Do you still think your customers are only searching on Google?

Think again. 

Nowadays, people turn directly to vertical search engines like YouTube, Pinterest, LinkedIn, TripAdvisor, and many more platforms built for specific industries or content types. 

As search behavior evolves, relying solely on traditional SEO won’t suffice. Businesses and their customers need a smarter, more targeted approach to discover where their audiences are searching.

In this blog, we’ll explore:

  • What does vertical search mean?
  • How vertical SEO helps businesses rank in vertical search engines
  • Vertical vs horizontal search: key differences
  • A step-by-step vertical SEO strategy
  • Real-world examples and platform-specific optimization tips
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What is Vertical Search

 Vertical search refers to the specialized search engines or tools that focus on a specific topic, industry, or content type and offer more targeted results than a horizontal search. It is also referred to as a speciality or topical search.

graphical representation of US search Market Share

The chart above from a 2018 SparkToro study using Jumpshot data shows how vertical platforms were already carving out a significant share of user queries in the U.S.

Some of the vertical search engine examples that are used prominently are:

  • Amazon for E-commerce
  • Etsy for handmade artisanal
  • LinkedIn for professional services/jobs
  • Yelp for locality-based travel, restaurants, etc.
  • Pinterest for visual discovery

Just like Amazon, Etsy, and LinkedIn, Google itself plays a hybrid role, operating a number of vertical search engines for users to find niche content quickly and precisely. 

Even Google operates several vertical search engines that many users access daily:

  • Google Images for searching images only
  • Google News to find relevant news articles and current events
  • Google Maps for local places and services
  • Google Shopping for searching and comparing products online

Example of vertical search

Unlike horizontal search engines, which deliver general results across the internet, vertical search engines provide highly targeted results within the respective niche, making them ideal for users looking for something specific. 

💡Why Vertical Search Matters for Businesses Today

Many people don’t always start their online searches on Google. Instead, they go to their niche-specific sites based on their needs or queries, like Amazon for shopping, YouTube for how-to videos or types of vlogs, LinkedIn for job services, or TripAdvisor for travel ideas. 

This change in search behavior means: 

👉 You miss out on visitors if you’re only on Google. 

👉 People are often more ready to buy on these specialized sites. 

👉 People are discovering things in different ways, like videos, product images, maps, and more. 

In simple terms, if your business isn’t set up for these specific searches, you’re not appearing where your best customers are looking. 

 😥So you’re worried about how to get discovered on these platforms?

That’s where Vertical SEO comes in — now let’s understand what vertical SEO means.

What is Vertical SEO 

Vertical SEO, also referred to as vertical search engine optimization, is a new approach to SEO that focuses on industry-specific needs. 

In this process, the content is optimized to rank higher within niche-specific or vertical search platforms like Amazon, Yelp, and LinkedIn, even Google’s verticals like Google Images or Google News. (as discussed above). 

In contrast to traditional SEO, which focuses on general and broad search outcomes (on the Google Search platform), Vertical SEO is tailored to platform-specific algorithms and user intent. It adapts to your content format and optimization strategy to match how users search in different verticals. 

 For example, suppose you are a skincare brand-

  • A traditional SEO blog might target “Top 10 skincare essentials this summer.”
  • A Vertical SEO approach might help you rank in different vertical searches of your niche:
    • On Amazon – Improve product titles, bullet points, and hidden keywords for items like “acne serum” and “paraben-free moisturizer.”
    • On YouTube Share skincare tutorial videos with titles, descriptions, and tags with keywords to help people find them.
    • Pinterest – Make attractive pins such as “AM skincare routine for acne-prone skin” with descriptions with suitable keywords.
    • Google Shopping – Use clear product titles, structured data, and price information to show up in product searches.
    • Google Maps – If you have a clinic or store, enhance your Google My Business profile with categories, photos, and customer reviews. 

Vertical Search vs Horizontal Search

Over 50% of shoppers now start their product search on Amazon, not Google.
At the same time, platforms like YouTube, Pinterest, and TripAdvisor are becoming primary discovery channels in their niches.

This shift highlights the growing importance of vertical search.
Let’s break down the difference:

📌 Horizontal Search 

📌 Vertical Search 

It searches across the entire web for general or broad researchIt searches within a specific niche or category
It is used for General-purpose platforms like Google and BingSpecialized platforms like Amazon, YouTube, Yelp and Google‘s vertical search engines 
It provides broad results for multiple industries It is focused on relevant results within a specific domain
Best for exploring diverse topics or initial research Best for transactional searches, buying decisions, or niche content
It uses traditional SEO practicesIt uses platform-specific optimization- Vertical SEO 
✅ Ideal for general users, researchers, or early-stage buyers✅ Ideal for ready-to-buy users, industry-specific audiences, or local intent

With this comparison, we understand how vertical and horizontal searches serve different goals, but also see that they’re not entirely separate.

Google acts as a hybrid search platform — a horizontal engine and a host of vertical searches like Maps, News, Images, and Shopping.

According to Google Search Statistics 2025:

  • Google processes over 8.9 billion searches per day
  • And 32.4% of all e-commerce-related Google searches now display Shopping results, highlighting a surge in product-focused intent

Therefore, for businesses to stay visible, they need to be optimized not just for Google’s main results but also for its cross-vertical search experiences.

This means tailoring content for images, videos, shopping feeds, local listings, and news snippets—not just traditional organic results.

Understanding Google’s Cross-Vertical Aggregated Search

At times, Google does not display results from a single source; instead, it combines various types of results on one page. This is known as cross-vertical aggregated search.

For example, when a user asks a query — like “best skincare routine,” Google may give you searches related to:

  • YouTube tutorials (Google Videos)
  • Product listings (Google Shopping)
  • Local salons (Google Maps)
  • Blog posts or articles (standard web results)

Cross-Vertical Aggregated Search Example

This unified SERP experience means your business needs to be optimized across formats, not just rank for keywords.

How to Build a Vertical SEO Strategy 

Whether you are an e-commerce brand, a service provider, or a local business owner, vertical SEO can help you reach your target audience faster and more directly through your niche platforms.

Different vertical search platforms

It aims to enhance the discoverability of your content not only on Google but also across specialized platforms such as Amazon, YouTube, Pinterest, Maps, and others.

Let’s break down the step-by-step strategy to help you–

✅ to identify the right platform

✅ to tailor your content format

✅ to leverage native tools

vertical seo strategies

Identify the Right Vertical Platforms for Your Industry

Identifying your right niche platform is essential before diving into optimization. It is important to understand where your audience searches. Your vertical strategy should align with the platform where your niche thrives.

For Example:

Amazon → For e-commerce and product-based brands

LinkedIn → For B2B services, hiring, or thought leadership

Google Maps → For local stores, clinics, and service-based businesses

📌Pro Tip: Use tools like SparkToro and Google Trends to understand audience behaviour or query asked across platforms.

Understand Platform-Specific Search Behavior

Understanding search behavior is trivial for businesses and individuals alike. It helps businesses tailor their content, optimize their online presence, and ultimately reach their target audience more effectively. 

Each niche platform has its own unique rules. What works on Google won’t necessarily work on Pinterest or Amazon. Thus, asking questions about-

  • How do users ask queries on this platform?
  • What type of content ranks: long-form? Short videos? Image pins?
  • What signals matter—CTR, save, or customer reviews?

📌Pro Tip: 

Study the top-ranking content manually

Read platform SEO guides (YouTube Creator Academy, Amazon Seller Help)

Look at autocomplete suggestions to uncover real search terms

Optimize Content Format Accordingly

Make sure the content created fits the style and structure of the vertical platform you’re targeting, like high-rise photos with alt text for Google images, keyword-rich titles, thumbnails, or timestamps for YouTube, or clear product titles, clear bullet points, and backend keywords for Amazon, etc.

📌Pro Tip: Use different tools for formatting
For optimized designing and content curation, Canva or Adobe/Schema Markup and Grammarly 

Schema Generator for Structured Data for Google 

Use Platform Tools and Features

Many vertical engines provide built-in features to improve discoverability. 

Examples-

Amazon’s A+ Content Manager

YouTube’s Video Chapters and Playlists 

Pinterest’s Rich Pins 

Google My Business: Add categories, service areas, and posts 

📌Pro Tip: Ensure all fields are fully completed—title, tags, categories, alt text, and backend keywords—as these often serve as ranking signals in vertical search.

Track Performance with Native Analytics

To enhance your vertical SEO, it’s essential to understand what strategies are effective. Use the different analytics platforms in vertical search platforms 

Example:

Amazon Seller Central → Search terms, sales, impressions
YouTube Studio → Engagement, click-through rate, watch time
Google Search Console → Visibility across Maps, Images, and Shopping
Pinterest Analytics → Top-performing pins, clicks, and saves 

📌Pro Tip: Focus on KPIs such as impressions, conversions, and CTR, and not just rankings.

Keep Content Updated & E-E-A-T-Friendly 

Unique, valuable, and keyword-optimized content still wins—regardless of platform. 

For E-E-A-T and content optimization, one should focus on the following practices:

  • Content audits and updated product listings with seasonal relevance
  • Enhancements showcasing your expertise
  • SEO practices with mobile responsiveness, keyword research, site speed, and internal linking
  • Reinforce E-E-A-T: Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trust

📌Pro Tip: Uses tools like review tracker for managing local reviews, AI tools (ChatGPT, Perplexcity AI, or Gemini) for outdated listings, and Semrush or AnswerthePublic for keyword research.

Interesting Read: Gemini vs ChatGPT: A Comparison Guide

Real-World Example: How Vertical SEO Works on Amazon

Let’s say you’re a skincare brand selling an “organic face mask for different skin types.” 

Ranking on Google is great, but you also want to appear when someone searches directly on Amazon.com, which is where half of the product searches begin.

Let’s see how to implement vertical search optimization and how it works on Amazon step by step:

Step 1: Set Up Your Amazon Seller Account 

Amazon seller account

Go to https://sellercentral.amazon.com and sign up as a seller.

Here you have to choose between two types of accounts:

  • Individual account 
  • Professional account (recommended for businesses)

 Step 2: Add Your Product 

Sign up or log in to your Amazon account.

Once logged in, go to:
Inventory → Add a Product

  • Match an existing product by ASIN (if already listed), or
  • Create a new product listing from scratch

Step 3: Optimize Your Product Listing with Vertical SEO 

This is where SEO meets strategy. Fill out these fields with keywords and conversion-focused content:

Optimize by adding

  • Product Title

Use main keyword +product +USP (Unique Selling Proposition)
Example: “Organic Green Tea Face Mask-Acne prone skin- 50ml”

  • Add a bulleted list of products.

Highlight the main feature of the product (with relevant keywords) according to the customer queries.

Example: “100% Vegan, Fights Acne, Made in USA, Paraben-free” (Max 5)

  • Add a detailed Description 

Write a compelling 300-500-word description of the product. Use keywords and simple HTML tags for formatting. 

  • Backend Keywords 

Add alternate keywords, alt text for product images, misspellings, or secondary phrases. These are not visible to users but crawlers but important for ranking

  • Use Product Images

Upload high-quality images with lifestyle photos, close-ups, and ingredient shots, which makes it more credible.

  • A+ Content 

If your brand is registered, use  “A+ Content Manager” to add visual-rich content like banners, ingredient charts, and comparison grids under A+ Content Manager

Step 4: Save & Publish 

Once done, click on Save and Finish.

*Amazon may take a few hours to review and publish your listing.

⚠️ Common Fallouts in Vertical SEO (What Most Brands Miss Out)

Even with the best intentions and most apt strategies, many businesses and business owners with expertise fall short in fully leveraging SEO.

Here are the key gaps any business owner should avoid: 

 People use voice queries like “best nearby cafés” to get results from Maps and local listings. 

🔧Fix: Use everyday language, add FAQ sections, and use structured data to make your content friendly for voice searches.

  •  Using Traditional SEO Tactics

Using traditional SEO strategies won’t work on sites like Amazon, Pinterest, or YouTube. 

🔧 Fix: Change your SEO for each platform—make sure thumbnails are good on YouTube, product details are clear on Amazon, and visuals are eye-catching on Pinterest. 

  • Duplicate Content on All Platforms

Using the same content everywhere leads to low visibility. Each platform needs unique content to get noticed. 

🔧 Fix: Adjust your messages and visuals for each platform while keeping your brand’s tone consistent. 

  • Neglecting Structured Data

Without structured data, your content won’t show rich results. This means it won’t be seen in Google’s Shopping, Images, or Maps. 

🔧 Fix: Add schema markup for products, videos, local listings, and FAQs using tools or Schema.org. 

  • Ignoring AI-Powered Search Results

Google’s AI can summarize different formats—text, video, shopping, and maps. 

🔧 Fix: Make your content clear, use E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness), and ensure your information is easy for AI to find. 

  • Not Tracking Beyond Google 

Many brands miss insights from different platforms, so they don’t see how their content is doing. 

🔧 Fix: Use tools like: – Amazon Seller Central, YouTube Studio, Google My Business Insights or Pinterest Analytics. 

Therefore, vertical SEO isn’t just about ranking; it’s about fitting well with each platform’s system. Fix these issues early to ensure your content is visible everywhere.

To Sum Up: Trends to Watch in Vertical Search

Vertical search is for the long run—and it’s only getting better and smarter. 

It comes with a blend of voice assistants, AI-powered results, mobile responsiveness, and platform-first discovery becoming the norm; businesses can’t afford to rely on traditional SEO alone, rather understand vertical SEO as well.

As search behavior continues to evolve, the brands that adapt early—by optimizing for platforms like Amazon, YouTube, Maps, and more—will stay ahead of the curve.

👉 The future of SEO is vertical, visual, and voice-driven.

Ready to future-proof your SEO strategy? Contact us today to know where your customers are really searching. 

FAQ

Is vertical SEO only for e-commerce brands?

No. It works for all industries—local services, travel, real estate, education, and more.

Is vertical SEO relevant for small businesses?

Yes. Local businesses especially benefit from platforms like Google Maps, Yelp, or niche marketplaces (e.g., Houzz, Thumbtack).

Will vertical SEO help my Google ranking?

Yes. Google pulls content from verticals like YouTube, Maps, and Shopping. Optimizing for them boosts your visibility in blended search results.

How is vertical search different from social media discovery?

Vertical search is intent-driven (users search with a goal), while social media discovery is passive (users scroll and stumble upon content). Pinterest, however, blurs the line between both.

Can I use the same content on every platform?

No. Each platform ranks content differently. Tailor your content to fit the format and user behavior of that specific vertical.

Do vertical search platforms have their own SEO tools?

Yes. Platforms like Amazon (Brand Analytics), YouTube (Studio), and Pinterest (Analytics) provide tools for keyword and content performance tracking.

Do I need to hire a separate SEO expert for each platform?

Not necessarily. A skilled digital marketer or SEO team familiar with multi-platform optimization can manage it—just ensure they tailor strategies per platform.

Is vertical SEO a one-time task?

No. Like traditional SEO, it requires regular updates—monitoring keywords, improving content, and staying aligned with platform changes.

What happens if I ignore vertical SEO?

You risk losing visibility on platforms where your audience searches, leading to missed traffic, conversions, and revenue.