BrightLocal publishes a list of the "
Top 50" citation sites for a few different countries. Whitespark has a similar "
Top 30". You would expect the first 30 on the BrightLocal list to align closely with Whitespark's list of 30 but they don't (at least for Canadian citations). In fact, there's an astounding disparity! Regardless, between the two lists, you get a good picture of what this two big players in local see as generic but important citation sites.
I've got a really interesting case right now. I'm helping a new massage therapy clinic establish an online presence. The business that ranks at the top of the the local 3-pack, for a few different search terms, is remarkable:
- it hasn't claimed its Google My Business listing
- so it has zero Google reviews
- has no website
- and has no social media accounts. (That's right: not even a Facebook page!)
(Searches performed from >30 km away to reduce proximity influence.)
The ONLY information about this business that exists online is its citations. So, as far as I can tell (please let me know if I'm missing something!) Google has ranked it at the top of the pack based on citations alone.
To expand on what Joy wrote:
Searching for this business (using <business name> + <street address>) I'm finding all of its citations. It's obviously got most of the important ones (except Facebook!) and many industry-specific, niche sites that you might find in a list of "niche" citation sites. E.g. rmtfind.com
But what I'm also finding is that it has lots of hyper-local citations. These would never be found in a list of top "niche" citations; they serve such a small geographic area.
So, I look at "niche" citations as being either industry-specific or hyper-local.
(Another example of hyper-local: knowledge panels for a bunch of coffee shops in Toronto show reviews from blogTO which, obviously, is only relevant in Toronto.)
Right now I'm helping my client nail down the top 30 or so citations AND mirror the hyper-local and industry-specific citations of the top-ranked competitors. I'm optimistic that this will help bump the strange listing from the top of the 3-pack. Time will tell. (Happy to report back if anyone's interested.)