How Search determines context
When someone types a search into Google, it’s trying to understand the full context behind that query. For regional SEO, this context is everything. Google wants to serve results that are not only relevant but also timely, nearby, and tailored to what the user really needs.
Keywords
Keywords are still king, but context is queen. Google tries to understand what a searcher is really asking for. For regional SEO, this means including neighbourhoods, landmarks, and other location-specific terms. So when someone searches “coffee near me,” your café has a better shot at appearing in the regional pack.
Language
The words you use, the phrasing, and even the regional slang matter. Google detects language nuances to match content with the right audience.
Localisation
Google uses location signals (like IP address, GPS, and declared business address) to deliver results relevant to the user’s neighbourhood. For multi-location SEO, this means every branch needs its own localised content, so each one can appear in searches specific to its area rather than competing with your other locations.
Current events
Google also factors in timely events and trending topics. If there’s a festival, a regional sale, or even weather-specific demand (i.e a plumber open after storm), Google can prioritise businesses that have fresh, locally relevant content.