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Local Content Marketing
Ted Yeatts
23 episodes
3 weeks ago
Hi everyone, Ted Yeatts back with you here from Local Content Marketing in Tampa, Florida. We spend a lot of time talking about conquering the Search Engine Results Page and getting found on Google Maps. But the way people search is constantly changing. Today, an increasing number of your potential customers are looking for local services using only their voice, asking questions to smart speakers like Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant. If your Tampa business isn’t optimized for this kind of voice search, you are effectively invisible to a growing segment of our community. Voice search is the ultimate form of local, immediate search. People aren't browsing the internet anymore. They’re intentionally searching for answers. They're asking, "Hey Google, where is the best pizza near me?" or "Siri, call a reliable plumber in South Tampa." The key challenge here is that voice assistants typically give the user only one definitive answer. To be that one answer, you have to nail the fundamentals of local content marketing with a voice-first approach. If you want Google Assistant to recommend you, or even if you want Alexa (which often pulls local data from Yelp and Google) to find you, the absolute, non-negotiable starting point is your Google Business Profile. This is the single most important asset for voice search. Voice assistants rely heavily on the data within your Google Business Profile to determine your location, category, hours, and phone number. To dominate this area, ensure every field is 100% complete and accurate. Critically, you must confirm your business categories are precise. If you are a coffee shop, list yourself as a "Coffee Shop," not just a "Restaurant." Voice assistants use this specific category data to filter results when a user asks for a business type. An incomplete Google Business Profile means you simply won't be considered as the one answer. Next, you need to master the conversational answer. Voice search is conversational, and your website needs to be, too. People ask full questions, not two-word keywords. This means your website content needs to be structured to provide a clear, concise answer to a frequently asked question. You can start by anticipating the exact questions your customers ask. A local auto repair shop should create content titled, "What is the average cost of an oil change in Tampa, FL?" or "How long does it take to replace brake pads?" Structure your content so the direct answer is provided in the first sentence of the paragraph under the question. This makes your content easily digestible for an answer engine, increasing the likelihood that your website is pulled for the Featured Snippet. That’s the snippet Google reads aloud for a voice search response. This strategy requires using what we call long-tail, question-based keywords that include location modifiers. Basically, think in full sentences, just like your customers speak. Another important thing to understand about voice assistants is that they are programmed to recommend the best option, not just any option. They use your online reputation and authority signals to make this choice. So, reviews are critical. The voice assistant will almost always prioritize a business with a high volume of positive reviews. A query like "Where's the best local dentist?" will default to the highest-rated practice. You must make collecting five-star reviews on your Google Business Profile and Yelp (which is used primarily by Siri and Alexa) a non-stop priority. Finally, let’s talk about another important factor specific to voice search and that’s optimizing for “near me” and “open now” searches. The vast majority of voice searches are for immediate needs. Users often ask questions that include phrases like "near me," "open now," or "in the next hour." So, your website must include clear, structured data to address these needs including hours of operation and your specific service area. Ensure the hours listed on your Google Business Profile are always updated and use Schema Markup on your website to clearly label your opening times. This allows the assistants to confidently answer the question: "Are they open?" Explicitly list the neighborhoods in Tampa and surrounding areas that you serve (for example: South Tampa, Seminole Heights, Indian Rocks Beach, Brandon, etc.). This reinforces your local relevance when a user includes a specific neighborhood in their query. Ultimately, getting found on Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant is about recognizing that your website and your Google Business Profile are becoming conversational databases. By making your data clear, your answers concise, and your reputation strong, you ensure that when a local customer asks for help with their voice, your Tampa business is the trusted, immediate answer. Until next time, this is Ted Yeatts reminding you that local content builds trust, and trust builds business.
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Marketing
Business
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All content for Local Content Marketing is the property of Ted Yeatts and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Hi everyone, Ted Yeatts back with you here from Local Content Marketing in Tampa, Florida. We spend a lot of time talking about conquering the Search Engine Results Page and getting found on Google Maps. But the way people search is constantly changing. Today, an increasing number of your potential customers are looking for local services using only their voice, asking questions to smart speakers like Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant. If your Tampa business isn’t optimized for this kind of voice search, you are effectively invisible to a growing segment of our community. Voice search is the ultimate form of local, immediate search. People aren't browsing the internet anymore. They’re intentionally searching for answers. They're asking, "Hey Google, where is the best pizza near me?" or "Siri, call a reliable plumber in South Tampa." The key challenge here is that voice assistants typically give the user only one definitive answer. To be that one answer, you have to nail the fundamentals of local content marketing with a voice-first approach. If you want Google Assistant to recommend you, or even if you want Alexa (which often pulls local data from Yelp and Google) to find you, the absolute, non-negotiable starting point is your Google Business Profile. This is the single most important asset for voice search. Voice assistants rely heavily on the data within your Google Business Profile to determine your location, category, hours, and phone number. To dominate this area, ensure every field is 100% complete and accurate. Critically, you must confirm your business categories are precise. If you are a coffee shop, list yourself as a "Coffee Shop," not just a "Restaurant." Voice assistants use this specific category data to filter results when a user asks for a business type. An incomplete Google Business Profile means you simply won't be considered as the one answer. Next, you need to master the conversational answer. Voice search is conversational, and your website needs to be, too. People ask full questions, not two-word keywords. This means your website content needs to be structured to provide a clear, concise answer to a frequently asked question. You can start by anticipating the exact questions your customers ask. A local auto repair shop should create content titled, "What is the average cost of an oil change in Tampa, FL?" or "How long does it take to replace brake pads?" Structure your content so the direct answer is provided in the first sentence of the paragraph under the question. This makes your content easily digestible for an answer engine, increasing the likelihood that your website is pulled for the Featured Snippet. That’s the snippet Google reads aloud for a voice search response. This strategy requires using what we call long-tail, question-based keywords that include location modifiers. Basically, think in full sentences, just like your customers speak. Another important thing to understand about voice assistants is that they are programmed to recommend the best option, not just any option. They use your online reputation and authority signals to make this choice. So, reviews are critical. The voice assistant will almost always prioritize a business with a high volume of positive reviews. A query like "Where's the best local dentist?" will default to the highest-rated practice. You must make collecting five-star reviews on your Google Business Profile and Yelp (which is used primarily by Siri and Alexa) a non-stop priority. Finally, let’s talk about another important factor specific to voice search and that’s optimizing for “near me” and “open now” searches. The vast majority of voice searches are for immediate needs. Users often ask questions that include phrases like "near me," "open now," or "in the next hour." So, your website must include clear, structured data to address these needs including hours of operation and your specific service area. Ensure the hours listed on your Google Business Profile are always updated and use Schema Markup on your website to clearly label your opening times. This allows the assistants to confidently answer the question: "Are they open?" Explicitly list the neighborhoods in Tampa and surrounding areas that you serve (for example: South Tampa, Seminole Heights, Indian Rocks Beach, Brandon, etc.). This reinforces your local relevance when a user includes a specific neighborhood in their query. Ultimately, getting found on Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant is about recognizing that your website and your Google Business Profile are becoming conversational databases. By making your data clear, your answers concise, and your reputation strong, you ensure that when a local customer asks for help with their voice, your Tampa business is the trusted, immediate answer. Until next time, this is Ted Yeatts reminding you that local content builds trust, and trust builds business.
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Marketing
Business
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Five Content Mistakes That Make You Invisible Online
Local Content Marketing
5 minutes 40 seconds
3 months ago
Five Content Mistakes That Make You Invisible Online
Hi everyone, Ted Yeatts back with you here from Local Content Marketing in Tampa, Florida. It's a frustrating reality for many small business owners: you put effort into creating content for your website or social media, but it feels like nobody is seeing it. Your business is doing great things in the community, yet online, you remain invisible. Today, I want to talk about five common content mistakes that lead to this exact problem and what you can do to get back on the map. The first major mistake is ignoring local relevance. Your business is in Tampa, but your content could be for anywhere. If your blog posts, podcasts and videos are too generic; and they fail to mention local issues, landmarks, or events, search engines will have a harder time connecting you with the local people who are searching for your services. Your content needs to be about and for your community. It should address the specific needs and interests of customers in Tampa, using local keywords and topics to build a powerful local connection. Another major mistake is being inconsistent. This is a pretty common problem. You might start a blog or a podcast with a burst of energy, publish a few pieces, and then stop for months. This sporadic effort doesn't build momentum or trust. Consistency is key because it signals to search engines that your website is active and a reliable source of fresh information. It also trains your audience to expect new content from you, which keeps your business top-of-mind. A steady stream of content, even if it's a short weekly update, is far more effective than an occasional flood of articles. A third mistake is creating low-quality, or "thin", content. This is content that offers no real value. It might be a short blog post that barely scratches the surface of a topic or an article that is simply a sales pitch in disguise. It might also be things like memes or shallow trends. Content needs to be genuinely helpful, insightful, and comprehensive to earn a reader’s attention and a search engine’s trust. Content that merely skims a topic or isn’t really connected to what you do at all, is a wasted opportunity. It will not rank well and it will fail to build the authority necessary to be seen as an expert. Next, a common error is focusing on yourself, not your target audience. Many businesses make the mistake of creating content that is all about them, their products, or their latest achievements. While that has a place, it should not be the main focus of your content marketing. Your content should answer your customers’ questions, solve their problems, and provide information that benefits them directly. It should speak to what they want. When your content is a resource for your community, it organically earns trust and brings people to your business. Finally, a huge mistake is neglecting your Google Business Profile. You might be spending time on social media content, but the two most important places to post are your own website and your Google Business Profile. An inactive Google Business Profile with no recent photos, posts, or responses to Q&A can hurt your visibility. Google prioritizes businesses that are actively engaged on its own platform. Regularly posting updates and photos to your profile is a simple, free way to signal to Google that your business deserves a top spot in local search results. By avoiding these five mistakes and focusing on creating consistent, high-quality, and locally relevant content that serves your audience, you can make your Tampa business visible and trusted online. Until next time, this is Ted Yeatts reminding you that local content builds trust, and trust builds business.
Local Content Marketing
Hi everyone, Ted Yeatts back with you here from Local Content Marketing in Tampa, Florida. We spend a lot of time talking about conquering the Search Engine Results Page and getting found on Google Maps. But the way people search is constantly changing. Today, an increasing number of your potential customers are looking for local services using only their voice, asking questions to smart speakers like Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant. If your Tampa business isn’t optimized for this kind of voice search, you are effectively invisible to a growing segment of our community. Voice search is the ultimate form of local, immediate search. People aren't browsing the internet anymore. They’re intentionally searching for answers. They're asking, "Hey Google, where is the best pizza near me?" or "Siri, call a reliable plumber in South Tampa." The key challenge here is that voice assistants typically give the user only one definitive answer. To be that one answer, you have to nail the fundamentals of local content marketing with a voice-first approach. If you want Google Assistant to recommend you, or even if you want Alexa (which often pulls local data from Yelp and Google) to find you, the absolute, non-negotiable starting point is your Google Business Profile. This is the single most important asset for voice search. Voice assistants rely heavily on the data within your Google Business Profile to determine your location, category, hours, and phone number. To dominate this area, ensure every field is 100% complete and accurate. Critically, you must confirm your business categories are precise. If you are a coffee shop, list yourself as a "Coffee Shop," not just a "Restaurant." Voice assistants use this specific category data to filter results when a user asks for a business type. An incomplete Google Business Profile means you simply won't be considered as the one answer. Next, you need to master the conversational answer. Voice search is conversational, and your website needs to be, too. People ask full questions, not two-word keywords. This means your website content needs to be structured to provide a clear, concise answer to a frequently asked question. You can start by anticipating the exact questions your customers ask. A local auto repair shop should create content titled, "What is the average cost of an oil change in Tampa, FL?" or "How long does it take to replace brake pads?" Structure your content so the direct answer is provided in the first sentence of the paragraph under the question. This makes your content easily digestible for an answer engine, increasing the likelihood that your website is pulled for the Featured Snippet. That’s the snippet Google reads aloud for a voice search response. This strategy requires using what we call long-tail, question-based keywords that include location modifiers. Basically, think in full sentences, just like your customers speak. Another important thing to understand about voice assistants is that they are programmed to recommend the best option, not just any option. They use your online reputation and authority signals to make this choice. So, reviews are critical. The voice assistant will almost always prioritize a business with a high volume of positive reviews. A query like "Where's the best local dentist?" will default to the highest-rated practice. You must make collecting five-star reviews on your Google Business Profile and Yelp (which is used primarily by Siri and Alexa) a non-stop priority. Finally, let’s talk about another important factor specific to voice search and that’s optimizing for “near me” and “open now” searches. The vast majority of voice searches are for immediate needs. Users often ask questions that include phrases like "near me," "open now," or "in the next hour." So, your website must include clear, structured data to address these needs including hours of operation and your specific service area. Ensure the hours listed on your Google Business Profile are always updated and use Schema Markup on your website to clearly label your opening times. This allows the assistants to confidently answer the question: "Are they open?" Explicitly list the neighborhoods in Tampa and surrounding areas that you serve (for example: South Tampa, Seminole Heights, Indian Rocks Beach, Brandon, etc.). This reinforces your local relevance when a user includes a specific neighborhood in their query. Ultimately, getting found on Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant is about recognizing that your website and your Google Business Profile are becoming conversational databases. By making your data clear, your answers concise, and your reputation strong, you ensure that when a local customer asks for help with their voice, your Tampa business is the trusted, immediate answer. Until next time, this is Ted Yeatts reminding you that local content builds trust, and trust builds business.