Service areas
Serving New Brunswick, city by city.
Every NB market has its own search behaviour, competition, and customer expectations. Moncton's bilingual business scene isn't Miramichi's tourism market isn't Oromocto's CFB Gagetown community. We tailor the work to the market.
Moncton
~85,000 (Greater Moncton ~157,000)
Moncton is the largest metro in New Brunswick and the fastest-growing city in Atlantic Canada by business formation. Bilingual market (French and English), heavy commuter traffic from Riverview and Dieppe, strong logistics and trades sector, and a tourism draw from Magnetic Hill and the Tidal Bore.
Digital marketing in Moncton→
Saint John
~69,000 (Greater Saint John ~130,000)
Saint John is Canada's oldest incorporated city (1785) and the province's industrial core, Irving Oil, JDI, NB Power. The small business ecosystem around Uptown, Rothesay, and Quispamsis is dense, loyal, and highly local-search-driven.
Digital marketing in Saint John→
Oromocto
~9,500
Oromocto is a military town anchored by CFB Gagetown, one of Canada's largest training bases. The local economy is built around the base community, service businesses for military families rotating in and out every 2–4 years, and spillover from Fredericton 20 minutes east.
Digital marketing in Oromocto→
Woodstock
~5,200
Woodstock is the hub of Carleton County and the Upper Saint John River Valley, agricultural heartland, cross-border commerce with Maine via Houlton, and a service centre for surrounding rural communities. Business here is relationship-driven and word-of-mouth, but that's changing fast, younger customers expect to find you on Google before they ask a neighbour..
Digital marketing in Woodstock→
Dieppe
~28,000 (Greater Moncton ~157,000)
Dieppe is one of the fastest-growing cities in Atlantic Canada and a majority-francophone market inside Greater Moncton. It is home to the Greater Moncton Roméo LeBlanc International Airport and a dense retail and commercial corridor, with steady residential and small-business growth year over year.
Digital marketing in Dieppe→
Miramichi
~17,500
Miramichi is northeastern NB's regional centre, river economy, Irish heritage tourism, salmon fishing, forestry, and a growing retiree population. The city amalgamated in 1995 from Chatham, Newcastle, and surrounding communities, which means 'Miramichi' as a search term competes against older local names still in use by customers..
Digital marketing in Miramichi→
Riverview
~20,500 (Greater Moncton ~157,000)
Riverview sits across the Petitcodiac River from Moncton and forms the third corner of the Greater Moncton tri-community alongside Moncton and Dieppe. It is largely residential with steady commercial growth along Coverdale Road and Hillsborough Road, and a service economy built around Moncton commuters and the local family market.
Digital marketing in Riverview→
Quispamsis
~18,800 (Greater Saint John ~130,000)
Quispamsis is the largest community in the Kennebecasis Valley and one of New Brunswick's most affluent residential markets. The local economy is anchored by professional services, healthcare, education, and businesses serving Saint John commuters.
Digital marketing in Quispamsis→
Edmundston
~16,500
Edmundston is the regional capital of the Madawaska region in northwestern New Brunswick and a majority-francophone city (roughly 93 percent French as a first language). The local economy is anchored by Twin Rivers Paper, the Université de Moncton campus, healthcare, retail along Boulevard Hébert, and cross-border commerce with Madawaska, Maine.
Digital marketing in Edmundston→
Bathurst
~12,200
Bathurst sits on the Bay of Chaleur in northern New Brunswick and is the regional centre for the Chaleur Region. The local economy runs on healthcare (Chaleur Regional Hospital is the largest single employer), retail, tourism, and what remains of the forestry and fishing sectors.
Digital marketing in Bathurst→
Tracadie
~16,100
Tracadie is the largest community in New Brunswick's Acadian Peninsula and a majority-francophone market (roughly 95 percent French as a first language). The town was formed in 2014 by amalgamating Tracadie-Sheila with surrounding parishes and is anchored by the Tracadie Hospital, the fishing and aquaculture industry, peat moss harvesting, and retail serving the broader Peninsula.
Digital marketing in Tracadie→
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Visit frederictonlocalseo.com →