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My advice is to experiment with any relevant

Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2025 5:06 am
by akbhasan185
So long as each category is applicable, you should be fine. In the past, there has been much discussion about whether category dilution (choosing too many categories) could hurt your rankings. Local SEO Colan Neilsen’s recent study demonstrated the opposite — that adding more, relevant categories can positively impact your visibility, rather than undermine it. This is a good time to note that the Guidelines for representing your business in Google’s section on categories can be a bit confusing. It contains outdated information pertaining to a bygone era (pre-2013) in which businesses were allowed to custom-create categories.


I don’t know why Google has never updated this section to remove the text about writing list of lebanon consumer mobile number list categories that describe what your business “is” rather than what your business “has”, since you’re automatically confined to choosing only Google’s own pre-approved categories, but, the odd state of this area of the guidelines has personally made me take the other recommendations in it with a grain of salt. For example, Google’s insistence that you should use as few categories as possible is somewhat dubious, though their recommendation that you only pick relevant categories makes perfect sense.


category and see where it gets you in terms of visibility. 2) What should I do if Google doesn’t have a category I need? Google has well over 3,000 categories for the US alone, and while this large index covers many business models, it’s not uncommon to find that something you offer isn’t represented. Sterling Sky founder, Joy Hawkins, recently highlighted a case in which a business owner went about requesting a new category from Google the right way, with abundant evidence of why a new option should be added.