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Map Tracker

Track your visibility in local search results.

Map Tracker follows Google Maps visibility for a saved local target. Use it for queries where location changes the result set and keep this work separate from standard organic ranking analysis.

Add a local keyword

  1. Select Add keyword.
  2. Enter the local query, such as a service plus a city or neighbourhood.
  3. Choose the country and language that represent the target market.
  4. Use Find your Map listing to confirm the business Screpy should evaluate.
  5. Add filters for the saved listing when needed—for example, a website domain that equals the business domain or a title that contains the business name.
  6. Save the keyword and wait for its status to become completed.

The report shows tracked-keyword count, average position, visibility score, and Top 3 count. Each row records keyword, location, position, change, trend, best position, last analysis, and status. CSV and Excel exports are available for the current table.

Set a location that represents the audience

Choose the keyword and location based on where the customer is actually searching. A result from one city, neighborhood, or country may not represent another. Keep the tracked location stable when you want to compare results over time; otherwise, you may be measuring a different market rather than a change in visibility.

Review the listed businesses and their information in context. A local result can be influenced by relevance, proximity, category, business details, reviews, and the searcher's location. Do not assume that changing one page title or adding one keyword will explain every local result movement.

Investigate a movement before changing the listing

When visibility changes, compare the query, selected location, date, and result set. Then review the business information, relevant landing page, and recent changes. Keep changes factual and consistent across the website and the business profiles you control.

Common questions

Why is the result different from a normal Rank Tracker result?

Local results use location-sensitive signals and can include map-oriented listings. They answer a different search question from a standard organic result set.

Should I create separate pages for every location?

Create location content only when it serves a real local audience with distinct, useful information. Thin city-page variations are not a substitute for an accurate local presence.

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