Directory & Citation Management for Springs, NY
Springs is a roughly 6,592-resident community in Suffolk County, bordered by East Hampton Village and Amagansett. Most of the local search action runs through ZIP 11937, where customers pull up Google, Apple Maps, or Yelp before they call anyone. The businesses we work with here are mostly home-services trades and real estate offices, and every one of them gets found, vetted, and judged by their directory listings before a single conversation happens. Year-round Hamptons hamlet north of East Hampton village. Limited commercial corridor; strong working-class home-services and trade base, which means citation consistency matters more than most owners realize. The problem is almost universal on Long Island: a handful of directories list the old phone number, two have a previous address from before a move, the GBP category does not match Apple Maps, and a duplicate Yelp page from a former owner is still ranking above the real one. NOVA is a Long Island done-for-you marketing and tech team. We audit your listings across every directory that matters, fix the conflicts, suppress the duplicates, build out the verticals you are missing, and check monthly so the data does not drift back. One bill, one team, one phone call when something needs to change.
Where Springs businesses lose leads on directories
Old addresses, disconnected phone numbers, and former owner names still showing on Google, Yelp, or Apple Maps for your Springs business.
Missing from the home-services trades verticals where Springs customers actually research before they buy.
Listings drift back out of sync after a few months and nobody is checking — until a customer calls the wrong number.
How NOVA solves it
Citation audit that pulls every listing into one report so you can see exactly where your NAP is wrong before we touch anything.
NAP standardization across every directory so Google sees one consistent business, not seven slightly different ones.
New listings on the local Long Island sources and industry verticals where your Springs competitors are already showing up.
Monthly sync checks so when a data aggregator overwrites your fixes — and they will — we catch it before customers do.
Springs context
Long Island local search is unusually citation-sensitive because the metro area is dense with similar businesses across Suffolk County and the next county over. In Springs specifically, customers searching for contractors and real estate teams are comparing you against options in East Hampton Village and Amagansett in the same scroll, and Google is using citation consistency to decide which result it trusts. Clean, consistent listings across the directories Long Islanders actually use is what tips the algorithm — and the customer — toward you instead of the next pin on the map.
Local anchors: Pollock-Krasner House, Accabonac Harbor, Springs General Store.
Frequently asked questions
Springs: Let's talk directories.
Plain English. One Long Island team. Month-to-month.