CategoriesLocal SEO SEO Web Development

What are local citations in SEO, and why are they important?

Picture yourself opening a very successful small bakery in town. You have the best sourdough in the entire town, an inviting bakery, and happy customers. However, when one of your neighbors types “nearest bakery” into Google Search, they don’t see your website listed. Not even once.

It’s not because you did anything wrong. Your bread is fantastic. The issue is far from complicated; the problem is that Google has yet to confirm that you really exist.

That’s the exact dilemma that citations management services address. At DevDigitalSEO, this is the first thing we do for a local business that doesn’t know how it became invisible on Google.

So, what exactly is a local citation?

A local citation refers to any reference on the internet that mentions the essential information associated with your business, such as your name, address, and phone number. Together, the three make up an acronym known as NAP in the world of search engine optimization. Local citations can be found everywhere from business directories to industry-specific websites.

  • Name: The exact, consistent business name
  • Address: Full address—formatted identically, every time
  • Phone: The same local number across all listings

Think of citations as digital references. When multiple credible sources across the web all say the same thing about your business—same name, same address, same phone number—Google reads that as a strong signal of legitimacy. The more consistent and widespread those references are, the more confident Google becomes that your business is real, established, and worth showing to searchers nearby.

“Citations are to local SEO what backlinks are to general SEO — they’re votes of existence, and they carry real weight in how Google ranks local businesses.”

Structured vs. unstructured citations

Not all citations look the same. They come in two main forms, and both matter.

Structured

Your business details appear in a formal, dedicated listing. Think Google Business Profile, Yelp, Bing Places, Yell.com, or TripAdvisor. These are intentional, directory-style entries with defined fields for your NAP data.

Unstructured

Your business name and details are mentioned naturally within content—a blog post, a local news article, a community forum, or a journalist’s roundup. Less formal, but still valuable signals to search engines.

Both types send trust signals to Google. A healthy citations strategy, as the team at DevDigitalSEO would tell you, builds both, starting with the high-authority structured directories and then expanding to niche and local sources that are relevant to your specific industry and geography.

Why do citations matter for local SEO rankings?

The search ranking algorithm employed by Google takes into consideration three main components, which include relevance, distance, and prominence. Prominence is directly affected by citations, where it represents the reputation of a business.

With good quality and trustworthy citations all through credible directories, the Google search engine would have an easier time placing your business in “the local pack” – the three most valuable search engine listing positions that every company desires. Your business could actually experience a radical change just by being in the local pack position.

In addition to improving the ranking of your website, citations improve visibility as well, as the optimization of your citation will be visible in any searches made through directories like Yelp and Apple Maps.

The consistency problem—and why it quietly kills rankings

This is usually where many companies fail without even realizing what they have done wrong. Citations require consistency in the company information provided. If your company shows up as “Smith & Sons Plumbing” in Google, “Smith and Sons Plumbing Ltd.” in Yell, and “Smiths Plumbing” in Yelp—these will make them appear as three separate companies to a search engine algorithm.

Incorrect NAP data in the listings is one of the most frequent local SEO mistakes that we see at DevDigitalSEO. These issues tend to be very subtle yet quite destructive to your local presence. A citation audit can easily reveal over 50 conflicts in a business’s citation profile, which have quietly suppressed their performance.

These problems accumulate over time. An old address from an old location, an old phone number or contact info, and an old business name—that is what you get if no one has tried fixing the mistakes. The problem here is that even if a company spends hours building fresh citations, Google won’t reward them if old citations still exist.

How to build citations the right way

Creating a powerful citations list is not hard; it simply takes some time and effort. Here is how it can be done successfully:

First, you need to start with creating entries on the larger business directories such as Google Business Profile, Bing Places, Apple Maps, Facebook, Yelp, and national directories for your country.

Then move on to create entries on the industry-specific directories such as TripAdvisor and OpenTable for the restaurants, legal directories for solicitors, and rated people for the tradespeople.

You also need to add regional and local directories such as local Chambers of Commerce and local councils’ business directories.

Lastly, you have to perform periodic audits of the existing citations and remove any duplicates or incorrect listings.

Create a master NAP file for your company so that each entry will be created identically.

Citations and the bigger local SEO picture

To claim that citations alone will take you to the top in local search is to overlook several important components of local SEO. Citations are indeed an integral part of local SEO, but it is a complex process with many components. These components include optimization of your Google My Business profile, your review scores, your local content, and even your backlink profile.

However, citations are usually low-hanging fruit in terms of achieving a higher ranking in the SERP. Newer companies and even those with no previous experience with local SEO should focus on citations first since these activities can yield visible results within weeks after implementation.

As experts in SEO, DevDigitalSEO believes in laying down solid foundations before going further. If our team agrees to undertake your company’s SEO project, then you better believe that we’ll talk all about content or backlinks only when citations are in place.