Philadelphia Restaurant Week in Search Engine Results

Two different approaches for using a popular event in local search strategy.

Philadelphia Restaurant Week is a popular event where participating restaurants offer a multi-course menu at a fixed price (much like other restaurant weeks around the world). Obviously this popular event is searched for locally (click on image to enlarge it):

Google Search Trend

Google Search Trend

Example 1.  Google Maps Spam

The other day I was looking for a list of the restaurants  participating in “Philadelphia Restaurant Week” and naturally I headed to Google and typed in “Philadelphia Restaurants Week”.  Among the organic listings Google “threw in” universal search listings from its local index (click to enlarge):

"philadelphia restaurants week" in Google

"philadelphia restaurants week" in Google

Also, this rather irrelevant listing shows up in Google Local index  in the 1st position- before the “real” Philadelphia restaurant  listings:

1-23-2010 6-05-37 PM

Whoever set this up in Google Local Business Center had a clear plan – get the seasonal traffic/online visibility  from the local event -  ‘Philadelphia Restaurant Week’.  Not sure how much qualified traffic this “cell phone text messaging” company  receives from the search term ” philadelphia restaurants week” but I’m pretty sure that I’m not the only Google user unhappy with this result.

The “business owner” of this local listing has clearly taken advantage of the well known Google  Local index weaknesses.  Unfortunately, for the end users,  it was  easy enough for somebody to game the system by adding the “Philadelphia Restaurant Week” in the listing titles and purposefully assigning the listing to the wrong categories:

The Listing Page in Google LocalFrom Google Local Listing Quality Guidelines:

  • Represent your business exactly as it appears in the offline world. The name on Google Maps should match the business name, as should the address, phone number and website. Do not attempt to manipulate search results by adding extraneous keywords or a description of your business into the business name

Example 2. Bing Local

After encountering  the above spam in Google I headed to Bing to see if the same result  will display. It did not. What I was presented in Bing was a positive surprise:

in Bing

'philadelphia restaurants week' in Bing

In this case, the business owner (or the person responsible for online marketing for Moshulu Restaurant) has planned ahead and optimized the relevant restaurant listing in Bing Local for “Philadelphia restaurants week’.   The optimization was very simple, however very effective and most importantly was done in a legitimate way.

1-23-2010 7-57-05 PMAdding  just  “Philadelphia restaurant week’ keywords was enough for Bing to display this listing for the relevant search query.

As a result, Moshulu Restaurant’s  local listing  visibility was increased and the opportunity  of capturing the Philadelphia Restaurant Week search traffic was maximized. Simple but brilliant.

The Bing example can be used as a case study showing that small business should actively use search engine local listings as promotional tools.  The changes you make to your business local listing have a direct impact on its search engine visibility and on your pocket.

Posted in SEO Blog - Search Marketing Trends & News by peter / January 24th, 2010 / 1 Comment »

One Comment

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Dave and peter wyspianski, Justin Freid. Justin Freid said: RT @PeterWyspianski: my recent local search observations http://bit.ly/7uazre (Nice case of Philly Restaurant Week in local search results) [...]

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