Data: Local search trends from 2017-2018
Key local search trends and tips based on data from more than 300,000 customer business locations active from Jan 1, 2017 to Dec 31, 2018.
Key local search trends and tips based on data from more than 300,000 customer business locations active from Jan 1, 2017 to Dec 31, 2018.
We talk a lot about local search and local search trends here at SEW and in the industry as a whole.
How have consumers changed the way they interact with local businesses? How can local businesses respond? And what can we anticipate about future trends?
Yext recently released some interesting findings on local search trends based on their internal data.
They analyzed a sample of more than 300,000 customer business locations active from January 1, 2017 to December 31, 2018.
What can we learn from this data about how consumer search behavior changed in 2018 versus 2017? And what might these changes tell us about the year ahead?
We spoke with Zahid Zakaria, Yext’s Senior Director of Customer Insights and Analytics. Zahid leads the data team behind these new findings.
He’s been at Yext since August 2015, and spends nearly all of his time focused on client data. How can they unify data? What are the right metrics? How does an impression on a listing compare to an impression on a page? How can they understand the insights in local search trends?
These questions and more led them to this analysis. They’d seen that the local search market has been consistently growing, but wanted to find what insights demonstrated that growth.
“We deal with tremendous data here at Yext,” Zahid said. “We power more than a million businesses globally. And we do quite a bit to ensure that all the work we do is based on a very complete data set.”
For these local search trends, the data set includes:
Timing: Every data point included in this set remained live for the entirety of January 1, 2017 — December 31, 2018. So it wasn’t affected by clients opening new locations, etc.
Distribution: They examined business primarily located in the US, and also had significant representation of businesses in Western Europe (mainly the UK, Germany, and France).
In other words, quite a clean and thorough data set to work with.
They examined how metrics compared from the 2018 calendar year versus those same metrics for the same businesses for the 2017 calendar year.
The biggest takeaway was that consumers are interacting more with businesses via local search and local listings. Local interactions as a whole have increased.
Perhaps because search technology has gotten better, perhaps because SEOs are nailing it, but this rang true across the board, including Google, Alexa, and Siri.
As Zahid said, “There is unbelievable consumer interaction data happening on websites.”
What do those interactions look like?
In other words, the volume of reviews per business nearly doubled this past year.
Whatever the reason, consumers seem to be feeling more comfortable treating an online business page as the representation of the business itself. And they seem to show little reserve in expressing their opinions there.
Beyond that, though, consumers take time and effort to leave a comment. They want to return the interaction.
And these brand interactions only increase the value of focusing on these listings.
“AI-enabled services” includes any consumer-based service powered by AI.
This could be traditional search, voice search, voice assistants, chatbots, Google, Alexa, Siri, Facebook, Yelp, Bing, etc.
Yext found that across nearly all industries, businesses have seen a greater proportion of their brand interactions happening via AI-enabled services rather than on their own websites.
73% percent of high-intent traffic occurs off a business’s own website.
Most businesses see 2.7 times the traffic on third-party sites verses on their own website.
(Caveat: these two stats were actually isolated to May 2017, in a survey of 20,107 business locations. We’re including them here as they represent a portion of the broader data set and local search trends as a whole.)
Consumers may find a business in an off-site interaction. They then would visit a business’s local page to take action.
This represents a fundamental shift in how consumers find out about and interact with a business.
Marc Ferrentino, Chief Strategy Officer at Yext, commented on this point:
“For twenty years, the brand website was the entry point for customers. People would go to the homepage and navigate to find the information they needed.
We’ve found that the customer acquisition funnel is no longer on the business website. Brand interactions in third-party AI-powered services are rising across the board as consumers engage with businesses off-site.
By the time they get to a business website, they’re ready to transact, and go straight to a local landing page to do so, often bypassing the homepage entirely.”
Within search results, there was a 20.1% increase in clicks to call, clicks for directions, and clicks to a business’s website.
Yext called these “Customer actions per business location.”
As we’ve seen since the beginning of local search, many consumers search in “micro-moments” of need. They’re often ready to make a purchase, walk into a store, place an order, etc.
Yext’s data shows that this trend is becoming even more prevalent.
Some businesses have “transactional” local pages, where consumers can book appointments, place orders, sign up for information, etc.
Increasingly, these pages are where the action is.
On this, Zahid elaborated, “When I as a consumer click the website link that shows up in a listing profile, what do I do? Surprisingly, it’s not get directions or make a phone call. It’s actually everything else.”
Consumers, it seems, increasingly want to complete their task — whatever they went searching for — via the page itself, without having to call or visit a location.
At the beginning of local search, we met consumers who wanted to make a phone call or get directions.
What we’re seeing as a trend, however, is that consumers don’t want to call to make an appointment, or get directions to a store to buy something.
They want to take those actions from the local page itself.
Zahid advises:
“Keeping that listing local is critical. A brand who takes a consumer from a local listing to their homepage just took that consumer from a local experience to a non-local experience.
For example, say I want to go get a haircut and the first thing I see when I land on that website is the exact wait time. It’s much better at capturing that micro moment of intent and turning it into a conversion.
That could be an online conversion, like in financial services, maybe requesting quotes. Or an offline conversion — maybe I just walked into the store, or made a phone call, booked that time to get my hair cut.”
So we’ve seen the above local search trends. Customers interact more with local business pages. They leave reviews. They take actions — increasingly beyond just calling and getting directions. And they come through a different point of entry than they have for the last twenty years.
With that information, what can we do moving forward? Zahid pulled these four takeaways.
Based on this data, what can we predict about the rest of the year? And what can we do with that information?
Zahid drew three primary conclusions.
“So the algorithm updates? Analyze your listings data. See how that changed from your organic data. See how they interact.
From the the last update we had some really interesting stories of clients that won and clients that lost. It’s very interesting to see how some that won had made great use of things like schema. They’ve really gone above and beyond.
Looking at the interaction of what you do on your local page and how that impacts your listing visibility is incredibly important. These two properties work together. Optimize engagement not just on listings, but on landing pages. Think of them as one thing that you’re optimizing.
That’s one. Make sure you understand those interactions.”
“Don’t forget about the world of voice and conversational AI as you think about your content strategy.
As we see the shift to voice assistants, think about how you’ll win here.
Answer the actual questions. Pull from inward sources. What are consumers looking for? What can we answer?
If you think from that perspective, you’ll be poised to win.”
“Look inwardly at data hygiene and what you need to get that information out there
Think five years in advance. Make a roadmap of how all these answers sit. Think about it now to carve a strategy.”
Given the general influx of data marketers have to deal with, and given that Zahid heads up a data team that has to deal with swarms of data points from millions of individual businesses — I couldn’t resist throwing in this question.
His answer? No secret sauce.
Like most of us, he first turns to Google Analytics and Google Search Console to look at his own website data and ask what trends are there.
Then he moves to other website sources: Google My Business, Facebook, etc. He’ll also use listings such as Yext’s own Intelligent Search Tracker, Brightedge, and various other rank trackers.
After that, he’ll look at third party industry level sources of information: Google Trends, publications.
Taking all of those things together, he’ll take a holistic look at what’s happening.
“Cleaning data is a lot like cooking,” he explained. “The first step is sourcing your ingredients. Source your data sources. Don’t just cook with one ingredient.”
One of the most challenging things?
“Merging a URL with a listing, and looking at a lot of different data sources together. A listing is not a URL. Some URLs are associated with a location or have UTMs directed to them. Tools like Yext help you unify that with the object as a core concept. Otherwise, you should do a mapping exercise. Where did all your data come from, what all do you have to look at?”
In closing, Zahid gave one friendly caveat: These are trends, not benchmarks.
“What we know about this data is that it’s a reflection of a lot of things. Trends that are coming. For this data, all these customers were on Yext. They saw certain growth, certain increases. But we think it’s a pretty good reflection of the trends. Use this as a directional thing. Not the exact number — you don’t need to compare yourself exactly. Use it to indicate where you should be going.”