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Tag: Local Search

  • Apple Maps Is More Important To Your Business Than Ever

    If you run a small business and aren’t taking Apple Maps seriously as a place where people will find your business, you may want to rethink that.

    Do you pay attention to your business listing in Apple Maps? Have you seen any indication that it’s an important tool for people to find your business? Let us know in the comments.

    When Apple first ditched Google Maps on iOS to offer Apple Maps, things went so horribly that CEO Tim Cook actually had to write a public letter of apology to users. This began:

    At Apple, we strive to make world-class products that deliver the best experience possible to our customers. With the launch of our new Maps last week, we fell short on this commitment. We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better.

    Not a great start.

    Eventually, Google Maps found its way back onto iOS devices and those who still preferred Google would continue using that. It’s not really all that often that we hear much about Apple Maps, but guess what. More iOS users use Apple Maps than use Google Maps, so the joke isn’t on Apple after all.

    A report that hit BetaBoston.com earlier this month says:

    Apple says its mapping service is now used more than three times as often as its next leading competitor on iPhones and iPads, with more than 5 billion map-related requests each week. Research firm comScore says Apple has a modest lead over Google on iPhones in the US, though comScore measures how many people use a service in a given month rather than how often.

    Google still dominates among all US smartphones, though, in part because Apple Maps isn’t available on Google’s Android system, which is more prevalent than iPhones. In October, Google Maps had more than twice as many smartphone users as Apple Maps. Much like Apple, Google benefits as the default on Android.

    So people are using Google Maps more, but it’s a different story when it comes to iPhone. Here’s what the operating system market share looks like in the U.S. (courtesy of Nielsen):

    The main takeaway here is that you really shouldn’t be ignoring Apple Maps.

    Apple gets its business listings from a lot of different places, so if you have a business, you’ll probably want to make sure you’re listed appropriately as to not miss out on searches that take pace in Apple’s app.

    Local search expert Mike Blumenthal has put together an updated list of data providers Apple is using for business listings. The information comes from Apple’s Map acknowledgements and information from an Apple email.

    “With the release of iOS 9 and its increasing foray into local search, it is important to stay on top of who is actually providing business listing data to Apple,” Blumenthal noted in a blog post.

    Sources include Acxiom, Booking.com, DAC Group, Factual, GasBuddy/OpenStore, TripAdvisor, Localeze, Yelp, Yext, and many others. Head on over to Blumenthal’s write-up for the full list.

    Above all else, this is an important reminder that your local search listings extend well beyond Google. Take the time to make sure your business is represented everywhere possible.

    Have you spent the appropriate amount of time going through Apple Maps’ data sources and checking the representation of your business? Let us know in the comments.

  • Google Pilots Local Business Markup for Knowledge Panels

    Google Pilots Local Business Markup for Knowledge Panels

    Last week, Google launched the Google My Business API to let big businesses and third parties integrate with the Google My Business platform and publish updates to customers on Google Search and Google Maps.

    Businesses can use the API to set special holiday hours, for example, and update them across all locations. The special hours feature was added to Google My business last month.

    Developers can also use the API to create locations with names, addresses, phone numbers, categories, business hours, etc. They can also mark a business location as permanently closed, manage business photos, list/invite/remove managers on locations and business accounts, read listing state to identify Google update, duplicate and suspended locations, search/filter locations by name/category/label, and set the service area for a business by specifying a point and radius or Place ID.

    To work with the API, you’ll need to have a basic knowledge of RESTful APIs.

    Documentation for the API is here.

    Search Engine Land points to a Google help document in which it talks about a way to provide local business information via structured data markup. When utilized, uses who search for a business may see a Knowledge Panel card with details about the business.

    Google says, “We are currently piloting this feature with a restricted set of initial data providers. We hope to soon open up the feature so any provider who implements spec-compliant markup is eligible to participate.”

    “Use markup on your official website to provide Google with information about local business locations,” it says. “These attributes appear on the card and elsewhere throughout Google Search and Maps. For instance, a restaurant’s menu URL appears prominently on the card, letting users click through to see what kind of food and drink is available.”

    More about adding the markup here.

    Images via Google

  • Facebook Professional Services Is Pretty Similar To Facebook Places…but for Services

    Facebook Professional Services Is Pretty Similar To Facebook Places…but for Services

    Earlier this year, Facebook put out a new local search and discovery tool at Facebook.com/places, giving users a look at places with Facebook Pages, including those your friends have been to (with their comments) and others with reviews from strangers.

    The directory lets you browse through restaurants, hotels, bars, cafes, public attractions, arts & entertainment, gyms, movie theaters, schools, theaters, grocery stores, and landmarks.

    Now, a similar feature has been spotted at Facebook.com/services (via Search Engine Land/acodez). Obviously this one is specifically focused on services.

    It looks pretty much the same as Places, but has two fields to fill out – one for service, and one for city. There’s also a directory with different service categories at the bottom. These are in the following spaces: Arts & Marketing, Automotive, Business Services, Event Planning, Financial Services, Home Improvement, Lifestyle Services, Medical & Health, Pet Service, Spa, and Beauty & Personal Care.

    Screen Shot 2015-12-15 at 4.35.21 PM

    Should Yelp and Angie’s List worry? Probably not. Facebook has for years enabled you to seek out business pages, and I just don’t see this as a gamechanger. That’s not to say some won’t find it handy.

    For businesses, anything that helps people find you should be viewed as a positive.

    Images via Facebook

  • Google My Business Now Lets You Close, Reopen Business Locations

    Google My Business Now Lets You Close, Reopen Business Locations

    Google announced on its Advertiser Community site that Google My Business will now let you mark a location closed in the list view to keep users up to date. You can also now reopen a location if need be.

    Google’s Elizabeth P. writes (via Search Engine Roundtable), “Multiple locations cannot be closed or reopened via spreadsheet, but you can close multiple locations and reopen multiple locations in Google My Business.”

    To mark one location as closed, click the location in list view, and click “Mark permanently closed” in the box at the top right of the page. Click “Mark permanently closed” again in the dialog box that appears. The location will then appear as closed in your account and to users on Google.

    You’ll need to verify that the location is closed when Google shows you this:

    Just click yes to confirm or no if the location is still open.

    To reopen a business, click Reopen from the red bar in the box at the top right of the page when you’re in list view. From there, the process is basically the same.

    Images via Google

  • Google Lists Google My Business Listing Visibility Factors

    Google Lists Google My Business Listing Visibility Factors

    Update: Google has changed language to remove “clicks”. Very interesting.

    Your business listings on Google aren’t going to do much for you if people don’t see them. Just having one isn’t enough. You need to make sure it’s optimized.

    Google employee Rahul J posted on the company’s Advertiser Community site about how to optimize your listing. He gets into fundamentals like selecting the right category, sharing your location and page with customers, asking customers to share their experiences, sharing updates, and including photos.

    Before that, however, he lists four factors that the visibility of your listing depends on. These are: relevance, prominence, distance, and search history.

    For relevance, he says, you should ask yow relevant your category and listing are to the search phrase used by the user. For prominence, he means traffic to your business listing and how established the business is online.

    Distance, of course, refers to the actual physical location in relation to that of the user.

    Search history refers to how many times the listing has been clicked on by users searching with the keyword.

    Regarding that factor, Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Roundtable notes, “I believe this is common knowledge in the local SEO world but I don’t think I’ve seen Google come out and say it.”

    Rahul J writes that the four factors are “governed by a dynamic system that decides the search results” and that “no one at Google has any influence over it.”

    Good to know.

  • Pinterest Updates Billions Of Place Pins With Location Data And Info

    Pinterest Updates Billions Of Place Pins With Location Data And Info

    Two years ago, Pinterest launched Place Pins adding a travel magazine-like experience to the popular social/search site. These enabled users to see information like the address of a place, phone numbers, etc. in a format designed to look natural to the Pinterest experience.

    This week, Pinterest announced the update of seven billion pins with new location data and info. This is in response to travel becoming increasingly popular on the site/app.

    “With these updates, it’s easier to visit the places you’ve Pinned,” Pinterest says. “In just a tap, Pinners can get directions through Google and Apple maps, call a business, visit a website, view hours of operations and top reviews from people who’ve been there.”

    “As a discovery engine, we’re making it easier to discover new places to visit, restaurants to try and sights to see in your city and around the world,” it adds. “Now, when you save a Pin, we’ll show you other places to visit nearby on a map and other Pins people have saved from the same place.”

    As Pinterest puts more focus on this local search type of experience, it’s bound to open up new opportunities for businesses with physical locations.

    Pinterest is already presenting itself more and more as a search service (including to advertisers), and now that Pinterest is monetizing itself with promoted and buyable pins, it’s hard to imagine that some of this won’t translate to place pins as well.

    Considering that most small businesses consider phone call to be the most important success metric, Pinterest’s expansion of Place Pins is surely a welcome move forward.

    Here’s a look at the 20 top pinned places on Pinterest:

    1. Positano, Campania, Italy
    2. Musha Cay Island, Bahamas
    3. Hanoi, Vietnam
    4. Havasu Falls, Grand Canyon, Arizona, U.S.A.
    5. Petrohué Falls, Chile
    6. Jarlshof, Shetland, Scotland
    7. Kyoto, Japan
    8. Port Fairy, Victoria, Australia
    9. Glacier National Park, Montana, U.S.A.
    10. Tulum, Mexico
    11. Lisbon, Portugal
    12. New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A.
    13. Kjeragbolten, Norway
    14. Marrakesh, Morocco
    15. Cape Town, South Africa
    16. Somoto’s Canyon, Nicaragua
    17. Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
    18. Milford Sound, Fiordland National Park, New Zealand
    19. Reykjavik, Iceland
    20. New York City, New York, U.S.A.

  • Google My Business Gets A Refresh

    Google My Business Gets A Refresh

    Google announced the launch of a new redesign for Google May Business. This includes updated navigation, which the company says is aimed at making it easier to access the product’s primary features and providing better access to multiple locations for those using Google My Business Locations.

    Google’s Marissa Nordahl made the announcement in a Google product forum (via Search Engine Land), saying:

    You’ll see tabs for editing, photos, insights, and reviews. These tabs provide quick access to the most common user actions.

    Merchants with multiple locations or Google+ brand pages will see an updated management experience with two tabs: one for “Locations” and another for Google+ “Brand Pages” where you can view your listings or pages in either a card and a list format. “Contact support” options are also now more prominent so you can find the answers to your questions faster.

    Google gives you a walkthrough on the new navigation here, but if you really want a tour, check out this five-minute video from local search expert Mike Blumenthal.

    Image via Google

  • Study: Local Search Gets Local Businesses More Clicks, Calls Than Any Other Channel

    Study: Local Search Gets Local Businesses More Clicks, Calls Than Any Other Channel

    Facebook may be doing more with is ads to help local businesses, but local search is still much more effective.

    BrightLocal recently released results from a survey (via Search Engine Land) finding that local search drives more clicks and calls than any other marketing channel as well as greater ROI than any other digital marketing channel.

    The firm polled local business owners in August in order to understand which marketing channels drive the most traffic, calls, and offline visits to local businesses. It covered “all types” of businesses including plumbers, accountants, dentists, etc. 477 people who optimized for 8,200 locations in the past year responded to the survey.

    It found that local search and organic search deliver the highest quality leads and that 34% would choose local search over any other channel. It also found that social media, display ads and Bing Ads deliver the lowest ROI.

    Here’s a look at how much time respondents dedicated o various channels:

    And here’s how they rated effectiveness of each channel:

    Businesses consider phone calls to be the most valued success metric compared to web traffic, search rankings, and significantly over customers actually walking through the door or inquiring via website. With that in mind, here’s what BrightLocal’s respondents reported about calls generated by various channels:

    Be sure to take a look at the full report, which provides a great deal of analysis and additional finding.

    Images via Thinkstock, BrightLocal

  • Where Your Business Needs To Be Listed For Apple Maps

    Where Your Business Needs To Be Listed For Apple Maps

    It’s hard to believe, but it’s been three years since Apple dropped Google Maps from iOS in favor of its own maps offering. It got off to a rocky start, and Google would later offer iPhone users a new Maps app, but Apple has improved its own offering over time.

    Apple gets its business listings from a lot of different places, so if you have a business, you’ll probably want to make sure you’re listed appropriately as to not miss out on searches that take pace in Apple’s app.

    Local search expert Mike Blumenthal has put together an updated list of data providers Apple is using for business listings. The information comes from Apple’s Map acknowledgements and information from an Apple email.

    “With the release of iOS 9 and its increasing foray into local search, it is important to stay on top of who is actually providing business listing data to Apple,” notes Blumenthal.

    Sources include Acxiom, Booking.com, DAC Group, Factual, GasBuddy/OpenStore, TripAdvisor, Localeze, Yelp, Yext, and many others. Head on over to Blumenthal’s write-up for the full list.

    iOS 9 was released on September 16th. Early research from Tapjoy found that users were taking their time in updating their devices compared to previously released versions of the operating system. Still, many more have gotten the update since then, and will continue to do so.

    Image via Apple

  • Bing Adds Quick Answers For Local Info

    Bing Adds Quick Answers For Local Info

    Microsoft announced that Bing will now display quick answers to queries related to local information. These come in the form of “facts” at the top of the search page, which provide things like phone numbers for restaurants, hours of local stores, and directions to people’s houses.

    “Need help figuring out whether that unbelievable sale item is still around and you can’t waste another moment? Or want to celebrate your savings with a nice dinner? Just search for the phone number and we’ll give it to you right there,” says Microsoft. “Now, how to get there? Just ask for directions and you can see a quick answer showing the best route with distance and travel time information. Click on turn by turn directions to get the full route details.”

    Examples of queries you could use (as provided by Microsoft) include: How to reach 120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271 from Brooklyn?; Directions to 920 Dexter Ave N, Seattle, WA; Travel time to 440 Terry Ave, Seattle.

    You can also use “reviews” or “address” commands for places.

    The directions feature is currently only available in the US, UK and France, while reviews and address answers are only available on desktop.

    Images via Microsoft

  • Yelp Reviews Say More Than You Realized

    Yelp reviews can have a tremendous impact – for better or for worse – on a business. They can dictate whether or not a customer decides to visit. This is one of the reasons the site/app is so controversial with businesses. There may actually be more to reviews than meets the eye, however.

    Do believe Yelp reviews have any significant impact on your business? Let us know in the comments.

    Yelp has been offering researchers access to its data in the form of the Yelp Dataset Challenge, which includes data from Phoenix, Las Vegas, Madison, Waterloo, and Edinburgh. It’s made up of data from 42,153 businesses, 320,002 business attributes, 31,617 check-in sets, 252,898 users, 955,999 edge social graph, 403,210 tips, and 1,125,458 reviews.

    With the challenge, Yelp has been calling on academics to break ground in research with its data. Explaining the challenge, Yelp says:

    How well can you guess a review’s rating from its text alone? Can you take all of the reviews of a business and predict when it will be the most busy, or when the business is open? Can you predict if a business is good for kids? Has Wi-Fi? Has Parking? What makes a review useful, funny, or cool? Can you figure out which business a user is likely to review next? How much of a business’s success is really just location, location, location? What businesses deserve their own subcategory (i.e., Szechuan or Hunan versus just “Chinese restaurants”), and can you learn this from the review text? What makes a tip useful? What are the differences between the cities in the dataset? There is a myriad of deep, machine learning questions to tackle with this rich dataset.

    Researchers from Yahoo took Yelp up on the challenge, utilizing 200,000 of the available reviews to look at social signals that can be gleaned from Yelp, which can provide a better understanding of consumers’ interactions with businesses on the popular review site. As they note, Yelp isn’t just about the actual reviews.

    In a blog post, Yahoo Labs researchers Saeideh Bakhshi, David A. Shamma, and Partha Kanuparthy write:

    People on Yelp also log in and express their opinions, not as reviews, but as votes on reviews. In effect, it’s a higher granularity than a Flickr “favorite” or a Facebook “like,” as Yelpers cast their votes with the distinct sentiments of cool, funny, and/or useful. These votes are three kinds of “likes”; they are a minimal social signal that many online sites use for communication and recommendation. The three options that Yelp offers lets one investigate the implied meanings carried by these sentiments more accurately than many other social networks. But there’s something more here. In aggregate, a random person on Yelp might carry a running total of votes they have cast, including 469 useful votes, 192 cool votes, and 260 funny votes. The same could hold true for a venue. We began to wonder if we could understand something more from these votes; are they indicative of particular emotions? Do the votes represent some fingerprint of a Yelper or of an establishment?

    They found that the way people vote on reviews (including the sentiment of the text) has a relationship with the tone of the text and the text’s rating, depending on vote type. They say there is deeper meaning in signals like “cool,” “useful,” and “funny,” than those labels suggest.

    “While many would be correct in associating the useful and funny votes as representing reviews with the most amount of information or humor they contain, these signals are actually a proxy for negativity in reviews,” the researchers say. “A cool vote is more ambiguous in its meaning, but clearly associates with more positive reviews. Understanding these votes, or signals, and how they affect ratings can better inform customers as they come across reviews and take them into account for their own purposes; ultimately, they could alter one’s perception of a business, for better or worse.”

    The main takeaways are as follows:

    • Reviews that were voted useful and/or funny tended to have lower user ratings and generally carry a negative tone.
    • Reviews deemed to be cool by users tend to have a positive tone and higher user ratings.
    • Reviews written by members who are active for longer periods of time tend to receive more votes. Readers tend to prefer long and objective reviews.

    You can read the full research paper here. There is also some follow-up research available here.

    Have you ever considered the impact of how non-reviewing Yelp users are contributing to your business’ reputation by their interactions with existing reviews? Does it make a significant difference in your opinion? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via Yelp, Yahoo

  • Facebook Has A New Directory For Local Places

    Facebook has an interesting new local search and discovery tool available at Facebook.com/places. It gives users a look at places with Facebook pages, including those your friends have been to (with their comments) and others who have left reviews.

    The directory lets you browse through restaurants, hotels, bars, cafes, public attractions, arts & entertainment, gyms, movie theaters, schools, theaters, grocery stores, and landmarks.

    It also points you to more cities nearby.

    When you click to view all of any category, you’re directed to Graph Search results for that category in that city.

    Given Facebook’s current strategy of releasing standalone mobile apps, I wouldn’t be surprised to see some version of this make for such a release in the near future.

    Via Search Engine Land

    Image via Facebook

  • Tool Claims To Show Google Search Bias

    Tool Claims To Show Google Search Bias

    As recently reported, Yelp has formed a coalition (not entirely unlike the FairSearch Coalition) with other Google critics/competitors Consumer Watchdog, Jameda, HolidayCheck, TripAdvisor, and Fight for the Future. The group launched the site Focus on the User, which comes with a downloadable Chrome extension to show you how Google “manipulates” search results to inject its own content and reviews from Google+, even when results from some of the aforementioned competitors would be more relevant (at least according to said competitors).

    Does Google unfairly manipulate its search results in your opinion? Let us know in the comments.

    In another article, we looked at how Google is injecting more and more direct “answers” into its search results, and how these answers have varying degrees of accuracy, and have the potential to send less traffic to third-party websites, which it’s actually getting these answers from in many cases.

    Google has said time and time again, however, that it focuses on users, not websites. Yelp and its cohorts are therefore using that mantra as their angle for this new Google criticism initiative, which comes as the EU awaits new concessions from the search giant to quell so-called anti-competition concerns. In fact, the tagline on the site’s homepage is: “Google+ is hurting the Internet. Europeans have the power to stop it.”

    Here’s the introduction video.

    The video demonstrates the Chrome extension, which claims to “turn on” the main Google algorithm within local Onebox results, so that these results show what the algorithm actually deems the most relevant, which (you guessed it) tends to be things from the competitors and not Google+.

    “You might think that Google gives you the best answers from across the web when you search for something as important as a pediatrician in Munich, a bicycle repair shop in Copenhagen, or a hotel in Madrid,” the site says. “But Google doesn’t actually use its normal organic search algorithm to produce the responses to this question that you see prominently on the first screen. Instead, it promotes a more limited set of results drawn from Google+ ahead of the more relevant ones you would get from using Google’s organic search algorithm.”

    The group says it has tested the tool’s results with thousands of users, and that all of the info in the demo comes from Google itself. It also shares this piece of anecdotal evidence:

    When you search for “hotel berlin” today, Google.co.uk injects a map on the right side of the screen showing locations of Berlin hotels. Having a map appear for local searches makes sense. But rather than connecting the map pins to HolidayCheck, a leading hotel review provider founded in Germany, the map is hard-coded to Google+’s review ecosystem. This clearly doesn’t produce the most relevant results, as HolidayCheck almost always ranks higher than Google+ content according to Google’s own relevance ranker. You can see this for yourself by trying a simple test. Perform a search on Google for [hotel berlin (site:holidaycheck.de OR site:plus.google.com)]. Limiting the search to only these two review ecosystems makes it possible to see how they rank comparatively according to Google’s own relevance-based general search algorithm.

    The results are rather shocking: for that query, Google’s general search algorithm thinks HolidayCheck has over 370 results that are more relevant than the most relevant result from Google+. But Google still gives Google+ preferential placement in search results.

    The FAQ portion of the group’s website is where it really makes its arguments against known Google defenses about such criticisms.

    For example, it’s Google’s site. Shouldn’t it be able to do whatever it wants?

    “Most of the time yes, but not if Google is acting anti-competitively by abusing its dominant position in organic search to tie its vertical search products, depriving consumers of relevant results, stifling competition and impairing innovation,” it says. “Consumers need to be able to access competitive sources of information from across the web; by tying its own vertical search products to organic search results, Google prevents this.”

    A common defense from Google is that competition is only a click away. And it is. There’s no real argument for this in my opinion. Users don’t have to use Google, which is a free service just like its competitors. There is absolutely nothing stopping consumers from going to Yelp, TripAdvisor, or any of these other services, and skipping Google altogether.

    The group’s response to this says, “Google has an overwhelming and very durable share of the European organic search market. This market share has an important effect on conditioning user behavior, masking alternative sources of information, and raising the costs (e.g., time and effort) to switch to other sources of information.

    “Using a search engine might be simple. But running a search engine is highly complex and offers many dials and levers that impact user behavior. A company like Google knows that it can degrade quality to a certain point before consumers leave in droves. Google has made an art of predicting user behavior and knowing how much change users will tolerate before switching to another organic search service.”

    The real question in all of this is whether or not that’s a valid argument. Should Google be punished for being good at knowing what they have to do to keep people using their product while also doing things that help their product? Isn’t that basically what running a business is about?

    Interestingly, the relevance of Google+ is also among the FAQ with the question being: “I’ve read that Google+ is a failure. Is this even still relevant?”

    The answer from the FAQ is that it’s being used to “unify and draw data from different Google products” and that Google uses the brand to build products for local businesses.

    Its interesting that this thing is apparently spearheaded by Yelp, yet it didn’t announce it on its blog, and the demo and examples don’t really focus on Yelp content, which is itself frequently criticized by businesses and users alike (not to mention shareholders). On its most recent earnings call, Yelp pointed out that a Google algorithm change increased U.S. Yelp traffic, though international traffic declined month-over-month despite being up 80% year-over-year.

    This new effort from Yelp and its peers is focused specifically on Europe.

    Should Google be forced to change the way it serves local results in the way that Focus on the User is illustrating? Should Google be able to serve the results however it wants? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • Yahoo Buys Zofari For Local Search

    Yahoo Buys Zofari For Local Search

    Yahoo has acquired Zofari, which offers a local search and discovery app of the same name. It first launched in 2012.

    Zofari announced the acquisition on its website (via TechCrunch), where it says:

    Since our very first alpha in 2012, our goal has been to deliver brilliant local recommendations in the fastest way possible, and essentially, make the world an easier place to explore. Inspired by what Pandora has done for music and Netflix has done for movies, we built (what we think) is a beautiful and powerful recommendation app that allows users to discover new places based on the restaurants, bars and cafes they know and love.

    Along the way, we’ve also created some cool contextualization technology that enables us to look at a place and extract granular information about it, transforming bland, vanilla attributes like ratings and dollar signs into the familiar ideas that people use to make real-world decisions.

    While we’ve built an experience we couldn’t be more proud of, we’re a small company and have always dreamed of reaching users at a greater scale. After meeting some of the amazing folks on the Yahoo Search team and hearing about their vision, the decision for our team to join Yahoo was an easy one. We can’t talk about what we’re working on yet but needless to say we are very, very excited.

    The local search and discovery space is an increasingly crowded one, so Zofari is probably better off with an established brand like Yahoo as the other big search engines, and dedicated services like Yelp and Foursquare battle it out.

    The Zofari apps for iPhone and Android are still available.

    Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Image via Zofari

  • Yelp Launches Mobile Review Translation On iPhone

    Yelp announced the launch of automated review translation in its iPhone app. They offer reviews in fifteen languages in 27 countries. As the company continues to expand internationally, this will only become more important.

    The app makes use of Bing Translator (you didn’t think they were going to go with Google, did you?), and lets you tap to translate a single review or all reviews.

    “Although machine-translation is not perfect, it’s a fantastic resource for understanding the overall meaning and context of a review that would otherwise be unavailable to a Yelper who does not speak that language,” says Yelp international product manager Stepanie T. “Use this feature to get a general idea of a reviewer’s experience, but understand that some details may be lost in translation.”

    “Yelp has always given both locals and travelers alike the ability to find the best hidden gems through the knowledge of the Yelp global community, and mobile review translation makes that even easier,’ she adds. “This tool also gives local businesses that are a bit off the beaten path a better chance to be discovered by travelers. Sounds like a win-win situation to us!”

    Yelp supports English, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, German, Spanish, Italian, Norwegian, French, Polish, Portuguese, Swedish, Turkish, and Japanese.The translation feature will come to its Android app soon.

    Image via Yelp

  • Foursquare Tells Businesses Its New App Is Better For Them Too

    As you may know, Foursquare launched its new check-in-less app today. If you want a rundown on what to expect as a user, read this.

    Given that the focus of Foursquare has shifted from check-ins to local search, you can imagine that it might have some implications for small businesses. Naturally, the company is telling businesses that the new app is not only better for users, but better for them.

    “It learns what you like, and leads you to places you’ll love,” the company says in a blog post. “For local businesses like yours, this is perfect: the new app is even better at connecting your business with customers who will love what you have to offer.”

    “Connect with customers when it’s most relevant,” it adds. “Do people rave about your fish tacos or your scenic views? Your affordable prices or your specialty items? We’ll highlight those things to people who have told us they love them. Best of all, they’ll learn of them through the tips left by your happy customers.”

    As noted in our previous article on the app, tips are a big part of the new experience. Luckily for businesses, they can write tips to tell users what they’re known for or what they do best. It shows up in a dedicated section of the business listing, where it will also display specials.

    In addition to the new look of Foursquare itself, the company is rolling out a redesign of tis business site. Foursquare says it has a community of nearly 2 million businesses.

    Images via Foursquare

  • Foursquare’s New, Still Check In-Less App Is Here

    Foursquare went and pissed a bunch of people off when they decided to “unbundle” and separate the core functions of their main app into two apps. They relegated check-ins to a new app, called Swarm, and promised that Foursquare would relaunch in the summer as an app entirely devoted to local search and recommendations. Some with an if it ain’t broke don’t fix it mindset were skeptical.

    Despite the criticism – which they most certainly saw coming – Foursquare is moving ahead as planned. Foursquare’s new app – new logo and all – is now available for download. Foursquare had already cut check-ins out of the main app, but the new app showcases Foursquare’s vision – the reason why they chose to split everything up.

    Launching the new Foursquare app prompts a wizard of sorts wherein Foursquare asks you to give it some information on your tastes. If you’ve been using Foursquare for any amount of time, it already knows a little bit about you – but this sort of “taste” mapping is at the heart of the app’s new recommendation focus. Based on what you like (revealed by activity and what you tell it specifically), Foursquare will recommend places you might like nearby.

    “Every search is tailored to your tastes, your past ratings, and picks from friends and experts you trust,” says Foursquare.

    Tips are also at the heart of the new Foursquare. As promised, Foursquare has developed a new “expertise” ladder for tips. The more you tip about certain areas, types of locations, or varieties of cuisine – and the more people respond to your tips by saving them – the faster your “expertise” levels up. That expertise level will be displayed to all, so that people can feel a bit more comfortable in trusting your tips.

    “Friends” are now “followers” (friends are for Swarm, ya dinguses). People who follow each other will have their tips placed more prominently in the app.

    “There’s no reason why we should all get the same recommendations when looking for a place to eat, drink or shop. Getting a one-size-fits-all list of places may have been innovative in 2006, but it feels downright antiquated now,” says Foursquare. “The new Foursquare frees you from having to read long, random reviews, wondering if those people share your tastes. With Foursquare, find things based on your tastes, the places you like, and the friends and experts you trust most.”

    So, what’s Swarm’s place in the world of new Foursquare? Not hugely prominent, but definitely present. Your check-ins on Swarm will help power Foursquare’s recommendations – but as noted before, check-ins on Foursquare are dead. Not only can you not check in on it, your Swarm check-ins will never appear anywhere on the new Foursquare app.

    “The world is a beautiful place full of all sorts of amazing experiences, and our phones should help guide us to them. We’re releasing it today, and can’t wait for everyone to experience it,” says Foursquare.

    How’s the app look? Nice. It looks nice. Would it look or feel any more cluttered with check-ins and an activity feed. Probably not.

    Image via Foursquare app, iTunes

  • Google Update Hits Local Search Results

    Google Update Hits Local Search Results

    Google has reportedly launched a significant algorithm update that’s shaken up local search results in the United States quite a bit.

    Following a tip from Brian May on Twitter, local search watcher Mike Blumenthal reported on the “turmoil” in local search results.

    They were noticing missing 7 packs in real estate results.

    Search Engine Land also reported that Google confirmed an update, saying that it “ties deper into their web search capabilities, including the hundreds of ranking signals they use in web search, along with search features such as Knowledge Graph, spelling correction, synonyms, and more”.

    According them, the company also said it improves distance and location ranking parameters. They’re calling it the “Piegon” update just to give it a name, as Google has apparently not given it one.

    While those who lose rankings as a result of this will no doubt be irate, this is probably a good thing for users, as the rankings of local search results have always been questionable. If they can tap into all these other signals, it stands to reason that relevance should improve at least to some extent.

    This update comes as Google sees increased competition in the local search space from companies like Foursquare and Yelp. Google also recently made an update to its Google Maps mobile apps to make it easier for users to find places of interest. It has also added new ads to local search results.

    Image via Google

  • Google Maps Apps Get New ‘Explore’ Feature

    Google Maps Apps Get New ‘Explore’ Feature

    Google announced that it has added a new Explore button to the Google Maps app on Android and iOS, giving users a better way to discover places of interest that are nearby.

    There was already a “Nearby” feature, but now there’s a button, which makes it easier to find places to go, and it takes more than just your location into account.

    “Now, whenever you want to discover places in your area, simply tap the new Explore button at the bottom right corner of your map to get a quick look at what’s nearby (where available),” explains Google Maps product manager Taj Campbell. “With Explore as your guide, you’ll see different places and activities that adapt to each area and moment throughout your day. This also works when you’re browsing other neighborhoods and cities on the map so you can plan your day’s outing or daydream about your next vacation.”

    “The results you get in Explore not only tell you what’s nearby—and you can decide if ‘nearby’ means a five-minute walk or a 20-minute drive—but they actually change based on context like the time of day and the weather, too,” adds Campbell. “So don’t worry about wandering over to a breakfast spot for dinner, or arriving at the park just in time for a thunderstorm. You’ll get best results when you’re signed in with location reporting and history turned on.”

    This should be handy if it actually works. How often is the weather information you’re presented with day to day completely accurate?

    When you’re at the location you choose, the Android version of the app lets you tap on the “My Location” button at the bottom right or on the blue dot on the map to bring up additional info, such as reviews or transit schedules. It also lets you save the place for later.

    Google says your location experience will improve as you confirm places you visit.

    The new functionality comes just as Foursquare is preparing to roll out its new experience, which places focus on local search and place discovery, handing check-ins off to its new Swarm app.

    Competition between Google and Yelp continues to get more heated as well. The latter recently became an official complainant in an antitrust investigation into Google’s business practices, and opened up its API to all developers paving the way for Yelp data to be discovered in any app or website that cares to use it.

    Images via Google, Foursquare

  • Check-in Out: Foursquare Officially Kills Check-ins

    Just a few hours after touting Swarm’s success in becoming users’ go-to place for check-ins, Foursquare has announced that starting tomorrow, all check-ins will be moving to that app. For the first time since its launch in 2009, you won’t be able to check in using Foursquare.

    Back in May, Foursquare decided that to survive and flourish, they were going to have to split apart. The company announced the launch of a new app called Swarm, one that would be tailored to handle the checking in aspect of the service – while transitioning the main Foursquare app into one entirely focused on local search.

    But up until now (tomorrow), check-ins have still worked on Foursquare, and any check-in made on Swarm automatically shows up on the main Foursquare app. Foursquare has always made it clear that Swarm would be the place for check-ins, and now they’re making good on that promise – like it or not.

    “Starting tomorrow, we’re moving all check-ins to our new app, Swarm. Don’t worry; all your past check-ins, all your friends, all your photos, they’re all automatically in Swarm. For everyone still using Foursquare to check in, you’ll need to download Swarm to keep checking in,” says the company.

    If you look above, the left-hand view is a Foursquare venue page for someone who doesn’t use Swarm. As you can see, there’s no check-in button. On the right, however, there’s a Swarm-powered check-in button. If you have downloaded and signed up for Swarm, that’s the venue page you’ll see on the Foursquare app. So yes, you can technically check-in from the main Foursquare app, but not on it.

    As for the new Foursquare we’ve been promised – well, it’s coming soon. Foursquare says a couple of weeks, to be not-that-precise. What we do get today is a brand new logo. At least is doesn’t look like balls.

    Foursquare echoes the same kind of constantly-touted benefits of personalized recommendations (It doesn’t get you, and, as a result, everyone gets the same one-size-fits-all results. Why should two very different people get the same recommendations when they visit Paris?). Few people would argue that notion. The question is – can Foursquare deliver on bettering local search?

    “This is the beginning of the ‘personalized local search’ future we’ve been talking about since we started Foursquare. It’s been built with the help of our amazing 50,000,000-strong community, with all your tips, check-ins, photos, and the smarts we layered on top of that. Those of you have been with us since the beginning, your check-ins and history will continue to help shape your recommendations. For those of you giving us a try for the first time – you still get all the benefits of a better way to explore any neighborhood, no check-ins required,” says Foursquare.

    More like no check-ins allowed. If you’re on the fence about Swarm, I will tell you that there is a pretty killer unicorn rainbow sticker over there.

    Images via Foursquare Blog

  • Google Launches Upgraded AdWords Location Extensions

    Google announced the launch of upgraded location extensions, which it says is a better way to display your business location in all ads. They’re linked to your Google My Business and AdWords accounts.

    The idea is that your ads will make it easier for consumers to actually find info about your business.

    “Consumers increasingly look online for information such as driving directions, store hours, and products and services available at local businesses,” says Google product manager Aileen Tang. “Research shows that 50% of consumers visit a store within one day of searching for local information on their smartphones. As people are likely to visit a store based on what they see in online search, it’s important to capture every opportunity to showcase your locations. Newly upgraded location extensions allow you to feature your store locations in all campaigns so that every ad can deliver the most relevant local information at the moments that matter.”

    As the company notes, a lot of businesses already use location extensions at the campaign level in ads on Search and Maps. The new functionality simply makes it easier to automatically display the relevant information across all campaigns.

    The business locations you link to in your AdWords account can also be used for location targeting and bid adjustments.

    “This change is part of our broader effort to help you better reach customers as more people search for locally relevant content while on the go,” says Tang.

    Google says it will be further improving account location extensions over the next few months.

    Image via Google