7 Google Algorithm Updates Every SEO Should Know
SEO is good for your site.
The catch is, not all SEO is equally good.
Certain optimization methods take time to produce results but prove effective in the long run. Others work much faster but may end up
leaving your site in a worse situation than when you started.
Less knowledgeable webmasters may use this as an argument that
SEO is ineffective, but it actually proves the opposite: Search Engine Optimization can
tell the good sites from the bad. Google, in particular, is an expert –
nay, the expert in measuring their worth.
Google’s search ranking algorithm has undergone countless
changes since its debut. In the past, nobody could predict all the possible
methods to push low-quality sites to the top of search results, but Google
dealt with them as they came – with the help of algorithm updates.
Now there are many fewer ways around Google’s principle
“quality first” than in the past. No doubt you’ve heard about the silent judges
who made it possible: Panda, Penguin and Pigeon, to name but a few.
If you notice a sudden drop in traffic and rankings while
looking at your site statistics, you might’ve been bitten (or clawed) by one of
those beasts.
Which one? That depends on what you’ve been doing with your
site.
Too much of something or not enough of something different –
Google algorithm updates cover a lot of ground.
Let’s look at seven of the biggest Google algorithm updates
of all time.
“In the past, nobody could predict all the possible methods
to push low-quality sites to the top of search results, but Google dealt with
them as they came – with the help of algorithm updates.”
Google Panda
What does it do?
This algorithm update is the most likely to strike you.
Google Panda evaluates websites based on the quality of
their content.
Pages with high-quality content are rewarded with higher
ranking positions, and vice versa.
It boils down to how good you are with on-page optimization.
What triggers the Panda?
Thin content. This doesn’t necessarily mean content
with too few words. Need a demonstration? Type “is it Christmas?” in Google’s
search bar and see what’s ranking first. The site checks the date and then just
says Yes or No in your local language. I won’t encourage you to be laconic like
a Spartan, though. When you create content, make sure it provides an explicit
answer to the user’s search query.
Low-quality content. This means content that hurts you
to even look at it, let alone read. Poorly formatted text with grammar errors,
huge or otherwise distracting images, a design that negatively affects a user’s
experience – anything you suspect will rub users the wrong way, will. Their
visit to your site should be enjoyable.
Unhelpful, untrustworthy content. The kind that doesn’t
help the users who found it or causes outright harm. Google has no tolerance
for incompetence and con artistry. Strive to be a positive force.
Duplicate text. It’s often referred to as “duplicate
content”, but Panda really only frowns upon copied chunks of text. Images are a fair game. Videos are a fair game (except on YouTube). Text is where you should
be careful. It’s OK to reuse small bits of text as quotes – if you properly
mark them as quotes in context. Reusing text and passing it off as your
original work, is a no-go. Do that on enough pages to hamper the quality of
your site, and Panda will take action.
Article spinning. This refers to attempts to avoid
issues with duplicate content by rewriting text from another site.
Unfortunately for those who try it, good content also needs to be original, and
spinning often lowers the content’s quality as well (especially if you automate
the process with software).
How to recover?
Are you positive your site was hit by Panda? Then your course of action is to improve your content’s quality.
If it’s obvious to you which pages need more work, overhaul
them: remove all that offends users and the algorithm and put up more of the
things deserving approval.
Google Penguin
What does it do?
This is the second algorithm update most likely to hit you.
Penguin has a lot in common with Panda, but it evaluates websites for a
different factors: their link profiles. Backlinks positively affect a site’s
rankings if:
They are placed on pages contextually related to your link
pages
They are surrounded by content related to your linked pages
They point to you from trustworthy sources
They come from multiple different domains
Conversely, dubious links from shady sources will negatively
impact your rankings. Penguin makes sure of that.
Important note: Google Penguin is not the same as Google’s
manual actions for unnatural linking. Penguin is completely automatic and
will let its grip on your site when unnatural backlinks are no longer a factor.
To deal with a manual action, you’ll need to submit a reconsideration request
in addition to purging those links.
What triggers the Penguin?
Buying links. It’s a violation of Google’s Webmaster
Guidelines to acquire links that pass PageRank in exchange for money or
products.
Lack of anchor text diversity. The text inside backlinks is
another factor affecting the quality of your link profile. If this text is the
same everywhere, it will look to Google as an attempt to manipulate your
rankings.
Low quality of links. A backlink will set Penguin off if the
content surrounding it is low-quality or contextually irrelevant to the linked
page. You can’t always control who links to you, but you should do all you can
to get rid of links that harm you.
Keyword stuffing. Surprise! You’d think this would be
Panda’s territory, since keywords are on-page content. But Penguin also watches
for an unnatural use of keywords. Have you ever encountered pages with long,
near-meaningless sentences filled with dozens of search queries? That’s what
keyword stuffing looks like at its worst.
How to recover?
If the problem is in the backlinks department, you should
dig through the ones you have.
The easiest way to do this is to scan your site with WebCEO’s
Backlink Quality Check tool.
Once you’ve found all the bad apples in your basket, take
them down through any means available.
If you are able to remove them manually, do it. If you can
talk to the person who manages the linking domain’s content, do it. For cases
when these two options can’t work out, there’s the Google Disavow tool.
Then get the keywords on your site in order if you’ve messed
up with them, too. Reduce their numbers until the text looks natural
everywhere.
You can scan your site’s pages with WebCEO’s Landing
Page SEO tool to check how much of their content in percent is keywords.
Google Pigeon
What does it do?
If you’ve ever dabbled in local SEO, you most likely know
about the ranking factors involved in it.
But did you know Google uses them in a separate search
algorithm?
Two algorithms – one for traditional web search, the other
for local search. Such a divided approach returned less than ideal search
results. An update was needed to make the two algorithms cooperate better, and
so it was made.
The outcome?
A website’s rankings are now determined by its respective
business’ location and distance from the user: the closer, the higher.
In addition, Google shortened its 7-pack and remade it into
the 3-pack. It was certainly a great help to users… But for businesses, it’s
now a priority to compete for those precious three positions.
What lies in post-Pigeon SEO?
It isn’t much you can do about the distance between your
business and the user. But to attract the users who are close enough,
there’s everything in your power to help your site appear higher in search.
Strengthen your ranking positions as you normally would with
SEO:
Create high-quality content related to your niche.
Use keywords that include your location.
Optimize your site for mobile devices.
Build links from reputable sources.
Optimize for the local search algorithm, as well:
Use text, images, and videos in your content that are
strongly associated with your location.
Create listings on business directories and Google My
Business.
Include NAP (name, address, phone number) citations in those
listings and on your own site.
Gain positive reviews and testimonials from your customers.
Leverage structured data on your site’s pages.
Google Hummingbird
What does it do?
Unlike Panda and Penguin, the purpose of Google Hummingbird
wasn’t to change how websites are ranked – at least not as directly.
Hummingbird aimed to improve search itself: by interpreting
the user intent behind a query, it made the algorithm return webpages that
would be the most qualified for the task. The context around keywords became
just as important as the keywords.
What lies in post-Hummingbird SEO?
Hummingbird started the era of semantic search as we know
it.
How to meet its standards?
The key lies in understanding what exactly users want to
find when searching online.
Most of the time it’s obvious, especially if the query is in
the form of a question. Provide answers in your content and be generous with
details, synonyms, and contextually related words.
It’s highly recommended to thoroughly research the subject
before you write about it; that way, you will possess all the necessary
vocabulary and the means to use it correctly.
Be careful: the point is to help your audience, not confuse
them. You don’t want to come off as a pseudointellectual who tries too hard to
fit in.
Where to find semantic search-friendly keywords and phrases?
Places where people interested in the subject hang out, such
as blogs, forums, social media, Wikipedia, and Q&A platforms.
Keyword finder tools: WebCEO’s Keyword Suggestions, Soovle, Answer
The Public or Ubersuggest.
Google’s search suggestions and the “searches related to”
section.
Wikipedia is a great example of a site optimized for
semantic search (and it was even before Hummingbird). Thanks to being rich with
information, its articles almost always satisfy user intent behind one-word and
“what is” queries – because that’s precisely what Wikipedia is for. The same is
true for other search results that appear for such queries.
Google Payday Loan
What does it do?
Payday Loan shares a few things in common with Google Panda
and Google Penguin, but it’s not to be confused with them. It’s a separate
update in its own right. It rolled out in 2013 when Google decided to
drain the swamp of pornographic, casino, and high-interest loan sites.
This update was straightforward and simple. It targeted
sites using high-risk SEO methods (such as spammy links) to rank for the above
mentioned keywords: sites with pornographic content, high-interest loan sites,
casino sites and so on.
Naturally, sites that were optimized for those queries
without resorting to spam techniques were not affected – in fact, some have
reported an increase in their traffic when their competitors were downranked.
How to recover?
As long as you don’t dabble in black hat SEO, Google Payday The loan should never be your problem for you. If you have triggered it, however,
the only solution is to abandon spammy methods and double down on SEO
activities that actually produce something valuable to users.
Google Mobile-Friendly update (Mobilegeddon)
What does it do?
One fine day with a boom and a blur, an update rolled out
and it caused a little stir. Despite the scary name it received from SEO pros,
sites didn’t crash and burn.
All Google did was introduce a new mobile search ranking
factor: the user experience quality when viewed on small screens.
Such an innovation was spurred by a significant increase in
the number of searches being conducted on mobile devices. Google had a hunch we
were were heading toward a mobile-first world – and was completely right. The
need to adapt their search algorithm for devices other than PCs was justified.
This mobile-friendly update, a.k.a. Mobilegeddon arrived in
2015, and ever since then, there has been talking of a new, separate index for
mobile-friendly websites. It finally saw the light of day in 2018, and
sites that prepared for it early were promptly added in this new index.
What lies in post-Mobilegeddon SEO?
A good start would be to check if your site is already
mobile-friendly. You can find out by using WebCEO’s Mobile Optimization
tool.
Suppose the result is negative, or you feel like you can do
more. How do you optimize your site for this Google update?
A website needs to meet certain requirements to be
considered mobile-friendly. Replace “mobile” with “user” and you can easily
tell what half of them are; after all, mobile SEO is primarily user
experience-oriented.
Let’s see how many of these you have guessed!
Responsive design. It is possible to design a website
in such a way that it will automatically adjust itself to any screen it’s
displayed on, removing the need to zoom in or scroll sideways.
Large font. Another way to save the users’ time is to
make your text larger than you’d normally do for a PC screen. Consider making
it even larger above the fold, where you are supposed to catch the visitor’s
attention and motivate them to keep scrolling.
No unplayable elements. Who wants to see messages like
“this content cannot be played on your device”? They make users feel like they
are missing out. Consider the types of content that certain devices don’t
support (e.g., Flash has this kind of relationship with mobile) and avoid using
them.
No intrusive elements (with a few notable exceptions). Popups
that all of a sudden cover the site you’ve been browsing peacefully is a UX killer.
If you need to show ads or tactfully hint to your visitors that they can
subscribe and get something good, do so in a way that will leave most of your
content still visible and usable. Users will much appreciate if you make your
popups easy to close, too. Exceptions are notifications that have a good reason
to block content, such as age verification popups.
Space between interactive elements. If there are any
buttons, checkboxes or the like on a page, make them large enough so they’d be
easy to press and leave some room between them so the users with big fingers
won’t press the wrong one by mistake.
No separate website. Frankly, having one won’t hurt
your SEO or rankings, but you’ll save time and effort if you don’t create one.
Just focus on making your primary domain mobile-friendly instead of working on
an m-dot.
– If, for whatever reason, you need to have a separate website, make sure all
your links between them are working properly. It’s not uncommon for a faulty
redirect to lead to the other site’s home page instead of where the user wanted
to go.
Loading speed. Google has finally announced its
plans to make web pages’ loading speed a ranking factor. It’s even more
important to sites that want to be mobile-friendly since mobile users tend to
close a slow-loading tab sooner than most. How does one make their site load
faster?
– Image optimization. Images take a toll on the loading speed due to all
the kilobytes (or megabytes) they are packing. It’s, therefore, necessary to
reduce their file size as much as possible while preserving their quality. Pick
the most optimal formats for your images and compress them with specialized
software and services.
– No excessive code. The less code in a page, the faster it’s parsed by
the browser. Make your pages do their job with minimum HTML, CSS, JavaScript
and other kinds of code. A special example of this method is AMP (Accelerated
Mobile Pages), which eliminates JavaScript code completely and minimizes the
rest, achieving blink-of-an-eye speeds.
Google Fred
What does it do?
Fred is Legion, for they are many. Fred is all those minor
updates to Google’s search algorithm that are made every day. However, one of
those unnamed updates proved to be bigger and more troublesome than most, so
this entry will be about this one particular Fred.
It was March 2017 when many websites reported a sudden drop
in traffic. (Maybe yours was one of them, too.)
Battle-tested webmasters immediately knew what it meant:
another Google algorithm update. Their investigation revealed that
affected sites had certain things in common, which proved enough to answer the
question:
What triggers the Fred?
Aggressive advertisement. Fred helped websites that
emphasized content over ad revenue, which is why users visit websites in the
first place.
Thin, low-value content. If users could find better
content elsewhere, Fred shared the sentiment and promptly rewarded the more
worthy websites.
Poor user experience. Fred wasn’t picky about the
methods of disrupting UX. If a site had popups covering the entire screen, wasn’t
optimized for mobile, or had user-unfriendly navigation, the outcome was the
same.
How to recover?
As it’s always the case with overcoming penalties, the path
toward recovering from Fred lies in doing the opposite of what leads to the
loss of traffic. Everyone and their dog have ads on their sites but don’t make
them the priority. That should be content and user experience.
Make your content worthy of being called competition and
your user experience silky smooth.
Interestingly, some websites observed a rapid increase in
their traffic shortly before Fred’s negative effects were noticed.
This shows Google is serious about improving the quality of search results. Was
your site among the lucky or the unlucky ones?
Google
updates may affect your rankings. Be careful and check your site
often.
Source By: SEARCH ENGINE JOURNAL
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