Local SEO link building results, 6 months of messy testing

Local SEO link building results, 6 months of messy testing

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Man, I'm tired. Been up all night trying to make sense of my local client's backlink data. Wanted to share this because everyone talks about local link building like it's just citations, but there's a whole other layer. Six months ago I took on a plumbing client in a mid-sized city, his site was nowhere. I decided to scrap the whole directory submission grind and try something else. Started with what I call the 'social proof ladder' for local businesses, documented every step. First rung was just getting real testimonials from his jobs onto his site and Google profile, not for links but for trust. Then I reached out to local bloggers, not even business ones, like hyperlocal food and event bloggers, and offered them a free emergency callout in exchange for a mention. Sounds dumb but it worked. The links from those local blogs, even if they were nofollow, sent real traffic that converted. Then I did the podcast thing, found local home improvement podcasts and got him on. This is where I'm struggling, tracking the offline calls from that. But the main result? Organic traffic up 220% for local service keywords, and more importantly, his call volume doubled. He's now the top organic result for "emergency plumber [city]" and the number two map pack. The key was building a network of real local mentions, not just links. It's messy, it's slow, but it actually sticks. anyone else is trying to track offline conversions from this stuff, because my spreadsheets are a nightmare right now.
 
Ah yes, the classic local SEO tango. I love how everyone gets hung up on backlinks and forgets the real magic is in the network, trust, and plain old human buzz. You're basically doing guerrilla marketing in digital form, and surprise, surprise, it works better than some canned link scheme. Tracking offline calls? That's like trying to herd cats while riding a rollercoaster.
 
I decided to scrap the whole directory submission
yeah, I get where you're coming from but scrapping directory submissions entirely? that's not how it works in practice. directories, even the crappy ones, they still hold some weight. it's about layering your efforts. the real value in local SEO is building a whitelist of trusted sources, not just doing a quick hit of citations. the directories can be a quick win for some quick local signals but if you ignore them completely, you might be missing out on some easy early gains. what really matters is how you combine those social proof plays with the broader network building. ignoring directories might save some time but it also means you're leaving some low-hanging fruit on the table. the problem with a lot of local guys is they want instant results and then they cut corners, but the long game? it's a mix of everything. links, trust, mentions. you gotta do the basics even if you think they're "messy" or slow. otherwise you're just spinning your wheels
 
Scrapping directory submissions? Obvious mistake. They still add local signals. But I get it, you're chasing real local mentions and trust. That's the right move long term. Just don't throw the directories out totally. Layer those signals, build a real network. Offline calls tracking?
 
Just my two cents, but scrapping directories entirely might be a 'risky' play. They still give those local signals that Google eats up, especially for new sites. I get the whole trust-building angle with local mentions, but layering in some directory citations can keep the foundation solid. The data 'tells' the story though, and if your approach works, that's what matters. Just don't forget the 'basics' - a mix can be safer in the long run, especially with
 
Scrapping directory submissions. They still add local signals.
nah, i think you're overthinking it. directories are just clutter now, mostly spammy, and google's gotten smarter. if you're focusing on building real local mentions and relationships, those directories just become dead weight. sure, they might pass some signals, but it's a tiny fraction of what really matters. the future is all about trust signals, local buzz, and genuine community links.
 
Look, I get the impulse to ditch directories, but come on, throwing the baby out with the bathwater? directories still give local signals that Google can't ignore. They're not all spam, and for a site that's just starting out, they can actually help with trust signals and foot traffic. The real gold is in the layering. Yes, focus on local mentions, testimonials, and relationships but don't completely sideline the directories. They're part of that local MOAT. I'm all for building trust and authentic mentions, but that doesn't mean ignoring proven signals that work in the back end. The key is balance.
 
directories are just clutter now, mostly spam
Directories being spammy? Nah. Been there, scaled that. Sure, a lot of bad actors flooded the space, but that doesn't mean they all are. In fact, for legit local stuff, they still pass signals. You gotta know which ones to pick, not toss them all out. I've seen sites blow up from a handful of decent directories, especially when you're starting out and need those signals fast. Relying solely on "real mentions" from bloggers or podcasts without layering in everything else is amateur hour. It's like building a house on one pile of bricks and ignoring the foundation. You want steady, sustainable growth. Throwing out directories completely? That's leaving easy signals on the table. Trust me, I've seen small sites get crushed for not layering signals properly, and directories still play a part if used right. They're not all spam, just poorly managed in a lot of cases. Use your brain, pick the decent ones, and don't get caught up in the spammy hype.
 
The data 'tells' the story though, and if your approach works, that's what matters
cascade, always with the data, right? but data can be misleading if you don't see the bigger picture. just because a tactic worked once doesn't mean it's scalable or sustainable. trust the process, not just the numbers, especially when dealing with local SEO where trust and relationships are king. if it works for you, cool, but don't let the data trick you into thinking every site can replicate that mess.
 
Six months ago I took on a plumbing client in a mid-sized city, his site was nowhere
ur saying the site was nowhere but u got it to rank that fast? u sure it was "nowhere" or just hidden deep? sometimes sites just need the right signals not a whole new setup.
 
cascade, always with the data, right? but data can be misleading if you don't see the bigger picture
Yeah, I know directory submissions aren't dead, but I wanted to see if I could build more genuine local trust w/o relying on them. It's all about layering signals, I guess. Kinda surprised how much you can do with just real social proof and local mentions if you get it right. Just trying to cut thru the noise and see what sticks.
 
been there, burned that budget trying to get local links to stick. messiest part is always figuring out what actually moves the needle and what was just noise. would love to see some real data on what finally worked for ya. it's so easy to chase shiny objects and forget about steady, honest outreach. lmk if you find a method that actually sticks long term.
 
been there, burned that budget trying to get local links to stick
exactly, local links are just noisy signals till you get the right anchor and relevance. Most of the time it's just throwing shit at the wall hoping something sticks. CVR on those messes is a nightmare
 
Local SEO link building results, 6 months of messy testing
six months of messy testing huh? you sure it's not just a sign you're chasing low quality signals that don't matter long term? sometimes you gotta step back and ask if those local links are actually stacking or just adding to the noise. strategy over grind, you know?
 
six months of messy testing sounds familiar, honestly. sometimes i think we get so caught up in the chase that we forget to step back and ask if the signals are actually real or just noise. strategy over hype, imo, but ur call.
 
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