Increase online visibility for your association: a practical guide
Google My Business: the first step
Google My Business is free and one of the most effective ways to be found locally. Create a profile for your association and fill it out completely:
- Name, address and telephone number
- Opening hours (also for hire)
- Photos of the spaces and activities
- Website link
- Description of what you offer
Ask members and visitors to leave a Google review. Reviews are strongly influential for your position in local search results.
Your website: getting the basics right
Make sure your website loads quickly (use Google PageSpeed Insights to measure), is easy to read on mobile, and contains the right keywords. Think of: "[stad] zaal huren", "workshop [buurt]", "sportclub [gemeente] aanmelden".
Each page should have a clear meta title and meta description. This is what Google displays in the search results.
Social media: consistency wins
You don't need to be active on every platform. Choose one or two channels that fit your audience:
- Facebook: Seniors and families, local events
- Instagram: Younger audience, visual content (activities, spaces)
- LinkedIn: Professional rentals, business audiences
- Nextdoor: Hyperlocal, neighbourhood-focused
Post regularly. At least twice a week. Photos and videos always perform better than text alone.
Coming soon to De Verenigingsplanner: automatically schedule social media posts from your activities and events overview. This means you never have to post manually again, and you won't miss any moment to reach your community.
Content marketing: give value, build trust
By publishing useful content, such as tips for organising a neighbourhood activity, explanations of membership fees or a behind-the-scenes look, you build authority. People find you on Google, read your article and return when they need a space or want to become a member.
A knowledge base or blog with relevant topics is the most sustainable investment in online visibility.
Building an email list
Social media could disappear tomorrow or reach could crash. Having your own email list is always yours. Offer on your website a reason to sign up: a newsletter with upcoming events, early-bird discounts for workshops, or exclusive content for subscribers.
Local collaboration and mentions
Every mention on another website (a local blog, the municipal events overview, a neighbourhood app) strengthens your position in Google. Actively look for opportunities:
- Municipal website (events calendar)
- Local newspapers and news sites
- Neighbourhood platforms (Nextdoor, Buurtwijs)
- Industry directories (sport federations, welfare coalitions)
Measuring and adjusting
Use Google Analytics (free) to see how many people visit your website, through which channel they come and which pages are most viewed. This tells you what works and where you should focus your energy.
Time investment
Building online visibility takes time, but not a large budget. Expect the first results after three to six months of consistent work. Those who persevere will benefit for years.