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How Business Listings Are Made

As a local business owner, it’s important for your business to be
listed in Google’s search results. But how do you fix your business
listing if the information is incorrect?

In this week’s edition
of Local Whiteboard Friday, David Mihm sheds some light on the
complicated process that Google uses to create its business listings.

For reference, here’s a still of David’s whiteboard diagram.

Video Transcription

“Hey everybody. Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard
Friday and in particular a local edition of Whiteboard Friday. I’m David Mihm,
the Director of Local Search Strategy for SEOMoz, and I’m here to answer one of
the most common questions that we get asked which is: “Hey, how come my business information
is showing up incorrectly at Google?”

So they type in the name of their business, and there’s
either a phone number wrong or their address is wrong or sometimes the marker
for where their business is, is in the wrong place. So I want to try to answer
how Google generates its business listings.

So the first step that a lot of business owners take, which
is a great step to take, is they go directly to Google. Google offers a
dashboard for businesses that Google Places as well as Google+, there are kind
of two ways into it right now. A business owner goes and he enters his business
name, his address, his phone number, some categories, maybe the hours that he
operates his business, and he tells that directly to Google. Of course the
expectation is, “Oh well, I’m the business owner. I’m telling Google this
information. That’s how it should show up when Google spits out a search
result.” But in reality that’s not actually how Google assembles a business
listing. So I’m going to erase these lines, and I’ll try to walk you guys
through how this process actually happens.

So for many of you, if you’re business owners, you go to one
of these places, the Google Places dashboard or the Google+ local dashboard,
and you tell Google about your business and you find before you even get there
Google knows about your business. It can guess at what your address and phone
number are for example.

So you might wonder where Google is finding that
information. Actually in the United States
there are three companies that aggregate business data for United States
businesses. Again, this is the United
States only, but in this country those guys
are Infogroup, Neustar and Axiom. So Google buys or leases information from at
least one of these companies and pulls it into its index. But it doesn’t go
right into Google’s index. It actually goes into a massive server cluster that
takes it into consideration as one data source.

So not only is the business owner one of these data sources,
but you would have one data provider, maybe Infogroup is another data source.
Neustar might be another data source and so and so forth. So imagine this
graphic going quite far to the right, even off of the whiteboard just with some
of these data aggregation services.

That all gets assembled at a server cluster, somewhere in Mountain View let’s just
say, that compiles kind of all of this information. These however, aren’t even
the only places that Google gets data. These guys, these data sources actually
also, in addition to sending information to Google, they send data out to a
whole bunch of other sites across the web. So Yelp, for example, gets
information from one of these sources. Yellowpages.com gets information from
one of these sources. Many of you guys have seen my local search ecosystem
infographic that kind of details a little bit more about how this process
works.

Then Google goes out, and it crawls these sites across the
web and again throws that information into this server cluster. So again,
imagine this table here going off basically to infinity, kind of off this page.

Additionally, in addition to these data aggregators, in
addition to websites, Google looks at government information. So if you’re
regional, like your county has a place of businesses that are registered in a
particular county or maybe your secretary of state, Google is either probably
going to crawl that information. In some cases the government publishes this in
PDF format or something like that, and that gets pulled into this cluster again
as one of these data points in this huge spreadsheet.

Another place that Google might get information believe it
or not is Google Street View. Bill Slawski of SEO by the Sea recently gave a
keynote at Local University in Baltimore, and there’s information in Google’s
patents that suggest that street view cameras from these cars that they go out
and they drive around trying to find driving directions are taking photos of
storefronts with business name signage, with the address numbers right there on
the storefront, and that information gets pulled into this, what we call the
cluster of information.

So there are all these different sources pulling in, and you
as the business owner, you are only one of these data sources. So even though
you tell Google, “Hey, yes this is my address, this is my phone number,
this is where I’m located,” if Google is seeing bad information, at any of
these other places from these data aggregators, from websites, from government
entities, Google pulls data in from everywhere. So if every other source out,
there or a lot of other sources out there that Google trusts, especially major
data aggregators or government entities, if they have your information wrong,
that could lead to misinformation in the search results.

But there’s one final step actually before Google will
publish the information, the authoritative information from this cluster. Google
actually has human reviewers that are looking at this information. They are
calling businesses to verify things like categories, the buildings that certain
businesses are located in, and these reviewers will again call a real business
offline. So if you get a call and it says, “Hey, Mountain View is calling you, it might
actually be Google.” So pay special attention if your business receives
those kind of calls. They might be trying to validate information that they’re
finding from across the web.

The other thing to keep in mind is that Google accepts data
from other reviewers, from other human reviewers via a website that it operates
called Google Map Maker. So if you’re having trouble with your information from
one of these sources, you might check Google.com/mapmaker. It’s like a
Wikipedia for locations. Anybody in the world can go in there and update data.
So it’s really, really important if you’re a business owner and you’re having
trouble with Google publishing bad information about your business, you can’t
just go into the Google Places dashboard or the Google+ dashboard and fix this
information. You really need to go to all of these different sources. So these
major data aggregators, they’re different in every country. So if you’re from
somewhere else in the world besides the United States, you need to do some
research on who these guys are. You need to update your information at Internet
yellow pages sites. You definitely need to update your information with
government authorities, and you probably want to check your information at
least on this Google Map Maker site, because all of these feed into this
central data cluster that then feeds into a Google search result for your
business.

So I hope that explains a little bit about this very
complicated process that Google has to assemble business listings. If you want
more information in the text part of the page on which this Whiteboard is
published, I’ll reference one of my colleagues at Local University,
Mike Blumenthal. Mike has a great sort of text based layout of what I just
explained visually, and Mike is actually the inspiration for this idea of the
data cluster at Google Local.

So hope you enjoyed that Whiteboard Friday, and again for
more information
I’ll link to Mike Blumenthal’s blog down near the comments.
Thanks guys.”

Video transcription by Speechpad.com

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