any expert input.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Yuji_m
-Yuji1 -
Penalties for duplicate content
Hello!We have a website with various city tours and activities listed on a single page (http://vaiduokliai.lt/). The list changes accordingly depending on filtering (birthday in Vilnius, bachelor party in Kaunas, etc.). The URL doesn't change. Content changes dynamically. We need to make URL visible for each category, then optimize it for different keywords (for example city tours in Vilnius for a list of tours and activities in Vilnius with appropriate URL /tours-in-Vilnius).The problem is that activities overlap very often in different categories, so there will be a lot of duplicate content on different pages. In such case, how severe penalty could be for duplicate content?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | jpuzakov0 -
Duplicate content within sections of a page but not full page duplicate content
Hi, I am working on a website redesign and the client offers several services and within those services some elements of the services crossover with one another. For example, they offer a service called Modelling and when you click onto that page several elements that build up that service are featured, so in this case 'mentoring'. Now mentoring is common to other services therefore will feature on other service pages. The page will feature a mixture of unique content to that service and small sections of duplicate content and I'm not sure how to treat this. One thing we have come up with is take the user through to a unique page to host all the content however some features do not warrant a page being created for this. Another idea is to have the feature pop up with inline content. Any thoughts/experience on this would be much appreciated.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | J_Sinclair0 -
Content per page?
We used to have an articles worth of content in a scroll box created by our previous SEO, the problem was that it was very much keyword stuffed, link stuffed and complete crap. We then removed this and added more content above the fold, the problem I have is that we are only able to add 150 - 250 words above the fold and a bit of that is repetition across the pages. Would we benefit from putting an article at the bottom of each of our product pages, and when I say article I mean high quality in depth content that will go into a lot more detail about the product, history and more. Would this help our SEO (give the page more uniqueness and authority rather than 200 - 250 word pages). If I could see one problem it would be would an articles worth of content be ok at the bottom of the page and at that in a div tab or scroll box.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | BobAnderson0 -
Best practices for a local business move
My client is a chiropractic office that will be moving to the next town over in about 3 months. What are people's best practices on how to best accomplish this SEO-wise so as to not lose too much in terms of rankings, current organic traffic and citation listings?
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | easystreetint0 -
Local TLD Domain and languages.
Hello all, I have a local tld domain in spanish for .es. Now i want to translate the site content to english and german. What do you advice? 1.1 www.domainname.es/en/ and www.domainname.es/de/ 1.2 en.domainname.es and de.domainname.es Or buy a new .com domain and set it like this: 2.1. www.domainname.com and www.domainname.com/de (english will be main language) 2.2. en.domainname.com and de.domainname.com Or the last option ( the one i think it's better) Local TLDs 3.1 www.domainame.es , www.domainname.co.uk , and domainname.de In this last case , the domain name is KW + Brand , should i also translate the KW? For example: www.heladosolimpia.es , www.icecreamolimpia.co.uk Thanks for your help.
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Barbio0 -
Content Marketing: Should we build a separate website or built in site within the Website itself?
Hi Mozzers, Client: Big carpet cleaner player in the carpet cleaning industry Main Goal: Creating good content to Get more organic traffic to our main site Structure of the extra content: It will act like a blog but will be differentiated from the regular site by not selling anything but just creating good content. The look and design will be different from the client's site. SEO question: In terms of SEO, what would be the most beneficial for us to do, should we built in this new section/site outside or inside the client's site? I personally think that it should be separated from the main site because of the main reasons: A followed link to the main site Anchor texts implementation linking back to our service pages If we would to choose to build in this content, it would be highly beneficial for getting organic traffic within the main site but I am afraid this will not provide us any link juice since anchor texts won't be accounted the same since all of those would be located in the Nav bar of the main site. Can someone tell me what would be the best in terms of SEO? P.S: My boss doesn't agree with me and would rather go the second option (build in within the main site) that's why i am asking you guys what would be the most beneficial? Thank you Guys
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | Ideas-Money-Art0 -
Geo-Targeting Content
I'm to get some ideas on restructuring existing content for geo-targeting. Example: Botox Page Tis is a hypothetical situation -- laser cosmetics clinic in Atlanta trying to rank for Atlanta Botox. The existing content is general information about botox procedures. The problem is editing the content to add Atlanta to the H1 tag and page copy. I'm wondering if there are some techniques to make the edits flow better? My idea is to add a geo-page for each procedure, but I'm wondering if this might interrupt or confuse users in the navigation funnel. Your thoughts? Thanks!
Intermediate & Advanced SEO | | 190west0