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Multi-location SEO strategy: Stop competing with your own content

Multi-location SEO strategy- Stop competing with your own content

Multi-location brands are investing heavily in content. But more content doesn’t automatically mean more growth.

I keep seeing the same issue. Each individual location has a blog, and they all cover the same topics. Same keywords. Same structure. Same search intent. The goal is local visibility, but the result is often internal competition and diluted authority.

Building an effective content strategy for multi-location brands requires clarity around roles. What should live at the corporate level to build authority, and what should stay local to drive relevance and conversions? Without that alignment, brands risk competing with themselves instead of winning in search.

Where the strategy breaks down

Most multi-location content issues aren’t intentional. They’re often the result of growth without a clear content framework, or simply too many cooks in the kitchen without overall governance.

Corporate teams are focused on building brand authority and scaling marketing efforts. At the same time, local teams or franchisees want content that answers their customers’ questions and lives on their own site, rather than sending users elsewhere. The assumption is simple: more content equals more visibility.

However, without clear ownership or strategic keyword targeting, overlap becomes inevitable. Similar topics are published across multiple URLs, and over time, this creates internal competition rather than building authority for the entire site.

What type of content belongs at corporate

In general, corporate should own the content that applies to the brand as a whole and build authority at scale. This includes blog content that targets broader informational queries and answers user questions, no matter where users are located. 

Educational resources, industry insights, and evergreen topics perform best when consolidated in one place rather than duplicated across multiple URLs.

Mathnasium - sample webpage

Core service, product, and line-of-business pages should also be centralized. These pages define what the brand offers and typically remain consistent across markets. While location pages can reference and support this foundational content, they often don’t need to be recreated at the local level unless they differ between locations.

Brand-level content, such as company history, leadership, mission, and differentiators, should also sit at the corporate level. These elements reinforce credibility and should be standardized across the organization.

Dig deeper: Local content playbook: From service pages to jobs-to-be-done pages

What type of content belongs at the local level

When it comes to local content, focus on what’s relevant to that specific market. This includes geo-specific content such as:

  • Location landing pages with unique, customized copy.
  • Localized metadata.
  • Location-specific FAQs, relevant structured data (e.g., reviews, LocalBusiness).
  • In some cases, region-specific service variations.
Tend location page


On location pages specifically, there are additional opportunities to highlight uniqueness:

  • Location-specific testimonials and reviews.
  • Team bios.
  • Owner messages or stories.
  • Events or awards.
  • Community partnerships.
  • Descriptive content about the location or service area.
  • Location-specific imagery.

These elements can live on a single, well-built location page or expand into a microsite structure (pages living under a subfolder) when it makes sense for the business. Remember, the goal of these pages is to strengthen relevance, target geo-modified and local intent queries, and ultimately drive conversions. 

One common concern with location pages is duplicate content. The question often becomes, how much duplicate content is acceptable? Instead of focusing on a percentage of unique versus shared content, teams should focus on what’s most useful for the user.

Typically, content that doesn’t need to be unique across every location includes:

  • Brand boilerplates.
  • Core service lists.
  • Service or product descriptions.
  • Standard calls to action.
  • Legal disclaimers.
  • Navigation.
  • Trust signals.
Neighborly Done Right Promise copy

Dig deeper: Local SEO sprints: A 90-day plan for service businesses in 2026

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Common SEO risks of a faulty content strategy

When content production lacks clear governance, it can lead to a range of issues that affect organic visibility and crawl efficiency. Over time, this can cause inconsistent rankings, diluted authority, and missed opportunities to convert traffic into leads.

Keyword cannibalization

Keyword cannibalization occurs when multiple pages across a site target the same keywords and search intent. Instead of strengthening rankings, those pages end up competing against each other in search results, and, in some cases, may not get indexed at all.

For multi-location brands, this often happens when individual locations publish similar blog content. For example, a plumbing brand might have multiple location pages with blogs, each posting a blog post titled “Tips to fix a leaky faucet,” creating several URLs targeting the same informational query.

A more strategic approach is to consolidate that topic into a single, strong corporate-level post. This would allow the brand to serve as the authoritative source, build backlinks, answer users’ questions effectively, and strengthen the site’s overall credibility.

Google choosing the ‘wrong page’

When multiple pages on a website are targeting the same or overlapping keywords, search engines have to determine which one to rank, and sometimes it’s not the page you intended.

On a multi-location site, that may mean a local blog ranks nationally for a topic that would be better suited to live on the corporate site and build broader brand authority. While the page may be relevant to the query, it may not guide users clearly to the next step, leading to customer confusion or bounces.

It may also cause users who aren’t in-market to leave the site after absorbing the information because there’s no clear next step for them, or because they only see information about services in Austin, Texas, while they’re located in Cleveland, Ohio.

Instead, consolidating authority on a single, well-ranking page that clearly directs users to take action, whether that means finding their nearest location or submitting a form, would be more beneficial for the brand and users.

Crawl inefficiencies

Publishing multiple blog posts on the same topic, especially when the answer doesn’t vary by location, can result in duplicate or low-value content. While these pages may be regularly crawled due to internal linking, they often never make it into the index.

At scale, this can become a bigger issue, especially for sites with many locations that publish similar informational topics. For a site with dozens or hundreds of locations, having similar blog posts across those locations can create crawl bloat, where search engines may spend time and resources crawling repetitive or low-impact URLs rather than more high-impact pages.

Diluted link equity

When similar content exists across multiple URLs, backlinks and internal links are split among pages instead of consolidating authority on a single strong page. Rather than building momentum around a single piece of content, link equity is distributed across competing versions. 

For multi-location brands, this can weaken overall ranking potential. Consolidating authoritative content at the corporate level allows links, authority, and trust signals to compound, strengthening the entire domain and supporting location pages more effectively.

Dig deeper: The local SEO gatekeeper: How Google defines your entity

Creating a plan: How corporate and local can work together

After defining roles, move to governance. Multi-location brands need a shared plan for ownership, keyword targeting, and team collaboration.

Before new content gets created, the right questions need to be asked, such as:

  • Is this topic location- or region-specific, or is it broader for any consumer?
  • Would publishing this for only one location add value to those specific customers?
  • Would publishing it across multiple locations make sense?
  • Who should own the keyword? The brand or a specific location?
  • Who does it make sense for the information to come from?

Clear keyword mapping and a centralized content calendar can prevent overlap before it starts. When teams understand their roles, content supports overall growth instead of competing internally.

Content collaboration also creates opportunities to strengthen E-E-A-T signals for the site as a whole. Corporate can cover broader educational topics while drawing on real expertise and experience from local teams.

For example, a roofing company might want to write a post about how often homeowners should replace their roofs. The topic is universal. However, the answer could vary by region due to factors such as the material used in that area or the weather. 

The blog could include quotes from franchise owners or team members across different regions to provide insights into regional factors, such as heat and humidity in the South versus harsh winter weather in the North.

This would allow corporate to own the topic and give locations the opportunity to provide their unique expertise and experiences. Plus, linking to relevant location pages can reinforce context and create stronger internal linking throughout the site.

Another option would be to create a local hub within the blog.

Volume isn’t always the right strategy

Search may be changing, but many of the fundamentals remain the same. High-quality, well-structured content that genuinely helps users is what earns visibility.

With Google’s AI Overviews and large language models pulling from authoritative sources, content that clearly answers questions and reflects real expertise is even more valuable. Pages created solely to scale across multiple locations — without adding unique value — are unlikely to perform consistently, and can even hurt a site in the long run.

Content shouldn’t be treated as a volume game. More pages alone won’t drive growth. What matters is planning, ownership, and alignment.

When corporate and local teams build a shared content strategy, it helps turn content into a growth driver rather than just more pages on a site.

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