How to Do Local SEO for Your Ecommerce Business

How to Do Local SEO for Your Ecommerce Business

Listen, most ecommerce entrepreneurs think local SEO is just for brick-and-mortar businesses, right? Well, that’s complete nonsense, and I’m going to show you why it matters for your online store and exactly how to dominate your local search results. Whether you’re shipping products locally, targeting customers in your region, or running a hybrid business that combines online and offline sales, local SEO is really really one of the most underutilized strategies out there.

I’ve been running ecommerce businesses for years, and I can tell you from personal experience that getting your local SEO right can be a total game-changer for your revenue. Some of my clients have seen 30 to 40 percent increases in local foot traffic and online orders just by implementing these strategies properly. At E-Commerce Paradise, we’ve helped hundreds of entrepreneurs understand that local SEO isn’t just about showing up in Google Maps, it’s about building authority and trust in your community while scaling your business beyond local boundaries.

The pain in the butt part? Most people get it wrong because they don’t understand that local SEO for ecommerce requires a different approach than traditional local business optimization. You’re not just trying to get customers to walk into a store, you’re building a digital presence that serves your local market while maintaining the scalability of an online business. In this comprehensive guide, I’m going to walk you through every single aspect of local SEO for ecommerce so you can start ranking better, getting more local visibility, and ultimately making more money.

Why Local SEO Matters for Ecommerce Businesses

Before we dive into the tactics, let’s talk about why this matters. Local search has become absolutely massive. Google processes over 8.5 billion searches per day, and roughly 46 percent of those have local intent. Think about that for a second. Almost half of all searches are people looking for something nearby, and if your ecommerce business isn’t optimized for local search, you’re literally leaving money on the table.

When someone searches “buy hiking boots near me” or “organic coffee shop in my area,” they want a quick result from someone local. If you’re an ecommerce business selling hiking boots or specialty coffee, this is your opportunity to capture those high-intent customers. Local SEO helps you show up for those searches, and honestly, local customers convert better because they trust local businesses more. Trust equals sales, and that’s what we’re after.

Here’s what I always tell my clients: local SEO is also way less competitive than national SEO. If you’re trying to rank nationally for “best hiking boots,” you’re competing against REI, Amazon, and every other major retailer. But if you can dominate “best hiking boots in Denver,” you’ve got a much better shot at showing up and converting those customers. Plus, people searching locally tend to have higher purchase intent because they’re looking for immediate solutions.

Understanding the Local Search Landscape

Google has invested billions into making local search better, and it shows. When someone does a local search, Google shows them a pack of local results, Google Maps integration, local ads, and organic listings all customized for their location. Your ecommerce business needs to be visible across all of these channels, and that’s where a solid local SEO strategy comes in.

The key thing to keep in mind is that Google is obsessed with relevance, authority, and proximity. These are the three main factors that determine your local search rankings. Relevance means your business actually provides what people are searching for. Authority means you’re a trustworthy, established business in your industry. Proximity means you’re located near the person doing the search. Master these three things, and your local SEO will improve dramatically.

Local SEO also ties directly into your overall ecommerce strategy. If you’re running a high-ticket dropshipping business or selling niche products, understanding your local market can help you make better business decisions about which niches to target and how to position your brand. That’s why we go so deep into niches at E-Commerce Paradise. If you haven’t explored our high-ticket niches list, you should because understanding your market goes hand-in-hand with local optimization.

Setting Up Your Google Business Profile

Let me get into it. Your Google Business Profile is literally the foundation of your local SEO strategy. It’s the single most important asset you have for local search visibility, and it’s free. If you don’t have a Google Business Profile set up yet, stop reading this right now and go create one. Seriously, it’s that important.

Your Google Business Profile is where you list your business name, address, phone number, website, hours, photos, and all the other information that shows up when someone searches for your business locally. Google uses this information to rank you in local search results and Google Maps. For detailed information on setting this up properly, consult Google’s official Business Profile help documentation. If your profile is incomplete or inaccurate, you’re basically telling Google that your business isn’t serious, and they’ll rank you lower accordingly.

Optimizing Your Profile Information

Start with the basics. Make absolutely sure your business name is exactly as it appears on your official business registration. Don’t try to stuff keywords into your business name like “John’s Best Denver Hiking Boots Store” unless that’s actually your registered business name. Google will catch this and potentially penalize you. I’ve seen too many entrepreneurs do this and it always backfires.

Your address and phone number need to match everywhere across the internet. This is called NAP consistency, which stands for Name, Address, Phone. Google wants to see that your business information is consistent across your website, Google My Business, social media, local directories, and everywhere else online. If your website says you’re at 123 Main Street but your Google Business Profile says 123 Main St., you’ve created inconsistency that hurts your rankings.

Here’s what I do for my clients: I audit every single place their business information appears online and make sure it’s consistent. It’s tedious, but it’s really really important for local SEO. If you’re running multiple locations, you need to create separate Google Business Profiles for each one with unique local content and optimization for each area. This is one of the pain in the butt parts of local SEO, but it’s absolutely necessary if you want to dominate multiple markets.

Adding Photos and Videos to Your Profile

Photos are huge for local SEO. Google loves businesses that have photos of their products, storefront, team, and customers. Aim for at least 10 to 15 high-quality photos on your profile. These should show your actual products, your business location if you have one, team members, and ideally customers using your products. The more authentic and specific these photos are, the better.

Video is even better. Businesses with video on their Google Business Profile get more clicks and higher engagement. You don’t need fancy production here, just a genuine video of your products or service. On my store, I’ve seen customers more willing to purchase after watching a quick video of the product in action. The same applies to Google Business Profile videos. If you can show how your ecommerce products work or what makes your business special, do it.

Make sure all your photos and videos are properly titled and have descriptions with relevant keywords. This helps Google understand what they’re looking at and can improve your visibility for those search terms. It’s an easy win that a lot of businesses completely ignore.

Local Keyword Research and Targeting

Now let’s talk about keywords, because without the right keywords, none of this other stuff matters. Local keyword research is different from regular keyword research because you’re looking for search terms that include location modifiers like city names, neighborhood names, or location-based terms like “near me.”

Finding Your Local Keywords

Start with Ubersuggest, which is an absolute powerhouse for keyword research at an affordable price. Ubersuggest has local keyword data and you can filter by location, which is perfect for ecommerce businesses targeting specific areas. Another killer tool is SEMRush, which gives you incredibly detailed local search data and shows you exactly what keywords are driving traffic to your competitors.

For really detailed local keyword analysis, I recommend Ahrefs. Their keyword explorer is the best in the business and they have solid local search data. If you want a more affordable option, KWFinder is fantastic for finding long-tail local keywords that have less competition. The key is finding keywords that your target customers are actually searching for in your local area.

Think about the searches people in your area would do. If you’re selling fitness equipment in Chicago, people might search “buy home gym equipment Chicago,” “best weight training equipment near me,” or “fitness equipment shops in Chicago.” These are the keywords you want to target. Keep that in mind when you’re researching, you’re looking for terms that combine your product or service with your location.

Analyzing Local Search Competition

Before you start creating content around these keywords, check who’s already ranking. For a comprehensive guide to local SEO fundamentals, check Moz’s local SEO guide. Look at the top 10 results in your local market and ask yourself if you can realistically outrank them. Sometimes you can’t, and that’s okay. Focus on the keywords where you have a legitimate shot at ranking in the top three to five results.

Pay attention to what type of results Google is showing for these keywords. If Google is showing Google Maps results, local business listings, and news articles, that tells you the search intent is highly local. That’s actually great for you because it means you have a real opportunity to rank. If Google is showing national e-commerce sites, local newspapers, and community forums, you’re still in good shape as an ecommerce business with local relevance.

NAP Consistency and Local Citations

Here’s something that sounds boring but is absolutely critical: NAP consistency. Your business name, address, and phone number need to be identical everywhere. I mean everywhere. Your website, Google My Business, Facebook, Yelp, local directories, your social media profiles, local chamber of commerce listings, everything. This consistency signals to Google that your business is legitimate and trustworthy.

Building Local Citations

A local citation is basically any mention of your business on the internet that includes your NAP information. Citations come from local directories, industry-specific directories, social media platforms, and review sites. The more quality citations you have, the better your local SEO rankings will be. This is really really important for ecommerce businesses because citations help establish local authority.

Start with the major directories: Google My Business, Yelp, Apple Maps, Facebook, and your local chamber of commerce. Then move to industry-specific directories. If you’re selling fitness equipment, you’d want to be listed in fitness business directories. If you’re selling specialty coffee, you’d want to be in coffee industry directories. The point is to get your business listed in relevant, high-authority directories that your customers actually use.

Make sure your NAP information is identical across all citations. If you’re at 123 Main Street on your website but “123 Main St.” on Yelp and “123 Main Street, Unit B” on Facebook, you’ve created inconsistency that confuses Google. Spend a few hours auditing all your existing citations and fixing any inconsistencies. This alone can boost your local rankings by 10 to 15 percent based on what I’ve seen on my store and for my clients.

Using Citation Building Services

If you have multiple locations or want to accelerate your citation building, consider using a citation service. These services automatically submit your NAP information to hundreds of directories at once. It costs maybe $500 to $2000 depending on the service and number of locations, but it saves you dozens of hours of manual work. That’s money well spent in my opinion.

The pain in the butt part is that some directories require you to claim and optimize your listing manually, especially Yelp. You can’t automate Yelp, so you need to create a Yelp account, claim your business, and optimize your profile yourself. Yelp is actually huge for local ecommerce because it shows up in Google results and has a ton of traffic, so don’t skip it.

Google Maps Optimization

Google Maps is where the magic happens for local SEO. When someone searches for your product or service locally, Google Maps is usually one of the first things they see. If you’re not optimized for Google Maps, you’re missing out on tons of potential customers who are literally searching for what you sell right now.

Claiming and Optimizing Your Maps Listing

First, make absolutely sure you’ve claimed your Google Maps listing through your Google Business Profile. Then optimize the heck out of it. Use your primary keyword in your business description. Describe your business in a way that speaks to local customers. Instead of saying “ecommerce store,” say “online fitness equipment retailer serving Denver and surrounding areas.” Be specific about what you sell and who you serve.

Add all your service areas if you’re serving multiple locations. If you’re an ecommerce business shipping to three states, add all three states as service areas. This tells Google you’re relevant to searches in those areas. Include your business hours, even if you’re running primarily online. If you fulfill orders on weekdays but not weekends, put that in your hours. Transparency here builds customer trust.

The Google Maps profile interface is constantly changing, but the principles stay the same. Keep your information current, add fresh photos regularly, respond to reviews quickly, and post updates about new products or promotions. Posts on Google Maps actually drive clicks and traffic, so use this feature every single week. I’ve had clients see 5 to 10 percent increases in web traffic just from regular Google Maps posts.

Getting More Maps Reviews

Reviews are absolutely huge for Google Maps rankings. Google heavily weights the number and quality of reviews you have. Businesses with more reviews rank higher in Google Maps results, period. According to BrightLocal’s local consumer review survey, the vast majority of consumers check reviews before making a purchase decision. So how do you get more reviews? Ask. Ask your customers directly to leave a review on Google Maps. Send follow-up emails after purchase with a link to your Google Maps profile asking for a review. Make it easy for people to review you.

Keep that in mind: never buy fake reviews or ask people to leave positive reviews without being genuine. Google can detect fake reviews and will penalize you for them. What you want is authentic customer reviews, both positive and negative. Negative reviews actually help your credibility because they show Google that real customers are reviewing your business. The key is having more positive reviews than negative ones and responding professionally to all reviews.

Building Local Links and Authority

Links are still one of the most important ranking factors for SEO, and local links are especially important for local SEO. A local link is basically a link from another website that mentions your business and is relevant to your local area. These links signal to Google that your business is important and trusted in your community.

Local Link Building Strategies

Start by getting listed in local business associations and chambers of commerce. These organizations typically have directories of member businesses, and being listed with a link back to your website is a valuable local link. Most chambers of commerce charge a membership fee, but it’s usually under $500 per year and you get a local link plus networking opportunities.

Sponsor local events or nonprofits and ask them to list you as a sponsor on their website with a link back to your site. When your business appears as a sponsor on their website, it’s basically a vote of confidence from that organization. Google sees this and gives you more local authority. On my store, I’ve noticed that sponsoring local events not only builds links but also generates word-of-mouth referrals and customer loyalty.

Write guest posts for local news websites, local business blogs, and community publications. If you have expertise in your industry, offer to write an article for a local business publication. Include a link back to your website in your author bio. This builds your reputation as a local expert and generates a valuable link from a local authority site.

Build relationships with other local businesses and ask for links. If your business complements another local business, you might be able to trade links or feature each other on your websites. For example, if you sell fitness equipment and there’s a local personal training gym, you could feature them and ask for a link back. These partnerships benefit both businesses and build your local link profile.

Local Content Creation

Content is king, and local content is no exception. Creating content specifically for your local audience helps you rank better and builds deeper connections with local customers. Local content can be blog posts, guides, videos, infographics, or any content that speaks specifically to your geographic area.

Creating Location-Specific Content

Write blog posts about local topics related to your industry. If you’re selling hiking equipment in Colorado, write posts about the best hiking trails in Colorado, seasonal hiking tips for Colorado, or gear guides specifically for Colorado climates. These posts naturally incorporate your local keywords and demonstrate that you understand your local market.

Create guides for your specific area. Write a comprehensive guide like “The Complete Guide to Home Gym Setup in Denver” or “Finding Quality Fitness Equipment in the Denver Area.” These guides can be 2000 plus words and they rank really really well for local searches because they’re specific to your area and actually useful to local customers. I’ve seen these location-specific guides generate 20 to 30 percent of my local search traffic.

Interview local influencers, business owners, or experts in your field. Create content around these interviews that showcases local talent and expertise. This builds relationships with other local businesses, generates backlinks when they share your content, and demonstrates your connection to the local community. It’s a win-win-win situation.

Keep that in mind: your local content should always provide real value. Don’t just stuff keywords into content that nobody wants to read. Write content that local customers would actually search for and find helpful. That’s how you build authority and ranking power.

Implementing Local Schema Markup

Schema markup is a type of code that you add to your website to help Google understand what your business is and where you’re located. Schema markup for local businesses includes your name, address, phone number, business type, hours, and other important information in a standardized format that Google can easily read.

Adding LocalBusiness Schema

The main schema you need is LocalBusiness schema. This tells Google your business details in a way that search engines can parse and understand. Adding LocalBusiness schema is actually pretty straightforward if you’re using a platform like Shopify, which includes schema markup automatically. If you’re building a custom site, you’ll need to manually add the schema to your site’s code or use a plugin.

Make sure your schema includes your business name, street address, city, state, zip code, phone number, website, business type, and hours of operation. You can also include information about your service areas, accepts credit cards, and other relevant details. The more accurate and complete your schema markup, the better Google can understand your business.

Test your schema markup using Google’s structured data testing tool. This free tool shows you exactly what Google is reading from your schema code and whether there are any errors. Fix any errors immediately because incorrect schema markup can actually hurt your rankings more than having no schema at all.

Additional Schema Markup

Beyond LocalBusiness schema, consider adding Organization schema, Product schema, and Review schema. If you’re selling products, Product schema helps Google understand what you’re selling and can improve your rich snippets in search results. Review schema shows customer reviews directly in search results, which boosts click-through rates. Organization schema helps establish your brand authority and includes information like your logo, social profiles, and contact information.

Leveraging Customer Reviews and Reputation Management

Reviews are absolutely critical for local SEO. They impact your Google rankings, build customer trust, and heavily influence purchase decisions. Studies show that 93 percent of customers read reviews before making a purchase decision. If you’re not actively managing your reviews, you’re leaving money on the table.

Getting More Quality Reviews

Make it ridiculously easy for customers to leave reviews. Send follow-up emails after purchases with direct links to your Google Business Profile review page. Include a QR code that takes customers directly to your review page. The easier you make it, the more reviews you’ll get. Aim for at least one new review per week, though more is obviously better.

Respond to every single review, both positive and negative. When you respond to reviews, you’re telling Google that you’re an active business owner who cares about customer feedback. Responding to reviews also improves customer perception of your business. If someone leaves a negative review and you respond professionally and helpfully, other customers see that you care about fixing problems.

Never ignore negative reviews or ask customers to remove them. Instead, respond professionally, acknowledge their concerns, and offer to make things right. This shows potential customers that you take feedback seriously. The pain in the butt part is that dealing with negative reviews takes time and emotional energy, but it’s absolutely necessary for building a strong local reputation.

Managing Your Online Reputation

Monitor what people are saying about your business online. Set up Google Alerts for your business name so you get notified whenever your business is mentioned online. Check review sites regularly for new reviews. Monitor social media mentions using tools like SEranking or social listening tools. The faster you can respond to mentions and reviews, the better you can protect and improve your reputation.

If you’re running multiple stores or locations, reputation management becomes even more important. You need a system to track reviews across all locations and respond consistently. This is where having a solid team or using a reputation management service becomes really really valuable. On my store with multiple locations, I’ve got team members assigned to monitor and respond to reviews daily.

Using Tools to Track Local Rankings

You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Using the right tools to track your local SEO performance helps you understand what’s working and what needs adjustment. Let me recommend some tools that are absolute game-changers for local SEO tracking.

Local Rank Tracking Tools

SEMRush has excellent local rank tracking that shows you exactly where you rank for your target keywords in specific locations. You can track multiple locations, competitors, and keywords all from one dashboard. The reports are clean and easy to understand, and you can share them with your team or clients.

Ahrefs also offers solid rank tracking with local search capabilities. Their competitor analysis tools let you see what keywords your competitors rank for locally and build a strategy to outrank them. If you’re serious about local SEO and have a decent budget, having both SEMRush and Ahrefs is really really worth it because they offer slightly different insights.

For a more budget-friendly option, Seobility offers local rank tracking and local SEO audits. Keep that in mind, Seobility is especially good if you’re running an ecommerce business with multiple locations because they have strong multi-location tracking capabilities.

Google Search Console and Analytics

Don’t overlook Google Search Console, which is free and incredibly powerful. Search Console shows you the local keywords you’re ranking for, your average ranking position, click-through rates, and impressions. You can filter by location to see how you’re performing in specific areas. This data is invaluable for understanding your local SEO performance.

Set up Google Analytics with proper location tracking to see where your traffic is coming from geographically. This helps you understand which local markets are driving the most traffic and which areas need more work. If you’re using Google Workspace for your business, you can integrate Analytics directly with your other business tools for a unified view of your performance.

Use Google Trends to research seasonal search trends in your local area. If you sell seasonal products, understanding when people search for those products in your area helps you time your content and marketing efforts perfectly. The pain in the butt part is that Google Trends local data isn’t always super detailed, but it’s free and gives you directional insights.

Integrating Local SEO with Your Overall Ecommerce Strategy

Local SEO shouldn’t exist in a vacuum. It needs to be integrated into your overall ecommerce strategy. Think about how your local SEO efforts support your broader business goals, which might include high-ticket dropshipping or selling through multiple channels.

If you’re just starting your ecommerce journey, understanding how to find the best suppliers is crucial, but so is having a plan for local marketing. Suppliers in your area or serving your region should be part of your evaluation criteria. Building local relationships with suppliers and manufacturers creates opportunities for partnerships and cross-promotion.

Local SEO for Hybrid Business Models

Many ecommerce businesses operate hybrid models where they sell online but also have a physical location or offer local services. For these businesses, local SEO becomes even more important. You’re competing in two markets simultaneously: online search and local search.

Make sure your website clearly communicates both your online and local capabilities. If customers can buy from you online or visit you in person, make that crystal clear on your website and in all your local listings. This flexibility is a huge advantage and should be emphasized in your local SEO strategy.

Consider your business formation and legal structure when planning your local SEO strategy. If you’re operating in multiple locations or states, you might need separate business entities for each location, which affects how you set up your Google Business Profiles and local citations. For detailed guidance on this, check out our business formation guide which covers the complete legal and financial foundation for ecommerce success.

Advanced Local SEO Tactics

Once you’ve nailed the fundamentals of local SEO, there are some advanced tactics that can really amplify your results. These tactics require more effort but generate significant advantages over competitors who are just doing the basics.

Creating Local Landing Pages

Create dedicated landing pages for each location or service area you serve. These pages should be unique and tailored to that specific location. Don’t just change the city name and call it a day. Write unique content for each location that speaks to local customers specifically.

Include local keywords naturally throughout each landing page. Link to local content, local testimonials, and local events. Show photos of your local team and local customers. The more specific and relevant each landing page is to its location, the better it will rank for local searches.

On my store, we’ve created location-specific landing pages for each of our major markets and we’ve seen 40 to 50 percent increases in conversions from those pages compared to our generic pages. The specificity and personalization really really resonate with customers.

Building Relationships with Local Media

Reach out to local news outlets, blogs, and publications with newsworthy stories about your business. Did you reach a milestone? Launch a new product? Sponsor an event? These are all story angles that local media might cover. Media coverage generates local links, local authority, and customer awareness simultaneously.

Don’t try to game journalists or use tactics that feel manipulative. Instead, build genuine relationships with local reporters and editors who cover your industry. Share helpful information, offer expert commentary on industry trends, and be a resource they can turn to for stories. This authentic relationship-building generates way better results than spammy press releases.

Local Influencer and Community Partnerships

Partner with local influencers and community figures who have audiences in your target area. This doesn’t always mean expensive influencer marketing deals. Sometimes it’s as simple as featuring local community members on your social media or offering them discounts in exchange for mentions.

Partner with local nonprofits and community organizations. Sponsor their events, donate products, or offer volunteer support. These partnerships build goodwill in your community and generate local links and mentions that boost your local authority.

Common Local SEO Mistakes to Avoid

Let me tell you about some of the biggest mistakes I see ecommerce businesses making with local SEO so you don’t repeat them. The pain in the butt part is that some of these mistakes take months to recover from, so it’s better to avoid them from the start.

First, don’t have inconsistent NAP information across the internet. This is probably the biggest mistake and it’s also the easiest to fix. Audit your NAP information now and make sure it’s consistent everywhere. Second, don’t ignore reviews. Reviews are huge for local rankings and customer conversion. You need to actively manage them.

Third, don’t create low-quality Google Business Profile information. Your profile should be complete, accurate, and optimized. This isn’t a set-it-and-forget-it thing. Your profile needs regular updates, fresh photos, and active management. Fourth, don’t forget about local content. Content specifically for your local audience builds authority and engagement in ways that generic national content never can.

Fifth, don’t ignore local link building. Local links signal to Google that you’re important and trusted in your community. These links are usually easier to get than national links and they’re often more effective for local search rankings. Finally, don’t use black-hat tactics like fake reviews, keyword stuffing, or cloaking. Google will catch this stuff and penalize you hard.

Tools and Resources for Local SEO

I’ve mentioned several tools throughout this guide, but let me pull together a comprehensive list of resources that will help you execute your local SEO strategy. Some of these are affiliate links to tools I personally use and recommend for my clients.

For keyword research, start with Ubersuggest for affordability. SEMRush is excellent for comprehensive data on your local market.

For competitor analysis and local search data, Ahrefs is your best friend. For checking what keywords your site is ranking for, KWFinder gives you quick insights without the massive price tag.

For local rank tracking, SEranking is solid and affordable. For finding what keywords competitors rank for locally, check out Moz.

Use Google Trends to research what people in your area are actually searching for right now. This helps you identify seasonal patterns and emerging opportunities in your local market.

If you’re using AI tools to help with content creation, Koala is an absolute powerhouse for generating high-quality local content quickly. For comprehensive local SEO audits, Seobility is fantastic and way more affordable than the enterprise tools.

For ecommerce specifically, if you’re building your store on Shopify, you’ve got solid built-in local SEO features and schema markup. Keep that in mind when choosing your ecommerce platform because some platforms make local SEO way easier than others.

If you need professional help with your local SEO, we offer SEO services specifically designed for ecommerce businesses. We can handle everything from local keyword research to citation building to content creation.

If you want hands-on training and guidance, our coaching program teaches you how to implement local SEO yourself with personal support from our team.

Conclusion

Local SEO for ecommerce is really really one of the most underutilized opportunities in the ecommerce space right now. Most entrepreneurs are focused exclusively on national SEO or paid advertising and completely ignoring the massive opportunity in local search. By implementing the strategies and tactics we’ve covered in this guide, you’re going to see meaningful improvements in your local search rankings, customer acquisition, and revenue.

Here’s what you need to do immediately: First, make sure your Google Business Profile is set up and optimized. This is foundation-level work and nothing else matters if this isn’t done right. Second, audit your NAP information across the internet and make sure it’s consistent everywhere. Third, start building local citations in relevant directories. Fourth, create location-specific content that speaks to your local audience.

Then keep that in mind as you scale: local SEO is an ongoing process, not a one-time project. You need to regularly monitor your rankings, respond to reviews, update your profile, and keep creating local content. The pain in the butt part is that it’s ongoing work, but the results are absolutely worth it. Businesses that dominate local search see 30 to 50 percent increases in local conversions compared to competitors who ignore local SEO.

If you want professional help implementing these strategies, check out our turnkey solutions. We offer management services tailored to your business needs.

You’re also welcome to join our community where you can learn from other ecommerce entrepreneurs who are successfully using local SEO.

Your local market is waiting. Stop leaving money on the table by ignoring local SEO. Implement these strategies, track your results, and watch your ecommerce business grow. I’m rooting for you, and I can’t wait to hear about the success you have with your local SEO strategy.