Local citations and directory listings that matter

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You run a plumbing business and you've optimized your Google Business Profile. But one day you discover your business is listed in Yelp under "Smith Plumbing" and on a local directory as "Smith's Plumbing Service." Your address is different on each one. Your phone number is formatted differently everywhere.

These inconsistencies matter more than you think. They're called citations, and when they're messy, they hurt your local ranking. When they're consistent, they boost it.

A citation is a mention of your business name, address, and phone number on another website. Directories like Yelp, Yellow Pages, Google Business Profile, and industry-specific listings all create citations. Having accurate, consistent citations across the web is crucial for local SEO.

How citations impact local ranking

Citations are a trust signal. When Google finds your business listed in multiple places with the same information, it signals that you're a real, legitimate business. The more legitimate citations you have, the higher you rank.

Citations also expand your visibility. When your business appears on Yelp, you get clicks from Yelp. When you're on a local business directory, you get clicks from that directory. Each citation is another place someone might find you.

For a dentist running a WEMASY site, citations matter because they reinforce that you're a real practice in Portland (or wherever you are). Google compares the information across all your citations. Consistency = legitimacy.

The most important citations

You don't need to be listed in every directory. Some directories are more important than others:

Google Business Profile

This is the most important citation. Optimizing this should be your first priority.

Yelp

Yelp is massive for local search. People use Yelp to find and review businesses. A strong Yelp presence matters for ranking and reputation.

Apple Maps and Apple Business Connect

Apple devices use Apple Maps. If you're in Apple Maps, you appear to iPhone and iPad users. It's less important than Google, but still relevant.

Industry-specific directories

These depend on your business. A dentist should be in DentistX or similar dental directories. A lawyer should be in legal directories. A salon should be in beauty directories. These carry more weight than generic directories.

Local business directories

Local Chamber of Commerce listings, better business bureau (BBB), and local city directories. These signal local presence and credibility.

Secondary directories

Yellow Pages, MapQuest, Foursquare, and other directories matter less individually. But having consistent information across many of them strengthens your citation profile.

NAP consistency: the critical rule

NAP stands for Name, Address, Phone number. These three pieces of information must be identical everywhere they appear on the web.

Name: If your business name is "Reliable Plumbing Portland," it should be exactly that on Google, Yelp, directories, your website, and everywhere else. Not "Reliable Plumbing," not "Reliable Plumbing PDX," not "Reliable Plumbing Co." Exactly the same.

Address: Format matters. "456 Oak Avenue, Portland, OR 97214" is different from "456 Oak Ave Portland Oregon 97214." Pick one format and use it everywhere. Don't switch between "Avenue" and "Ave."

Phone number: Use the same phone number everywhere. Don't list a main line in Google Business Profile and a different number on Yelp.

Inconsistent NAP signals to Google that something's wrong. It looks like a different business or an unmaintained listing. Google's algorithm is less confident about your legitimacy.

Building your citation strategy

Start with the most important citations:

Step 1: Claim and optimize Google Business Profile

This is your foundation. Get this right first with accurate NAP and complete information.

Step 2: Get on Yelp

Yelp often creates listings for businesses automatically. Claim your listing and make sure your NAP matches Google Business Profile exactly.

Step 3: Find industry-specific directories

What directories exist for your industry? If you're a salon, look for salon directories. If you're a dentist, find dental directories. Build a list of the top 5-10 and get listed on each one.

Step 4: Get on local directories**

Chamber of Commerce, Better Business Bureau, local city directories. These vary by location, but they matter for local SEO.

Step 5: Submit to aggregators

Services like Moz Local, BrightLocal, or Yext will submit your information to hundreds of directories automatically. This saves time and ensures consistency. For a small business like plumbingpro.com, this investment pays off.

Managing citations for multiple locations**

If you have multiple locations (say, three dental offices across Portland), create separate citations for each location. Each office gets its own Google Business Profile, its own Yelp listing, and its own entries in directories.

For each location, NAP must be consistent. Location 1 (downtown) should always be "Downtown Dental, 123 Main Street, Portland, OR." Location 2 (southeast) should always be "Southeast Dental, 456 Oak Avenue, Portland, OR." Same business name with location modifier, but each with its own unique address.

What if citations are already wrong?

If you find inconsistent citations, start correcting them immediately. Update Google Business Profile first. Then update Yelp. Then work through each directory.

For incorrect third-party listings you don't own, contact the directory and ask to update or remove the listing. Most directories have a contact option for business owners to claim and correct information.

As you fix inconsistencies, Google will gradually recognize the corrected information. It doesn't happen overnight—it can take weeks to months for Google to update its understanding. But consistency compounds.

Monitoring and maintaining citations

Don't set it and forget it. Citations need maintenance. Check your citations quarterly. Make sure phone numbers haven't changed, addresses are still correct, and hours are up to date.

Tools like Moz Local show you all your citations and highlight inconsistencies. Using these tools saves you from having to manually check dozens of directories.

Citations on your WEMASY site

Your WEMASY website should display your NAP prominently in the footer. Your homepage should mention your location. Service pages should include your location and service area.

This internal consistency on your website reinforces the consistent information across citations. When Google crawls your site and sees your NAP, then finds that same NAP across directories, it confirms that you're legitimate.

Frequently asked questions

How many citations do I actually need to rank?

Do I need to be listed on every online directory?

What should I do if my business name has changed?

Should I hire someone to manage my citations for me?

How long does it take for citations to impact my search ranking?

Can bad or inconsistent citations hurt my search ranking?