OMG Kathy! Were you in my head? Or did I type that under your user name?
You saved me so much time and carpal pain!
Now a disclaimer, before people start saying again that "Linda said citations aren't important" that's not what Kathy meant or what I'm about to say.
Citations are important just like backlinks.
BUT when you can blast them out easily with automated submission tools, similar to backlinks, I don't think they are going to count as much in the algo.
Back before everyone and their brother was talking about citations and building them en masse, before they were abused, I think the algo looked at them as a sign of popularity or proof the business was legit. Google now knows exactly how much folks are focusing on them purely for ranking, you know it's not going to last or maybe even now, does not quite carry the weight it once did.
Back when I still worked client-side my strategy was the same as Kathy's. Do everything else really well and put extra time into the on-site SEO and that will usually do the trick, unless it's a client with scrambled NAP OR a new business with no citations, then you may need to build a good base of citations to get them started.
But building 500 more citations for a mature company that already has 2000 I suspect does not move the needle as much as it used to. And getting listed on all the standard local directories everyone else does - the easy ones that can be blasted out - well I just don't think those are viewed with as much importance these days.
And if Google isn't already, I assume they soon will be looking at citation velocity. Like links, natural citations happen gradually over time. If you suddenly get 500 new ones I think it will either trip a filter or they will just be ignored. (This is all just my gut feeling based on knowing how Google often thinks and reacts to anything that could be perceived as ranking manipulation. I don't have any hard proof - just my opinion.)
If I were still working on client campaigns I would be thinking more about outside the box ways to boost activity and engagement - to get people locally to link to the site or mention the business name for targeted local citations. Sponsoring events, contests, charity contributions, local news or industry news on the site or other unique content that makes folks want to talk about the business online. Embedding "Business View" on the home page for the right kind of business, if you make it creative, viral and entertaining is a great thing to try.
I would be thinking about ways to 'attract' links and citations, instead of building them en mass.
(Again I'm talking about a mature business that already has a good base of citations.)
Sheesh Kathy said it all, then I still had to ramble on a write a book.
