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Official statement

It's better to create unique and engaging content for each individual business, even if they are in different locations. Otherwise, gathering information on a single strong page may be more effective than having multiple small pages.
4:25
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 27/07/2018 ✂ 33 statements
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📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends creating unique content for each local establishment rather than duplicating it. If this approach isn't feasible, it's better to consolidate all locations on a strong single page than to spread weak content across multiple URLs. This stance directly challenges the strategy of many networks that multiply nearly identical local pages.

What you need to understand

Why does Google caution against multi-local duplication?

The main issue is that most franchise networks massively duplicate their content. You change the city name in the H1, adjust the Google Maps address, and voilà, you've multiplied the same page by 50.

Google detects this practice and sees it as low-value content. Each page becomes a diluted version of the same information, failing to provide a specific answer to the user looking for precise local information.

What does 'unique and engaging content' really mean for each location?

We're talking about creating a genuine local page with information specific to the establishment. Specific hours, photos of the on-site team, localized customer reviews, local news, and events happening at that location.

The content must respond to location-based intentional queries. If someone searches for 'hairdresser Rennes,' your page should explain why your salon in Rennes is worth visiting, not just serve a generic template with 'Rennes' inserted 8 times.

When is it preferable to consolidate on a single page?

When you don't have the resources to produce high-quality differentiated content, Google suggests consolidation. A /our-saloons page with an interactive list, region filters, and a map is better than 50 ghost pages.

This approach avoids internal cannibalization and concentrates PageRank on a strong URL. It also simplifies maintenance and reduces the risk of Panda penalties for thin content.

  • Multi-local duplicated content: Google detects it and penalizes it as soft spam
  • Unique pages: require substantial editorial resources (time, photos, on-site information)
  • Consolidation: a viable fallback strategy if the editorial budget is limited
  • Cannibalization: several weak pages compete instead of strengthening the domain
  • Panda risk: multiplying thin content pages can affect the entire domain

SEO Expert opinion

Is this recommendation consistent with real-world observations?

Yes, but with a significant nuance. The best-performing local sites do indeed have unique and rich pages. However, 'unique' doesn't mean reinventing the wheel every time.

It's observed that 70 to 80% of the structure can be common (services, prices, FAQ), as long as 20 to 30% provide real local value. The problem arises when 95% of the content is identical verbatim.

What nuances should we add to this statement?

Google remains extremely vague about the acceptable duplication threshold. At what percentage of similarity does it consider a page duplicated? [To verify] as no official data exists.

Secondly, the recommendation to 'consolidate on a strong page' works for Search Console and indexing, but it severely limits your ability to capture local long-tail queries. You sacrifice geographic granularity.

Third nuance: Google My Business changes the game. Even without a dedicated page on your site, your GMB listing can rank locally. The question becomes: does your local site provide more value than your GMB listing? If not, consolidation is advisable.

In what cases does this rule not strictly apply?

Franchises with truly differentiated services by location can justify separate pages even with a common core. For example, a network of garages where each establishment has specific equipment (electrical diagnostics, bodywork, etc.).

Sites with high domain authority (DR > 60) tolerate a certain level of duplication better than younger sites. Google gives them more credit for editorial intent. But this isn’t an excuse to spam.

Caution: Do not confuse multi-local duplication with content syndication. A network of dealers using manufacturer listings faces a different problem, managed by canonicals and rel="alternate."

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do if you manage a multi-local network?

Start with a similarity audit. Use a tool like Copyscape or Siteliner to measure the duplication rate between your local pages. If you exceed 80% similarity, you're in the red zone.

Next, prioritize your locations. Identify the 5-10 establishments generating the most traffic or revenue. Invest in these priority pages: local photos, customer testimonials, events, local partnerships, team interviews.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in this multi-local management?

Avoid falling into automated spinning. Replacing 'Paris' with 'Lyon' via a script doesn’t fool anyone, especially not Google. NLP algorithms detect this pattern instantly.

Also, steer clear of geographical over-optimization. Stuffing your page with 'hairdresser Lyon', 'hair salon Lyon', 'best hairdresser Lyon' 20 times reeks of spam. Focus on real utility for the user.

Final trap: creating empty pages while waiting to fill them. It’s better not to publish than to index skeletal content. Google crawls, indexes, evaluates, and you end up with a history of thin content that’s hard to erase.

How can you check if your local strategy is effective?

Measure the indexing rate of your local pages via the Search Console. If Google indexes only 40% of your 50 pages, it’s a clear signal it sees them as low value.

Compare the organic performance of your local pages against your consolidated page (if you have one). Look at impressions, CTR, and average positions. If your local pages are stuck in positions 15-30 without ever moving up, they are likely cannibalizing each other.

  • Audit the similarity rate between local pages (target < 70%)
  • Produce unique local content for the 5-10 prioritized establishments
  • Avoid automated spinning and keyword over-optimization
  • Monitor the indexing rate in the Search Console
  • Compare organic performance of local page vs consolidated page
  • Enhance with photos, reviews, events, local team
The multi-local strategy requires a balance between scalability and quality. If you don't have the resources to create truly differentiated content, consolidate on a strong page with filters and an interactive map. If you can invest, prioritize your key locations and build rich local content. These optimizations require sharp editorial and technical expertise. When internal resources are lacking or the business stakes warrant professional guidance, engaging an SEO agency specializing in local strategy can help structure a coherent approach for the long term.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Quel taux de duplication est acceptable entre deux pages locales ?
Google ne communique aucun seuil officiel. L'observation terrain suggère qu'en dessous de 70 % de similarité, le risque est limité, mais tout dépend de l'autorité du domaine et de la qualité du contenu unique restant.
Une page consolidée peut-elle ranker sur des requêtes géolocalisées ?
Difficilement. Google privilégie les pages dédiées pour les requêtes avec intention locale claire. Une page consolidée performe mieux sur des requêtes génériques ou informationnelles que sur « service + ville ».
Faut-il créer une page par établissement même si le contenu est similaire ?
Non. Si tu ne peux différencier substantiellement le contenu, mieux vaut consolider sur une page avec filtres ou carte interactive. Ta fiche Google My Business compensera pour la visibilité locale.
Comment gérer les pages locales existantes si je décide de consolider ?
Redirige les pages locales faibles en 301 vers la page consolidée. Conserve uniquement les pages qui ont déjà du trafic organique significatif et enrichis-les en priorité.
Le spinning de contenu est-il détectable par Google ?
Absolument. Les algorithmes NLP et BERT détectent les patterns de remplacement automatique. Le spinning n'a jamais été une stratégie viable et l'est encore moins aujourd'hui.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content AI & SEO Local Search International SEO

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