Today I’m here to talk about local search in Canada. There is a huge difference between USA and Canada and I think the major factors are:
-Population density
-Brand recognition
-Strategic SEO/SEM decisions taken by the nationwide leader to stay on top of the local search market (PagesJaunes.ca // YellowPages.ca).
-Strong direct force marketing and telemarketing from the nationwide leader, especially across the Quebec province.
Those factors directly impact the relevance of the directories. On paper, everyone knows the “YellowPages / PagesJaunes”. And the same thing also happens on the Internet. In Canada, every single YellowPages / PagesJaunes listing is ALSO included in Google Local, a smart move from them. Also, announced for mid-april (although they will probably officialy launch in mid-june), their new research method: keyword-based research! Although I have some strong concerns about their search engine depth and quality of queries, I’m more than willing to give it a try.
I’ve already mentioned that the YellowPages.ca are responsible of 36% of local search across Canada and ~50% across Quebec province. I think that the synchronization of Google Local with them really helped them get to a valuable position. For my part, I can even say that searching online on the YellowPages is way simpler / faster than using their paperbased version.
As for visibility / traffic, I can use our company as a great example. They offer, since a couple months, a great online product called “Interactive Banner” on their site. What does it means? It means that you can pick up to 3 different categories on their directory and it will show you as a “national or provincial leader” for your industry. Indeed, if you search for any of the 3 following categories (Internet – Web Page Design, Internet Consultants or Internet Electronic Solutions provider), no matter where you did your query across the Quebec province (nationwide or city-limited packages are also available). This has generated several leads through calls to our office and visits/conversions on our website. Also, they provide a monthly report on your trafic and statistics (they partnered up with WebSideStory) to offer a detailed report.
Don’t get me wrong, this advertizing is expensive, although I think that for B2B and B2C local services, it can deliver great results if your industry is often queried through YellowPages and alike.
Another major player in Canada (Quebec province for most of its audience) is the search engine + local directory “La toile du Québec“. This search engine kinda replace all the minor search engines that we see in the US but that are pretty much invisible in Canada, especially in Quebec. Studies vary but it has been reported that it is responsible of 4-10% of the trafic, and that its conversion rates seem to be higher because the audience was more targeted. For our business, it is an important consideration… and it can bring 200-500 targeted visitors to your site every month (if you go for the VIP option which cost 69,95$/year) while providing a worthy backlink (basically, its a good referrer AND a good backlink, which is rare these days!).
On my next post: I will focus on local/niche directories which are not considered mainstream, but more focused on specific industries, like real estate, jobs, freelance, trade centers. Any suggestions of topics you would like covered?