I have the company websites that show the websites they claim to operate, but I don't have proof they have virtual offices other than the fact that they have about a dozen offices that supposedly are all located in the same building. What do you recommend using as evidence?
I'm quite late to the party and this one isn't on Google, but I couldn't believe that I saw a doctor respond to a patient's review by explaining that she's "low educated." But don't worry, it's not her fault. :rolleyes:
A competitor of my client has multiple spammy listings for different firms that use virtual addresses. I know I could try to address these all in a redressal firm, but I feel like without pictures of the building directories for these locations, I would have a difficult time flagging them. But...
I just noticed his website has the following disclaimer. Is this something Google might flag a listing for and possibly remove it?
THIS IS AN ADVERTISING PLATFORM
This is for advertisement only and should not be intended for legal advice. Various attorneys with this platform maintain independent...
Fair enough, but would it at least be a little more effective?
Also, if he does this for multiple firms he has locations for, should I do multiple redressals or just try to bundle them all into one?
What about the redressal form? If I make a spreadsheet with some of the evidence of their false reviews and their fake addresses, will that at least increase the likelihood the reviews will be removed and the location with the fake address might get puled again?
One of my legal clients has a competitor that uses a wide variety of black hat tactics. Most recently, they started getting a bunch of positive reviews that are obvious fakes -some of them are from people who have only reviewed his 5 legal companies, one even talks about how he gift wrapped her...
So if we created a second site for the SD office, would it be ok if we took some articles from the original site that are ranking well for San Diego keywords and moved them to the new site (deleting them on the original of course to prevent duplicate content)? Or would Google dislike that?
He...
I work for an attorney and he ranks pretty well for most keywords. The problem is, he has a primary location in Vista, CA and a secondary location in the city of San Diego, CA (both are in SD county). We've focused most of the site content on the main website with local keywords "Vista criminal...
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