10 Benefits of Local SEO for Local Businesses

10 Benefits of Local SEO For Local Businesses

How is your small business benefiting from local SEO? How are you measuring that benefit?

Being a local business comes with a lot of perks. However, it can be discouraging to feel like you have to go up against the big-name brands. The continued growth of your business is important and could benefit from local SEO work. 

To help local businesses rank better for their local SEO, we asked small business owners and business professionals this question for their best insights. From increasing website traffic to building your community, there are several benefits that may help you rethink your SEO strategy and continue the growth of your business. 

Here are ten benefits of local SEO for local businesses:

  • See Results in Sales
  • Get on Google My Business
  • Increase Website Traffic
  • Generate High-Quality Leads
  • Track Success With CRM
  • Build Your Community
  • Boost Online Visibility
  • Help Customers Support Local
  • Utilize SEO Tools
  • Create Specific Content

See Results in Sales

Local SEO is a more vital strategy for small businesses than you might think. Did you know that 50% of people who did a local search on their phone went to a physical location that day? 18% of those searches also lead to an immediate sale. Google has put such an importance on local SEO that they have provided a guide on how to improve your local ranking on Google. Small businesses with local, brick and mortar locations can’t afford to NOT invest in local SEO efforts. The benefits are simple, local SEO leads people to your store and results in sales! 

Bailey Mills, Markitors

Get on Google My Business

Appliance repairs are a service that customers look for on the local level. Some customers want to avoid the big, national companies who pass themselves off as “local,” and would prefer to work with a company that is actually local to the area. That’s where small businesses can really benefit from local SEO initiatives. By getting visibility for local searches through a Google My Business profile, businesses can better connect with prospective customers in their service area. 

Alex Belladorsi, Appliance Technician

Increase Website Traffic

Since I started investing in local SEO strategies, potential customers can find me and learn more about my business and the products that I offer on my website. My main reason for investing in local SEO is to drive traffic to my website, and ultimately, get more requests for quotes. The increase in quotation requests from my websites is how I measure the success of this business strategy.

Brian Greenberg, Insurist

Generate High-Quality Leads

The highest-quality leads for my transcription business come from organic search. Clients who find me on Google are usually larger companies with longer-term projects, as opposed to the tire kickers who tend to frequent local business directories. I keep it simple when it comes to measuring my local SEO efforts: Using basic rank tracking software, I audit my rankings every month, and I aim for an overall increase in average position for my target keywords. If I see more red than green, it usually means I need to focus more on my link-building strategy.

Chloe Brittain, Opal Transcription Services

Track Success With CRM

My personal injury law office has benefited a great deal from local SEO. I have attracted numerous new clients to my office as a result of local SEO. I measure the success of local SEO by using CRM (customer relationship management) software that tracks how any lead that contacts my office found my office. This allows me to determine whether any marketing source I invest in for my company is worth the money I am investing.

Tate Meagher, Meagher Law Office, PLLC

Build Your Community

Supporting local businesses has been a consumer trend for a number of years now, and even urbanists are re-thinking the cities of the future so that most people will be able to quench their thirst for goods and services at a local level, thereby reducing unnecessary car travel and pollution. This is where local SEO, the art of optimizing your content and visibility online to a local audience, comes in. It is more than about online visibility: it is also about having local customers return and help create a real sense of community, where customers feel at home and like they’re part of something. The role of local SEO then takes a whole new meaning: by reminding local customers of your presence online with relatable content they will be coming back to you in no time.

Daniel Torres, Zety

Boost Online Visibility

I am a small business owner and have utilized local SEO for my company. I have optimized the business site for the USA. As a local business operator, I have always wanted my web pages to rank for specific search queries performed by a local group of audience. Local SEO helped me a lot to promote WeInvoice on various location-based keywords. I have gained huge traffic from Arizona, Alaska, California, Connecticut, and others. With the help of local SEO, I got a higher ranking locally without many worries. It boosts my online visibility and fetches traffic from those locations. Therefore, the conversion rate has increased after attracting the targeted traffic. Now, competition is less, and chances of clicking are massive.

Eden Cheng, WeInvoice

Help Customers Support Local

Our business thrives on local SEO. Being a watch company out of Dallas, TX we use local SEO to drive our business locally in Dallas. We find that people really want to support local businesses and will buy our watches to support a local Dallas-Fort Worth business. We find that our local SEO efforts really help raise awareness around our brand to the Dallas area. We are then able to target people who land on our website through social media advertisements. We find this to be a really effective way to convert people into buyers.

Craig Carter, Jack Mason

Utilize SEO Tools

In terms of SEO Tools for site audits, I’ve found Ahrefs to be extremely useful. It’s one of the most user-friendly options out there and provides you with a comprehensive analysis of all aspects of your website’s traffic, backlink profile, and competitor information too. If I had to pick one tool to use, I would definitely choose Ahrefs.

Brandon Brown, Grin

Create Specific Content

Our firm has benefited a lot from local SEO as it helps us to build stronger relationships for more precise reasons. As a firm operating in the niche of personal injury law, we understand the benefits of focusing on niche categories in order to grow trust. Local SEO helps us do that by allowing our audience to find a local firm with lawyers who can accurately address their needs. This is done through the creation of more specific content, using long-tail keywords, and more. While the audience reach for local SEO techniques is smaller, the value you get from that audience is very high, and our aim is, therefore, to continue using these techniques for the foreseeable future.

Peter Horne, Geoff McDonald and Associates

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8 Email Marketers Share Their Biggest Email Frustrations

Email marketing challenges

Email marketing isn’t always easy and many of our clients come to us because they’re frustrated with the amount of time it takes to make a great email. We wanted to hear what the experts thought too! Below you’ll hear from 8 Mailchimp Partners and email marketers (including myself) on what frustrates us the most.


Email coding is still stuck in the 90s, and I doubt that will change. The biggest frustration is also the thing that excites me the most. I find as a creative person, when you have limited resources, the challenge to create something unique and fresh each time is what drives us to keep innovating and dreaming up new ways to work around these limitations. Obviously, Outlook is a pain, but hey.

-Doug Dennison, CEO & Co-founder, MailNinja


The lack of email standards has always been a huge barrier for email marketers and the teams that prepare the messages. The fact that your email can render differently in hundreds of different email clients means that you are never 100% sure that your email looks and works the way you want it to everywhere. And additionally, the differences in the display of fonts, backgrounds, animated GIFs, etc. means you have to prepare and test for a wide range of scenarios. This also prevents progress in our industry, as certain advancements like AMP have limited client support, so it’s less attractive for brands to pursue using it.

-Adam Holden-Bache, Dir. of Email Marketing, Enventys Partners


Email can be frustrating but the misinformation and lack of understanding of how email marketing actually works is probably our biggest pain point. We spend more time breaking down email marketing strategies, ESPs platforms, training and other general questions more than anything else.

-Sequoia Mulgrave, CEO & Founder, Daily Mode Studio


Well, Outlook of course, but there’s so much that goes into a perfect email that makes it challenging. Testing takes time – checking spelling, links, image loading speed, checking you have all alt text descriptions, testing on different devices (really formatting for mobile is one of the hardest things about email), getting into the Inbox, making sure your plain text version is set, checking recipients. So much! The most frustrating part is that there really is so much that needs to be tested before you hit that big send button.

How to solve this? Have a great process for testing your email, whether that’s a checklist or a program (like Litmus) that does the testing for you.

Emily Ryan, Co-founder & Mailchimp Strategist, Westfield Creative


As I work a lot with email automation, I’m continuously experimenting in Mailchimp with old Automated Workflows and new Customer Journeys Builder. I think I know by heart the limitations of the former, and time after time I’ve learned a lot of hacks to overcome them; as for the Customer Journey Builder, sometimes it drives me crazy because it still lacks some features, and every now and then something doesn’t work properly, which I report to the patient Customer Support folks. I’m aware that advanced features are probably used by a small fraction of users, but nonetheless, I wish to see them prioritized asap.

-Alessandra Farabegoli, Digital Strategist, Co-Founder, Digital Update


I’ve always found the tech to be the easy part of the job. It’s generally predictable and reliable. It either does or it does not (with Outlook, that’s usually a “does not”). When tech does not do what you need, you work around a solution.

The most variable factor in email is the human on either side of the communications. Clients who can’t make up or continuously change their minds, subscribers who are unpredictable, customer service management for campaign responses… those are the least controllable and predictable factors in email, and there is not a single thing I can do to control that.

-MaryAnne Pfeiffer, Digital Marketing Strategist, 108 Degrees Digital Marketing


…it would be really cool if you could reliably track opens…

…it would be good if all the email systems worked the same and you could develop better-looking emails without having to test them in 100 different systems.

…it would be great if Mailchimp could update some of the things at the more advanced end of things

…it would be good if there was a better understanding and explanation of data privacy over borders

…it would be good if Gmail would be a bit more transparent (never gonna happen!) of what’s good/bad and why emails end up in promo/spam

-Robin Adams, Founder, Chimp Answers


1000% Outlook. I don’t understand why Outlook needs to “translate” the email into a Word doc and then render the Word doc in HTML.

The second is Gmail not delivering emails to the inbox and dumping them into the archive never, neverland. So frustrating!

-Amy Hall, Email Marketing Strategist and Certified Mailchimp Partner, amyhall.biz


Want to connect with a Mailchimp Pro Partner? Check out the Mailchimp Experts Directory here.