What Happens When You Sign Up for Yext?

This post is part 2 of a 2-part series:

  1. What Happens When You Cancel Yext? 
  2. What Happens When You Sign Up for Yext? (this post)

A few weeks ago I wrote an article about what happens when one cancels Yext. However, that may have seemed backwards, because in order to cancel a Yext subscription, one must first sign up for Yext. Thus, I decided to explore what happens when a business signs up for Yext.

Susan Staupe was very kind to offer a client of hers as the test subject for this research. The client is a personal injury attorney in New York: Proner & Proner. This industry and the city where the business is located is enough to make any local SEO professional shudder, so we decided that it was the perfect case for our research.

Business Details

The business’s information footprint turned out to not be as messy as one would expect from a personal injury firm. Especially one that has been operating since 1958.

The NAP that we are working with is:

Business Name: Proner & Proner
Address: 60 E 42nd St, Suite 1448 New York, NY 10165
Phone: (212) 986 – 3030

We discovered that the business has been known as Proner & Proner (or derivative names) throughout most of its existence, with one significant name shift. Early on, the practice had been named “Stanley A Proner PC” (after Mr. Proner Senior) before the son, Mitchell Proner, joined in. The business had changed its physical location once in the past – from 305 Madison Ave, Ste 1448 to 60 E 42nd St, Ste 1448, both in NYC*. Additionally, we found out that the business had used 8 different phone numbers throughout its existence.

We discovered listings for three practitioners at the practice:

    • Allan Stanley Proner
    • Mitchell Laurence Proner
    • Tobi Rochford Salottolo

Usually, a practice-practitioner business like this would be even more messy to start with, due to each lawyer (or doctor, dentist, insurance agent, etc) having their own listing in addition to the practice itself. Thus, our expectations were that the success rate after the Yext subscription was activated would be relatively high.

*Note: Another location in NYC was discovered – at 220 E 65th St, Apt 10G. However, this location was not considered relevant to our research, so it was not included in the overall statistics reported below. It is important to mention that no listings for that location were affected in any way by the Yext subscription.

General Case Study Methodology

We performed a standard manual citation audit of the listings of the business that included all of the sites officially in Yext’s network (at the time of working on the research). Then, we signed the business up for Yext, waited a week, and did another audit to see what happened to the listings.
We obtained a standard information intake form from Susan, which featured up-to-date information about the business, as well as information about the business that might have been used in the past. The past information included the names of the 2 main practitioners, as well as 2 call-tracking phone numbers.

Timeline of the Research

  • May 30, 2016: we completed a detailed citation audit on the most important citation sources and all the sites in Yext’s network
  • June 15, 2016: the Yext subscription was started
  • June 20, 2016: we completed another round of citation audit on the same citation sources

Stop paying recurring fees for your business listings and perfect your business listings on the most important sites with Whitespark’s Yext Replacement Service. Say goodbye to your annual subscription, and hello to owning your business listings and get a comprehensive cleanup on the sites that matter most for local SEO.

Summary of Results

After completing the final citation audit one week after the Yext subscription was started, the following changes were observed:

Success rate of fixing listings on the 56 sites within Yext’s network:
(the other 12 are mobile apps or GPS systems)

EVENT

TOTAL SITES 

Inconsistencies/Duplicates Remain

19 sites

Inconsistencies Were Fixed

15 sites

Listings Were Already Correct

10 sites

Listings Reported as “Processing” by Yext

5 sites

Brand New Listings Were Created

7 sites

Sites Where Inconsistencies/Duplicates Remain*

  1. 2FindLocal
  2. AmericanTowns
  3. Apple Maps
  4. CitySquares
  5. Cylex-USA
  6. DexKnows
  7. EzLocal
  8. Foursquare
  9. GetFave
  10. InsiderPages
  11. MerchantCircle
  12. Pointcom
  13. ShowMeLocal
  14. SuperPages
  15. USCity.net
  16. YellopageCity.com
  17. Yellowise
  18. YellowpagesGoesGreen
  19. Yelp

*Note: Yext has a duplicate detection and removal feature, but it’s only available to enterprises and agency partners. While our study points out that duplicates remain, it’s important to note that Yext’s service for SMBs doesn’t claim to identify or clean up duplicates. It’s just not part of the service.

Sites Where Inconsistencies Were “Fixed”

  1. 411.com (*1)
  2. ABLocal
  3. AlloneSearch
  4. BizWiki
  5. Brownbook
  6. eLocal (*2)
  7. GoLocal247
  8. iBegin (*1)
  9. InternetChamberOfCommerce
  10. MapQuest
  11. Opendi
  12. SwitchBoard (*1)
  13. Whitepages (*1)
  14. Yahoo! Local
  15. Yasabe

(*1) – On 411, iBegin, Switchboard, and Whitepages, there was already a correct listing on the site before signing up for Yext, but Yext just deleted it and created a new listing instead. The end result was that these sites had one correct listing for the business and no duplicates, but it’s interesting to note their methodology on these sites. If the original citation URLs were indexed and aged, they won’t be now. Hopefully Google will pick up the new citation URLS and index them.

(*2) – on eLocal there was an existing incorrect listing. Rather than syncing with it and fixing it, Yext simply deleted/suppressed it and made a new listing. The end result was still that there was one and only one listing on this site with correct information, but again, the potential concern about losing the indexation of the previous citation URLs. The ideal approach would have been to sync with the existing listing and update it.

Sites Where Listings Were Already Correct

  1. Bing
  2. ChamberOfCommerce
  3. CitySearch
  4. Credibility.com
  5. Factual
  6. LocalDatabase
  7. LocalStack
  8. Tupalo
  9. VoteForTheBest
  10. Yellowbot

Sites Where New Listings Were Created

  1. 8Coupons
  2. iGlobal
  3. LocalPages
  4. MyLocalServices
  5. N49
  6. Topix
  7. Yalwa

Sites Where Listings Were Processing

  1. CredibilityReview (D&B)
  2. Facebook *
  3. Google *
  4. Local.com
  5. Nokia Here

* Google and Facebook:  in order for Yext to update listings on Google and Facebook, you need to connect them in your Yext dashboard. We never did this, so it is understandable that they’re still processing, and we can make no claims about Yext’s ability on these sites.

* Mobile Apps/GPS Systems Excluded from Study

  1. AirYell
  2. AroundMe
  3. Avantar
  4. CityMaps
  5. CoPilot
  6. Navmii
  7. Soleo
  8. Telenav
  9. TomTom
  10. Waze
  11. WhereTo?
  12. White & Yellow Pages

Note: mobile apps and GPS systems were removed from the audit research because they’re not citations. There are no citation URLs to audit on these platforms. We are only looking at this study from the perspective of citation cleanup.

Analysis of Results

So, in this particular case study, a Yext subscription solved citation problems on 15 citation sites in Yext’s network, and out of those 15 sites, only 7 are part of our list of Top 50 Citation Sites in the US. We recognize that we can’t help but be biased to our list, but it’s based off a stringent selection process and it’s not restricted by any kind of partnership or API agreements. It’s simply the best sites we know of for citations in the US. Of course, we must exclude Google and Facebook from consideration since we didn’t connect them in the Yext dashboard.

While there are other benefits to using Yext, (near-instant updates, featured messages, enhanced info, review monitoring), if you’re using it primarily as a citation cleanup solution, paying almost $500 per year, every year, for this level of cleanup, especially on a service that doesn’t include the primary data aggregators, it doesn’t seem like a good investment to us.

Overview of Listings That Were Not Taken Care of

While it is important to estimate the value of a Yext subscription in terms of citation clean-up, it is also equally important to try to understand the issues with Yext and why their system of dealing with listings is flawed as it currently stands. Below are a few patterns of issues that were discovered during the post-subscription citation audit:

Duplicate Listings

In 2014, Yext launched a “Duplicate Suppression” add-on feature for Yext PowerListings, acknowledging the great importance of having duplicate listings dealt with. However, this feature appears to be available only to certain clients, and it was certainly not available in the Proner & Proner case. With Yext’s standard system, duplicate listings are completely neglected. Of the 46 identified duplicate listings, 0 were dealt with as a direct result of the Yext subscription. This is by far the most major problem with Yext’s service, and really calls into question Yext’s claim on their sign-up page to “Fix your local search listings everywhere”.

Examples of the missed duplicate listings:

AmericanTowns.com

Yext created this brand new duplicate listing.

This listing was updated by the Superpages mirror.

And this incorrect listing was left on the site.

Insider Pages

Yext found and corrected this listing.

But left this listing with the incorrect # and URL on the site.

And this one with the same inconsistencies.

And here’s a duplicate they didn’t remove.

And here’s another duplicate they didn’t remove.

Ignored listings

As it was noted above, 5 listings were reported as “Processing”. These listings are on some of the most important sites, such as Google itself, Facebook, D&B (a data aggregator), and Nokia’s Here.

Additionally, none of the discovered 11 practitioner listings were dealt with in any way. This is easily explainable, though – the Yext service covers only 1 listing per site, which is an important downside for businesses that tend to have more than 1 listing per site such as law firms and accounting firms (a listing for the practice, and a listing for each practitioner), medical, dental and chiropractic practices, insurance agencies, and real estate agencies.

Examples of listings that were ignored:

Yelp

Yext reports that they can’t update the Yelp listing because it’s marked as closed.

There is a closed listing, but Yext missed their actual active listing which has the wrong phone number.

Stop paying recurring fees for your business listings and perfect your business listings on the most important sites with Whitespark’s Yext Replacement Service. Say goodbye to your annual subscription, and hello to owning your business listings and get a comprehensive cleanup on the sites that matter most for local SEO.

Listings That Were Reported as Changed by Yext, But Were Not

In some cases Yext’s reports featured incorrect information about some listings – something that was also observed during the “What Happens when You Cancel Yext” research. For instance, Yext would report that a listing has been changed, but when you click through and go to the listing page, you could clearly see that the listing still features incorrect information. It is likely that this problem derives from how Yext’s system is connected to the databases of each of the sites in their network. It is possible that there might be bugs in this connection, or it is possible that the information about when listing changes go live is not available to Yext in real time. In any case, the fact is that Yext sometimes misreports, so it is important that if you decide to use their service, you double-check everything manually.

Apple Maps

Searching shows that there is only one listing on Apple Maps

Yext reports it as synced

But the phone number is still incorrect

Additional General Downsides of Yext

There are some additional features of Yext that are worth mentioning in the context of discussing signing up for Yext PowerListings.

A) Yext’s PowerListings Scan

In my opinion the most useful software of Yext is its free scanner. You can use it by going to Yext’s site and filling in the country, name, and phone number of your business. The scanner will display the listings that would normally be found and dealt with if you sign up for Yext PowerListings, so it is particularly useful as a pre-assessment of what a Yext subscription might be able to do for you. However, this software should be taken with a grain of salt for a few reasons:

    • The scanner discovers only 1 listing per site (i.e. doesn’t discover duplicates or practitioner listings, if such exist);
    • The scanner covers only the sites covered by Yext (i.e. doesn’t cover any of the data aggregators, as well as about 30% of the most important citation sources);
    • The scanner tends to misreport.

This last issue is important to explain. In some cases Yext is unable to find already existing listings. That is the main reason why in some cases Yext would create new listings instead of fixing already existing incorrect listings (8 such listings were created in our research example). Additionally, it is possible that your listings might be 100% accurate, but the Yext scanner would report that the optimization rate is lower, because the listings are “not standing out” and/or “not verified through Yext”. Obviously this means that the only way for one to achieve a 100% optimization rate using the Yext scanner would be if they are signed up for Yext.

B) Yext spam

It is difficult to determine how many cold calls Yext sales people give to each business that claims a listing on some of the sites within their network or on sites that resell Yext’s services, but it is safe to say that an average business would receive at least a few such calls per month. We have more direct observations on the email inboxes of email accounts through which we have claimed listings for our clients on some of the sites within their network or on sites that resell Yext’s services.

These email accounts become practically unusable for any meaningful work after we finish working on a citation clean-up for a client, because of the large number of unsolicited sales emails by Yext and Yext re-sellers that start flooding the inboxes of these accounts. When you manually create listings on the top 50 most important citation sources, you can expect receive around 3 to 5 such emails per week from various senders. That is why we recommend the following to everyone that works on citation clean-up:

  • Use a new email address when claiming listings that will not be used for anything else, because that email’s inbox will be heavily spammed;
  • Add “@yextoffers.com” to the spam filter of that email address if you would prefer not to receive those sales emails (or at least most of them, because some are sent by resellers whose accounts are under other domains).

C) Sites that are completely controlled by Yext

In the past few years, more and more business directories have sold their listings management business to Yext. While it is likely financially savvy from the business directories’ point of view, it is definitely a major PITA for businesses who want to see their listings rectified and don’t want to have to pay for that to happen. In fact, it doesn’t make sense for a business to have to pay for their business information to be rectified as it is in the business directory’s best interest to provide accurate and up-to-date information to its users. It is the other way round – the business directories need to pay for high quality and up-to-date information and that is what they do when they purchase business data from data aggregators, whose sole purpose is to collect and update business information.

Therefore, there is a natural discrepancy between the function and natural business model of a business directory and the fact that a user would be forced to subscribe to a paid, yearly-renewed, ongoing listings management service. Some of the most prominent business directories that fall into that category are Yahoo! Local, MapQuest, Citysearch, MerchantCircle, and Local.com.

Stop paying recurring fees for your business listings and perfect your business listings on the most important sites with Whitespark’s Yext Replacement Service. Say goodbye to your annual subscription, and hello to owning your business listings and get a comprehensive cleanup on the sites that matter most for local SEO.

Download the Audit Spreadsheet

You can download the detailed before and after citation audits in Excel by clicking on the image below. Please note that the client did not want to leave their listings incorrect and leave duplicates around the local search ecosystem, so we have since completed a comprehensive audit and cleanup up for them.

Conclusion

Does Yext really “Fix all your local search listings” as they claim on their sign up page? This case study shows that there are some holes in that claim. The service is missing the primary data aggregators and many other important key sites, it misses many listings that need to be fixed, and leaves a number of problems on the sites within its network.

As with the article on what happens when you cancel your Yext subscription, the conclusion is that you might want to think carefully before signing up for Yext in the first place. The service is suitable for some types of businesses and some types of situations (for instance, brand-new businesses with no online footprint, or enterprises with thousands of locations), but it might be equally unsuitable in other cases.

Does paying an expensive annually recurring fee for this level of business listing “fixing” make sense for you? We would love to hear your thoughts and experiences with Yext in the comments below.

Also, don’t miss part 1 of this series: What Happens When You Cancel Yext? 

AUTHOR

Nyagoslav Zhekov

Nyagoslav is the Director of Local Search at Whitespark. He has been in the local search industry since 2010. Nyagoslav has been cited on Search Engine Land, David Mihm's blog, Local SEO Guide, and has presented at SMX West.

Follow Me on Twitter

17 comments on “What Happens When You Sign Up for Yext?

  • Very impressive audit of Yext. We had been doing this audits of citation sites a while back (http://blog.bizyhood.com/category/citation has many of them) and had started one on Moz Local and Yext, but got distracted with other things and stopped. Really glad to see you (and Phil R) picking this up and helping people understand that none of the Citation services are “magic”, and do require some care and feeding.

    In Yext’s case, we never felt it was worth the value, primarily because they don’t impact the major sites (the 4 aggregators primarily). What I’m surprised at is how much they miss with the rest of the citations I would have thought they would do well on – and primarily, how they handle duplicates and correcting errors in existing citations. As a company that (mostly manually) manages these things, it’s hard and they aren’t doing it in a way that’s helpful for the business.

  • Ouch, that’s pretty disappointing, especially considering the price. Yext has always been somewhat of an ethical grey area for me.

  • It would have been interesting if you had done another followup audit of the Yext progress a month later, as many of their listing updates trickle in over weeks and months, as evidenced by the confirmation emails that come from Yext with each active updated listing. They don’t ever all happen in the first week.

  • I have an insurance agency that is part of a much larger agency, Yext has been trying to sell me on their service for sometime, they even gone so far as to strong arm you for not signing up, suggesting there would be big problems for not using their service right now. For me its more than an ethical gray area.

  • With a few moments out of your day, you can claim your own listings, correct them and be done. I know if any of your information changes, it may be tedious to make the corrections, but it also helps to use the audit to track where you’re listed. Yext has been spamming me for years and I’m not quite sure how it started or from where, but it’s a bit annoying that they show my correct address as wrong 🙂

  • This is so comprehensive and EXACTLY what I have been suspecting. Thank you! Sharing this to every SEO I know.

  • I’m still not sure what happens when you cancel Yext, or rather how or whether to cancel Yext. If I understand correctly, your article says, basically, don’t start Yext in the first place. But that doesn’t really help those who already have.

  • It is important to remember that changing anything on your Yext page can result in changes to all of your listing (including google plus). This has caused local map rankings to dive for critical key words days at a time. “Changes” included a name, category, or phone number change.

  • You might want to also check manta.com. For some reason yext totally ignores them and there is a lot of directories that yext misses, but are on manta. I signed up for brownbook.net with a new business and within 2 days, searching for the business name popped up as the 3rd result on google vs not really even finding it at all before.

  • Two great articles Nyagoslav, thanks for researching and bringing Yext’s behaviour to the light. I’ve always been cautious of these dreary directories sites and seen them as low value as a web user… so when I shifted jobs and had to do some local SEO for my new employer here in the UK, I was somewhat not looking forward to tackling the citation mess. Whilst I’ve dodged Yext, I did find that Scoot seemed to be their equivalent PITA. Their creepy ‘i can see you’re in the admin section, so i thought i’d phone you’ approach really put me off logging in to update anything, and their hardnosed sales calls were irritating. In the end i quoted some damning research about them down the phone to their grumpy sales guy, and they’ve left me alone ever since. I hope we don’t move offices soon!

    • Thanks for your comment Adnrew. I didn’t know Scoot were so aggressive in their sales approach, although it doesn’t surprise me.

  • I used YEXT several years ago and was not impressed with the value for the money.

    I have a problem with several sites that say they are part of the Yext network and can only be corrected through Yext. The major one I am having a problem with that has a wrong telephone number is MapQuest.

    Do you a suggestion on how to fix these or a recommended alternative to Yext?

    • Some of the sites within Yext’s network sold their listing management business fully to Yext. Thus, there is no way to claim your listing on some of these sites nowadays. For instance, MapQuest issued this statement a few years ago when they effectively shut down their listing management service and substituted it with Yext’s paid version. Most of the sites, however, still have options for listings to be claimed and/or updated, although these options are purposefully made very obscure.

      In the case of MapQuest in particular, you can send an update request to MapQuest, and they usually would update the listing within 1-2 weeks. However, since MapQuest sources information from a number of third-party sources (Infogroup, Yelp, YP, TomTom, CityGrid are the most notable), you would need to make sure that your business information appears correctly on these sites as well. You can refer to our Local Search Ecosystem infographic.

      We have a manual Citation Audit and Clean-up service, which could be seen as an alternative to Yext, although Yext is not a citation clean-up service per se.

      I hope this helps!

  • Hi, I’m fairly new to the whole marketing industry and I just wanted to thank you for taking the time to write incredible content on the topic. This is definitely really informative and makes me rethink the whole matter. Keep up the great work and hopefully my business will grow using this information and others!

Comments are closed.