Showing posts with label Google Algorithm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Algorithm. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Official Google Panda Update Version 3.7 On June 8th
4:55 AM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Panda, Google Panda Update, News, SEO, SEO Tips
Google has confirmed the rumors of a Panda refresh happening over the weekend.
Google said this refresh started rolling out on Friday, June 8th and has an impact of less than 1% of search queries in the U.S. and about 1% worldwide.
As I said, the search forums took notice to major changes in the search results, specifically impacting sites that were originally hit by the Panda update. I reached out to Google this morning for a confirmation and they have confirmed the update.
Previously, Google pushed out Panda 3.6 on April 27th, about 6 weeks before this update. Google tends to do Panda and even Penguin refreshes every one to two months.
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Could You Briefly Explain The PageRank Algorithm?
3:48 AM
Google Algorithm, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, SEO Beginners Guide, SEO Interview Questions, SEO Tips
PageRank Algorithm is a sequence of instructions which different Search Engines use for the calculation of the search result i.e. SERP which comes after every search we made for a specific keyword.
No one knows exactly about that Algorithm but we know how it works and how it gives ranking for a site. For Google Search Engine as you know is the number one SE these days and it gives priority to different factor like Keyword Strength, Domain strength, Inbound link Score, user data, content quality score, manual boost etc.
Keyword Factors:
- Keyword in title tag
- Keyword in header tagsKeyword in document text
- Keyword in internal links pointing to the page
- Keyword in domain and/or URL
- Registration history
- Domain age
- Strength of links pointing to the domain
- Topical neighborhood of domain based on inlinks & outlinks
- Historical use & links pattern to domain
- Inbound Link Score
- Quality of domains sending links
- Quality of pages sending links
- Anchor text of links
- Link quantity/weight metric (Pagerank or a variation)
- Subject matter of linking pages/sites
- Historical CTR to page in SERPs
- Time users spend on page
- Search requests for URL/domain
- Historical visits/use of URL/domain by users GG can monitor (toolbar, wifi, analytics, etc.)
- Potentially given by hand for popular queries/pages
- Provided by Google raters (remember Henk?)
- Machine-algos for rating text quality/readability/etc
Saturday, May 5, 2012
What Is Google Penguin ?
3:44 AM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Penguin, Google Penguin Update, Matt Cutts, News, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, SEO Tips
Penguin is an improve version of Panda Update to the Google algorithm which was released on the 24th of April 2012, with the mission to demolish those websites which are over-optimized with webspam techniques. To bring traffic to the website, a few sites use tactics that don’t give benefits to users, as they are taking a shortcut which makes their site rank higher then its expectation. According to Google Engineer Matt Cutts.
Google Penguin update will not affect those blogs/websites which are using pure SEO as they heavily depends on their content and according to Google content is the king. This update will completely change the way of searching it will not only give better search results but also give a boost to high quality blogs/websites by ranking them high in SERP (Search Engine Results). It’s easy to discover, just search some of your popular keywords in Google and check whether your site is getting the same rank that it use to get previously if it is getting the same ranking then we you have survive the first wave. Now quickly look at your website statistics and check how much visitors is referred by Google. If you saw a major traffic drop down then compare your old stats with your current stats if so, then you are unlikely hit by a Penguin Update. But if you saw a rise in your traffic then Penguins is being cute to you so don’t worry. Saw no change? Then you are safe it has no impact on your website.
Comment Spamming – It’s time to say good bye to it:
It’s been an old trend to build backlinks by commenting on high page rank websites but as the technology is getting advance we need to elaborate our self. It is the time that we stop comment spamming this not only irritates a blog owner but now it can also affect your site ranking. Most users only post a comment for the sake of getting a BackLink they use automation commenting which are over stuffed with keywords and links which makes it simple for Google to identify this, and penalize these sites which are using such spam techniques.
Overflowed Same Keywords – Killing SEO:
Keywords are the most essential part of SEO (Search Engine Optimization) it allows users to get the relevant content with the help of search engines. But most of the users are using it as a source of getting traffic by using blackhat techniques. They use the same keywords in every line of there article which makes Google to suspect why they are repeating same keywords again and again hence they penalty them.
Duplicate Content - Another Wrong Habit:
I can’t understand why people copy others hard work, we have witnessed it million times. Copying content is considered as a crime, if we copy others posts then we will be considered as a content thief. I don’t know why people are continuing the same trend of copying, its time that we come out from the shell and instead of copying we should concentrate on building our own unique content. After the Google Penguin update, it is almost impossible to attain high rank in SERP by copying contents. So its better to concentrate on building our own unique content If we still continue to repeat copyright violation then our blog may face detention in form of getting banned from SERP (Search Engine Results)
Hit by Google Penguin? An In-House SEO Crisis Management Plan
3:38 AM
Google Algorithm, Google Penguin, Google Penguin Update, Google Update, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, SEO Tips
Another update, another dose of mayhem. This time the mayhem is called Penguin. As with all Google updates over the years, there have been winners and losers.
Before we start panicking, we should remember that for Google to survive and continue dominating in the next decade it has put in huge effort to keep its SERPs relevant, useful, and clean of spam. As a reminder, Penguin isn’t the first major update Google has rolled out in the past 10 years:
Instead, let’s focus on the one theme that runs through each of them: To keep spam in check. Granted, Google’s definition of spam has varied, but generally they have done a good job of being vocal in the community through Matt Cutts, head of Google's web spam team, and also through Google’s own Webmaster guidelines.
Some websites are out to make a quick buck (not thinking of their customers/visitors), or they have been misguided by an agency or by some black hat SEO magician that it’s OK to use tricks. Here are a few of the things websites should avoid as outlined in Google’s Webmaster guidelines:
- Hidden doorway pages
- Buying links
- Different page for engines and users
- Hidden text or hidden links
- Cloaking or redirects
- Improve the visitors user experience?
- Add value for your customers?
- Acquire an audience/customer base and keep them coming back for more?
As an in-house SEO, thinking of how to create value for your site visitors and employing ethical white hat SEO tactics should be on top of your agenda. And only if it is on top of your agenda will it filter down to other departments in your company. This will also ensure that there is no risk of turning to the dark side of SEO.
Let’s look at what in-house SEOs can do immediately when an algorithmic updates like Penguin happen, and how to plan for the future so you don’t get hit hard.
Immediate Plan of Action
- Check your analytics to assess damage: If you've been hit by Penguin or another Google update, start by checking your web analytics reports. A simple 30-day traffic report should tell you when you were hit and the amount of visits you lost.
- Check your keyword referrer report (organic): Once you know that you have lost traffic from Google, then a Keyword Referrer report can help you pinpoint which keywords lost traffic on and how much. Again, a 30-day report can paint an accurate picture.
- Manually check rankings on some of your top keywords: This may not tell you a whole lot more than your analytics report, but as SEOs we just have to do this! Check your top five or six money keywords.
- Check Google Webmaster Central: Chances are you may receive a message in your webmaster account from Google if your site was affected. You can also message Google web spam team if you think your site was wrongly targeted.
- Use link tools to see your link profile: Unknowingly, this could happen so always a great idea to run periodic reports on your inbound links and see your link profile.
- Run redirect tools to see if all is well: Run through this tool to see if any havoc was caused unknowingly by developers. Using tools like pingdom or webconfs can help.
- Enterprise-wide guidelines and training: As an in-house SEO, you need to create company-wide SEO guidelines around best practices of SEO, specifically: on-page optimization and the right balance of keywords in ad copy (to stay away from appearing spammy). The other initiative is training employees on nuances of SEO but also create a case-study of companies that got hit by recent Google updates. Remember to wear your SEO educator hat.
- Financial forecast of your drop: If you got hit by any Google updates, then you'll need to create a financial forecast of how much revenue you lost due to this update. Use that as a financial case study to alert everyone in your organization on why they should be taking every SEO guideline very seriously. One way is to take your lost traffic data, keywords that got hit, revenues lost at a keyword level, and total lost revenue based on missed conversions whether it is life-time value (LTV), cost-per-acquisition (CPA), or any financial metric you use in your organization.
- Clear directions for IT/Developers: We all know this but developers need clear guidelines on what is recommended for SEO best practices. For example, do they know the difference between the SEO impact of 301s versus 302s? You may find it tough to have them listen to your suggestions, but over time build bridges by working with them.
- Page level keywords: Do users want to read content when a single keyword is repeated 10 times in four lines of text? This can happen to some content writers who get carried away with the whole “SEO thing”. You need to pay close attention to content that is getting produced. One of the best practices is provide writers with the theme of the content and not provide them keywords to start with. This way their natural writing talent can flow into the theme of the content. Keywords should flow automatically since it will be topical, focused content.
- Link monitoring: Keep a close eye on the inbound links you are acquiring. Many times you will naturally gain links through variety of sources. We have also seen some instances of link warfare, where an outsourced company is employed by your competitor and is building links that work against you without you knowing about it. Ensure you’re checking your inbound links and your overall link profile.
- On-page SEO guidelines: This is a must-have document and should include all on-page best practices like title, meta, URL naming convention, ALT tag, H level tags, internal linking, and copywriting best practices, among others.
- Work closely with your content and copy team: Again, make sure they don't go overboard. Under no circumstances should your page be stuffed with keywords. Rule of thumb: use a keyword no more than three times on a page. Ensure your content is focused and keywords will occur naturally.
- Work even more closely with your agency or consultant: Ask the right type of questions. Go beyond a weekly status call where you go over SEO performance and ask for information about your link profile, site performance benchmarks, keyword mapping, and so on. Your job is to work very closely with your agency and have full knowledge and transparency of the work they are doing.
It can be a big blow to your business if you get hit by these Google updates. But avoiding SEO shortcuts, having a plan of action, and creating a long-term plan is a solid start. Think of this as your own SEO crisis management plan.
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Google Penguin, Over-optimization, Googled Panda Safe
1:05 PM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Panda, Google Panda Update, Google Penguin, Google Penguin Update, Google Update, Matt Cutts, Penguin Update, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, SEO Tips
If you are looking for an SEO package that complies with the current (2012) search engine algorithms, you have finally found one. Following is not flashy sales page text, instead, it is valuable information you have to know about this SEO package.
Our all new offering is based on extensive research on Google's algorithm changes and the safe SEO practices to avoid over optimization. According to Matt Cutts video QnA session, organic and natural SEO still has value and he has hinted how Google’s decides the reputation of a website to rank in the search engines. He says (see the video to the left) a website should have some interesting information or something interesting to talk about which is then shared widely in the social media. If a website has such activity with social media signals, Matt has confirmed that these are considered as ranking factors as well as points to gain page rank.
Our all new offering is based on extensive research on Google's algorithm changes and the safe SEO practices to avoid over optimization. According to Matt Cutts video QnA session, organic and natural SEO still has value and he has hinted how Google’s decides the reputation of a website to rank in the search engines. He says (see the video to the left) a website should have some interesting information or something interesting to talk about which is then shared widely in the social media. If a website has such activity with social media signals, Matt has confirmed that these are considered as ranking factors as well as points to gain page rank.
A solution to stay away from over optimization penalty!
Another most important factor to consider when SEOing your website is "Over Optimization". If you have read the SEO news around, you would know the importance of taking over optimization factors into consideration. While all the SEO experts are clueless on what qualifies as over optimization, our research team at SIM labs found those factors:
- Promotion is spread over a period of one month with slow, organic and natural SEO
- Safe use of natural and varying anchor texts so that over optimization of targeted keyword is eliminated
- Usage of a mix of inner page urls within your website to ensure that the promotion looks natural to both search engines and users. SEO benefit would be applied to the entire website along with achieving rankings to the main targeted keywords and pages
- As usual, usage of the most updated list of top websites for promotion. This makes sure that your website gets only quality links, which is a safe SEO investment.
Googled SEO is Panda Safe and Penguin Safe
Google panda update has been around us for quite a long period of time. We had mastered the safe SEO strategies to fulfill the panda update.Now with the recent webspam (penguin) algorithm update, we have extended our Panda SEO research and implemented more organic strategies to make sure that Google loves your website. Being Panda and Google Penguin safe:
- Uses 100% manual process from formatting, submission to report creation. We strictly adhere to the "ZeroBOT" policy to make sure that the strategy is Penguin proof
- Handpicked site lists. Each site we use resides on different IPs from different locations. Your website is safe as there are no sites belonging to a huge network in our list
- Unique content used as applicable to deal with the latest Google panda update
- There are many other factors from Google Penguin update and the latest panda algorithm, which are taken into consideration
The Strategy
1: Creating the buzz about your website
As mentioned, the initial approach is to create something interesting about your website. The natural and organic way of achieving this – Write and publish well researched content related to the target keywords. For that, you cannot think of any other services other than "Advanced article marketing" and "Press Release promotion".
Advanced article marketing
- Write a well-researched, unique article of 450 – 500 words based on the main target keywords.
- The article would be then prepared for publication at 24 best article directories. Now here is the real optimization part in this SEO package. All 24 articles would carry unique resources boxes with different anchor tags. We would be making use of 10-12 keywords to link back to the related urls of your website. This makes sure that over optimization focusing on a particular keyword is not done.
- Publishing the articles will take place gradually over a month. Articles would be published in 6 spots every week for 4 weeks. This gets you 24 published articles in total.
Deliverables: 24 Published articles with varied resource box in a month with 2 links from each article
Duration: 4 Weeks
Press Release Promotion
- Write a newsworthy press release about your company which would create an instant buzz online. The press release would be written as an official release so that there is no harm in sending it to all online news channels in a single shot
- The press release would be distributed to top 90 Press release sites for maximum visibility
- Guaranteed syndication by Google News ensures that a huge buzz would be created about your website.

Deliverables:
- Login Details of each press release directory
- Screenshots of press release distributed to 90 sites
Duration: 5 working days
2: Social Media Marketing to spread the word
Now that a buzz is created about your website, it's time to spread information in the social media and perform social media marketing. Though there are countless numbers of social media marketing strategies available today, we have handpicked the services that Google values the most. Watch another clip from the same QnA video session of Matt where he confirms that the social media signals from networks such as facebook and twitter, social bookmarking sites such as stumbleupon and reditt, blogging sites such as blogspot and considered in the search engine rankings. Now we have the interesting information about your website in the form of articles and PRs, so Google bots would identify any social media marketing done right now as a natural one.
All the following promotions would start after 7 days of initial promotion so that the initial approach is indexed by Google.
20 shared social document sharing of article
The article that we had already written would be shared in top 20 social document sharing sites. For the promotion to look natural, we would use one of our general, old authority profiles to share the documents. The shared documents would carry links back to your website as well.
Deliverables: Published links of all 20 shared articles
Duration: 5 working days
10 news bookmarking of Press Release with different title and description
Now we already have the Press release about your company live online. It’s time to get the press release shared in the social media. This is where social news bookmarking comes into play. The live press release would be bookmarked in top 10 news bookmarking sites such as Slashdot and newsvine. To get rid of duplicate bookmarks, we make use of unique titles and descriptions as well.
Deliverables: Direct links to each published news bookmark
Duration: 10 working days
40 shared social bookmarking (10/ week) with different users and different titles and descriptions
You have heard Matt himself say that signals to your website from social bookmarking sites such as Stumbleupon and dig are valuable for rankings. However, at most caution has to be taken when it comes to social bookmarking, when the over optimization penalty is lurking around. So we have formulated a unique social bookmarking strategy:
- Write 40 different, unique titles and descriptions
- Bookmark your website on a slow and natural pace of 10 bookmarks per week for 4 months
- Bookmarks would be done using highly reputable unique user account that we have along with posting different titles and descriptions.
- This makes the bookmarks look like being done by individual users.
Deliverables: Direct links to each bookmark (40 in 4 weeks) in the final report
Duration: 4 Weeks
Continuous participation in twitter, facebook and linkedin (Google Plus can be chosen instead of linkedin)
- 20 Wall updates to your facebook fanpage in 20 days
- 20 Tweets to your twitter profile in 20 days
- 20 updates to your Google Plus company page in 20 days
We would write interesting updates based on extensive research. It would be made sure that the social media posts that we write would be shared like a wildfire within these networks.
Deliverables: 24 Published articles with varied resource box in a month with 2 links from each article Duration: 4 Weeks
Bronze Social Media Blogging Wheels
Now it’s time for publishing unique content in social media blogs with optimized anchor texts. With the social media wheel, you would get:
- Completed profiles in 12 social media blogging sites
- Keyword research to find 12 unique keywords related to your website
- 12 Unique, well researched social media content (250-300 words) written based on the keywords
- The unique content published in 12 blogs with a Google safe link pattern.
Deliverables:
- Profile login information of all 12 social media blogging sites
- 12 Published content links
Entire project duration: 30 working days
6 Changes Every SEO Should Make Before the Over-Optimization Penalty Hits
2:04 AM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Update, SEO, SEO Tips
Having overly optimized web pages could soon get your websites in some hot water with Google and their search results. It has recently been announced that Google will start to penalize websites that engage in over-optimization practices.
Here is some information and changes that you should be making to your SEO practices in order to avoid this type of penalization.
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Google Penguin Update Recovery Tips and Advice
12:07 AM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Panda, Google Panda Update, Google Penguin, Google Penguin Update, Google Update, Panda 3.5, Penguin Update, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, SEO Tips
Struggling to know what to do in the wake of Google’s Penguin Update? Judging from all the comments and forum discussions we’ve seen, plenty are. We’ve got a little initial advice from Google on the topic, mixed with our own.
What Was Penguin?
The Penguin Update launched on April 24. It was a change to Google’s search results that was designed to punish pages that have been spamming Google. If you’re not familiar with spam, it’s when people do things like “keyword stuffing” or “cloaking” that violate Google’s guidelines. To learn more:
- Google Webmaster Guidelines
- Iolations & Search Engine Spam Penalties
Is Penguin Fully Live?
Sometimes it can take a few days for an update to fully rollout across all Google’s various data centers, which in turn means impacting all its search results. In this case, the rollout is complete. Google confirms that Penguin is fully live.
Was I Hit?
It’s easy to run some search, see that your site has gone and assume the worst. While Google does report some spamming offenses through Google Webmaster Central, it tells me there’s no way currently to log-in and know if the Penguin Update hit you.
My advice to people worried has been this. The update launched on April 24. Look at your search-related traffic from Google immediately after that date. Do you see a major drop compared with a day or two before? If so, you were probably hit by Penguin. See a rise in traffic? You probably benefited from Penguin. See no change? Then it really had no impact on you.
I ran this advice past Google; I was told it was good advice. It’s also exactly the same advice we and others have given people trying to understand if they were hit by the various Panda Updates over time.
How Do I Recover?
Since this was targeting spam, you need to remove any spam you might have. In some cases, Google may have sent messages to you about spam activity in the past. Messages may even be waiting for you in Google Webmaster Central, if you’ve never verified your account.
Obviously, correct anything that Google has flagged as spam with your site. If nothing’s been flagged — and you’re sure it was Penguin that hit you — then correct whatever you can think of that might be spam-like.
Within Google Webmaster Central, there’s the ability to file a reconsideration request. However, Google says this is an algorithmic change — IE, it’s a penalty that’s applied automatically, rather than a human at Google spotting some spam and applying what’s called a manual penality.
Because of that, Google said that reconsideration requests won’t help with Penguin. I was told:
Because this is an algorithmic change, Google has no plans to make manual exceptions. Webmasters cannot ask for reconsideration of their site, but we’re happy to hear feedback about the change on our webmaster forum.
What If Google’s Wrong!
Feel like Penguin has nabbed you for spamming incorrectly? As explained, there’s no reconsideration request process. As the statement above explains, you can post feedback through Google’s webmaster forum.
My advice is not to go in with the attitude that Google has wronged your site. Maybe it did, but Google’s more interested in whether its search results that are doing wrong by searchers.
Give an example of a search where maybe you were previously listed. Explain the quality of your site. Explain what remains, especially if what remains seems to be benefiting from spam or is of low quality.
Of course, giving examples like this is also seen by some as “outing,” and there’s a belief among some SEOs that it should never be done. Others disagree. If this bothers you, then at least explain the quality behind your site and what’s being missed by searchers, not an emphasis on things like how much traffic or business you’re losing.
Postscript: There’s now also a specific form you can use. See Penguin Update Peck Your Site By Mistake? Google’s Got A Form For That.
What About The Over-Optimization Penalty?
Google had initially warned that an “over-optimization” penalty was coming. This is the penalty it was talking about, but it has clarified that it’s not meant to target some hard-to-pin down “over-optimization” but rather outright spam.
What About Panda 3.5?
Yesterday, Google confirmed that it also released an update to its Panda algorithm, Panda 3.5, on April 19. Unlike Penguin, which is meant to target spam, Panda is designed to target pages that aren’t spam but aren’t great quality.
The date is important. If your traffic dropped on April 19 and never recovered, then you were probably hit by Panda rather than Penguin, and you need to follow advice for recovering from Panda, such as these:
- Your Site’s Traffic Has Plummeted Since Google’s Panda Update. Now What?
- Hit By Panda Update? Google Has 23 Questions To Ask Yourself To Improve
- 5 New Tactics For SEO Post-Panda
- Can You Dig Out Of Your Google Panda Hole By Offloading To Subdomains?
- Yet More Tips For Diagnosing & Fixing Panda Problems
- Google: Low PageRank & Bad Spelling May Go Hand-In-Hand; Panda, Too?
Around April 17, a number of sites reported lost traffic. That turned out to be a problem with how Google was incorrectly classifying them as being parked domains.
If your traffic dropped around April 17, it’s probably related to that, especially if you recovered by April 18. It shouldn’t be responsible for any drop you might see after April 18. Rather, Panda and Penguin are more likely culprits.
What About All Those Link Warnings?
Around mid-March, Google began taking action against some blog networks that seemed chiefly designed just to generate links to those participating, in hopes of boosting rankings. Then around the end of March, Google also sent warnings about “artificial or unnatural links” to a variety of sites.
If you saw your traffic drop in mid-March, it could be for one of two reasons. First, Google might no longer be letting the traffic from the link networks you were in carry weight. You’re not penalized. You’re just not benefiting any longer. Second, Google might have actively attached a penalty to your site.
It’s really not clear which has happened to people. Getting a warning doesn’t necessarily mean you got a penalty, it seems. But we’ll try to confirm this more from Google in the coming days.
What About Negative SEO?
Especially in the past week, there’s been a huge rise in forum discussions that “negative SEO” is now a serious problem. The idea is that if being in a blog network or having paid links could hurt you, then anyone could point bad links to harm another site.
This fear has existed for years. It’s not new. It’s even something Google acknowledges can happen in some limited cases. The fact that we’ve not had many sites over the years complaining that negative SEO has hit them should be reassuring.
For most sites, it’s not a problem because good sites have enough good signals in their favor that bad ones stand out as an oddity. It’s more a liability for smaller sites that haven’t built my authority, in my view.
I’ll be following up in more depth on the current round of worries, and I’ll try to get Google to weigh in more on the fresh concerns.
Is Penguin Bad For Searchers, Small Businesses…
If you read forum discussions, the Penguin Update has ruined Google’s search results. The reality is difficult to tell.
Make no mistake, it’s easy to find plenty of weirdness in Google’s results, as I covered in yesterday’s post, Did Penguin Make Google’s Search Results Better Or Worse?
However, these still remain anecdotal reports. It’s always been possible to find oddities like this.
There’s been no mass outcry from ordinary Google searchers that it’s suddenly gotten worse. There’s also typically outcry mostly from publishers who have been harmed by updates and not from publishers who have gained. Those who’ve gained have no reason to speak up.
As a result, after any update, it’s always possible to come away with a skewed view that the sky is falling in terms of relevancy. The reactions I’ve seen to the Penguin Update? They could have all been drawn directly out of reactions from the Florida Update of 2003. This presentation I did for concerned publishers at the time are equally applicable today.
After that update, Google was accused of trying to do everything from put small businesses out-of-business to trying to get more AdWords cash out of big brands. And SEO was dead yet again.
If SEO is dead, it sure has been taking its time dying, as I’ve written in the past. If Google really does have a grand master plan to wipe out small businesses, then it’s going on 10 years now that it hasn’t managed to do it.
The reality is that I’d say the vast majority of small businesses are getting plenty of traffic from Google, real small businesses that make real things or provide real services.
Of course, if the definition of small business is someone who writes hundreds of articles for a blog, to carry Google’s or someone else’s ads alongside, then “spins” those articles using software into slightly different versions for three other blogs to carry more ads, then yes, those types of businesses are in danger. They were from the beginning, actually, and it’s surprising they’ve lasted so long.
None of that is meant to take away from anyone with a quality site who has been harmed by latest update. If Google’s screwing up on listing relevant sites, we want to know, and we sure want that corrected. But as someone who has witnessed Google updates for as far back as we’ve had Google — who can remember panic over updates with Excite that existed before Google — this seems fairly normal.
Search didn’t suddenly stop sending everyone traffic. Google didn’t just stop sending sites tons of traffic. A bunch of people were definitely hit, some of whom probably should have been hit. A bunch of people were rewarded, some of whom should have been rewarded. Most people probably noticed no change at all. Here’s hoping the people who were hit mistakenly, or who weren’t rewarded as they should have been, get corrected in future updates.
Friday, April 27, 2012
The Penguin Update - Google’s Webspam Algorithm Gets Official Name
11:17 PM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Penguin, Google Penguin Update, Google Update, Penguin Update, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, SEO Tips
Move over Panda, there’s a new Google update in town: Penguin. That’s the official name Google has given to the webspam algorithm that it released on Tuesday, 24 April 2012.
What’s An Update?
For those unfamiliar with Google updates, I’d recommend reading my Why Google Panda Is More A Ranking Factor Than Algorithm Update post from last year. It explains how Google has a variety of algorithms used to rank pages.
Google periodically changes these algorithms. When this happens, that’s known as an “update,” which in turn has an impact on the search results we get. Sometimes the updates have a big impact; sometimes they’re hardly noticed.
Who Names Updates?
Google also periodically creates new algorithms. When this happens, sometimes they’re given names by Google itself, as with the Vince update in 2009. If Google doesn’t give a name, sometimes others such as Webmaster World may name them, as with the Mayday update in 2010.
With Penguin, history is repeating itself, where Google is belatedly granting a name to an update after-the-fact. The same thing happened with Panda last year.
When the Panda Update was first launched in February 2011, Google didn’t initially release the name it was using internally. I knew it, but I wasn’t allowed say what it was. Without an official name, I gave it an unofficial one of “Farmer,” since one of the reasons behind the update was to combat low-quality content that was often seen associated with content farms.
In the end, I suspect Google didn’t want the update to sound like it was especially aimed at content farms, so it eventually let the “Panda” name go public, in a Steven Levy interview for Wired about the update about a week after it launched. Panda took its name from one of the key engineers involved.
Say Hello To Penguin
Since Panda, Google’s been avoiding names. The new algorithm in January designed to penalize pages with too many ads above the fold was called the “page layout algorithm.” When Penguin rolled out earlier this week, it was called the “webspam algorithm update.”
Without a name for the new webspam algorithm, Search Engine Land was asking people for their own ideas at Google+ and Facebook, with the final vote making “Titanic” the leading candidate. A last check with Google got it to release its own official name of “Penguin.”
Why Google Panda Is More A Ranking Factor Than Algorithm Update
11:02 PM
Google, Google Algorithm, Google Panda, Google Panda Update, Google Update, Search Engine Optimization, SEO
With Google Panda Update 2.2 upon us, it’s worth revisiting what exactly Panda is and isn’t. Panda is a new ranking factor. Panda is not an entirely new overall ranking algorithm that’s employed by Google. The difference is important for anyone hit by Panda and hoping to recover from it.
Google’s Ranking Algorithm & Updates
Let’s start with search engine optimization 101. After search engines collect pages from across the web, they need to sort through them in demand to searches that are done. Which are the best? To decide this, they employ a ranking algorithm. It’s like a recipe for cooking up the best results.
Like any recipe, the ranking algorithm contains many ingredients. Search engines look at words that appear on pages, how people are linking to pages, try to calculate the reputation of websites and more. Our Periodic Table Of SEO Ranking Factors explains more about this.
Google is constantly tweaking its ranking algorithm, making little changes that might not be noticed by many people. If the algorithm were a real recipe, this might be like adding in a pinch more salt, a bit more sugar or a teaspoon of some new flavoring. The algorithm is mostly the same, despite the little changes.
From time-to-time, Google does a massive overhaul of its ranking algorithm. These have been known as “updates” over the years. “Florida” was a famous one from 2003; the Vince Update hit in 2009; the Mayday Update happened last year.
Index & Algorithm Updates
Confusingly, the term “updates” also gets used for things that are not actual algorithm updates. Here’s some vintage Matt Cutts on this topic. For example, years ago Google used to do an “index update” every month or so, when it would suddenly dump millions of new pages it had found into its existing collection.
This influx of new content caused ranking changes that could take days to settle down, hence the nickname of the “Google Dance.” But the changes were caused by the algorithm sorting through all the new content, not because the algorithm itself had changed.
Of course, as said, sometimes the core ranking algorithm itself is massively altered, almost like tossing out an old recipe and starting from scratch with a new one. These “algorithm updates” can produce massive ranking changes. But Panda, despite the big shifts it has caused, is not an algorithm update.
Instead, Panda — like PageRank — is a value that feeds into the overall Google algorithm. If it helps consider it as if every site is given a PandaRank score. Those low in Panda come through OK; those high get hammered by the beast.
Calculating Ranking Factors
So where are we now? Google has a ranking algorithm, a recipe that assesses many factors to decide how pages should rank. Google can — and does — change some parts of this ranking algorithm and can see instant (though likely minor) effects by doing so. This is because it already has the values for some factors calculated and stored.
For example, let’s say Google decides to reward pages that have all the words someone has searched for appearing in close proximity to each other. It decides to give them a slightly higher boost than in the past. It can implement this algorithm tweak and see changes happen nearly instantly.
This is because Google’s has already gathered all the values relating to this particular factor. It already has stored the pages and made note of where each word is in proximity to other words. Google can turn the metaphorical proximity ranking factor dial up from say 5 to 6 effortlessly, because those factors have already been calculated as part of an ongoing process.
Automatic Versus Manual Calculations
Other factors require deeper calculations that aren’t done on an ongoing basis, what Google calls “manual” updates. This doesn’t mean that a human being at Google is somehow manually setting the value of these factors. It means that someone decides its time to run a specific computer program to update these factors, rather than it just happening all the time.
For example, a few years ago Google rolled out a “Google Bomb” fix. But then, new Google Bombs kept happening! What was up with that? Google explained that there was a special Google Bomb filter that would periodically be run, since it wasn’t needed all the time. When the filter ran, it would detect new Google Bombs and defuse those.
In recipe terms, it would be as if you were using a particular brand of chocolate chips in your cookies but then switched to a different brand. You’re still “inputting” chocolate chips, but these new chips make the cookies taste even better (or so you hope).
Note: In an earlier edition of this story, I’d talked about PageRank values being manually updated from time-to-time. Google’s actually said they are constantly being updated. Sorry about any confusion there.
The Panda Ranking Factor
Enter Panda. Rather than being a change to the overall ranking algorithm, Panda is more a new ranking factor that has been added into the algorithm (indeed, on our SEO Periodic Table, this would be element Vt, for Violation: Thin Content).
Panda is a filter that Google has designed to spot what it believes are low-quality pages. Have too many low-quality pages, and Panda effectively flags your entire site. Being Pandified, Pandification — whatever clever name you want to call it — doesn’t mean that your entire site is out of Google. But it does mean that pages within your site carry a penalty designed to help ensure only the better ones make it into Google’s top results.
At our SMX Advanced conference earlier this month, the head of Google’s spam fighting team, Matt Cutts, explained that the Panda filter isn’t running all the time. Right now, it’s too much computing power to be running this particular analysis of pages.
Instead, Google runs the filter periodically to calculate the values it needs. Each new run so far has also coincided with changes to the filter, some big, some small, that Google hopes improves catching poor quality content. So far, the Panda schedule has been like this:
- Panda Update 1.0: Feb. 24, 2011
- Panda Update 2.0: April 11, 2011 (about 7 weeks later)
- Panda Update 2.1: May 10, 2011 (about 4 weeks later)
- Panda Update 2.2: June 16, 2011 (about 5 weeks later)
Recovering From Panda
For anyone who was hit by Panda, it’s important to understand that the changes you’ve made won’t have any immediate impact.
For instance, if you started making improvements to your site the day after Panda 1.0 happened, none of those would have registered for getting you back into Google’s good graces until the next time Panda scores were assessed — which wasn’t until around April 11.
With the latest Panda round now live, Google says it’s possible some sites that were hit by past rounds might see improvements, if they themselves have improved.
The latest round also means that some sites previously not hit might now be impacted. If your site was among these, you’ve probably got a 4-6 week wait until any improvements you make might be assessed in the next round.
If you made changes to your site since the last Panda update, and you didn’t see improvements, that doesn’t necessarily mean you’ve still done something wrong. Pure speculation here, but part of the Panda filter might be watching to see if a site’s content quality looks to have improved over time. After enough time, the Panda penalty might be lifted.
Takeaways
In conclusion, some key points to remember:
Google makes small algorithm changes all the time, which can cause sites to fall (and rise) in rankings independently of Panda.
Google may update factors that feed into the overall algorithm, such as PageRank scores, on an irregular basis. Those updates can impact rankings independently of Panda.
So far, Google has confirmed when major Panda factor updates have been released. If you saw a traffic drop during one of these times, there’s a good chance you have a Panda-related problem.
Looking at rankings doesn’t paint an accurate picture of how well your site is performing on Google. Look at the overall traffic that Google has sent you. Losing what you believe to be a key ranking might not mean you’ve lost a huge amount of traffic. Indeed, you might discover that in general, you’re as good as ever with Google.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Google's Algorithm Update to Penalize Over Optimized Sites
5:24 AM
Google, Google Algorithm, Matt Cutts, Search Engine Optimization, SEO, Tips
Few week during a SXSW panel, Matt Cutts, head of Google's search spam team, announced that Google has been working on a new tweak to its algorithm that will punish sites that are too optimized for SEO -- what he called "over-optimized" or "overly SEO'd," according to the recording of the announcement posted on Search Engine Land. Here's what you need to know about the new Google algorithm update, which has not been released yet but will go live in the next few weeks, according to Cutts' announcement.
What Cutts Revealed About the New Algorithm Update?
Cutts hadn't planned on mentioning the algorithm update, but was given the perfect opportunity when an attendee asked the following question:
"With so many SEO companies showing up claiming to do SEO, a lot of markets are getting saturated with optimized content...What are you doing to prevent, for example, if you're looking for something, and the first page is just optimized content, and it's not what you're actually looking for? Are you pretty much out of luck if you're not optimizing your site but it has relevant content? If I'm a mom or pop and I'm trying to optimize a site by myself, I'm going to get beat by people paying thousands of dollars."
This algorithm update is working to level the playing field for sites without as many resources to dedicate to SEO. Matt explained the changes as "trying to make the algorithm more adaptive," or being more understanding of sites that have good content even if it isn't search engine optimizedlike many marketers have learned to do. The sites that will be penalized are those that "throw too many keywords on the page, exchange way too many links, whatever they're doing to go beyond what a normal person would expect."
What Google's Algorithm Update Means Practically for Marketers?
If your content is driven by topics, you shouldn't expect to be penalized when the new algorithm update rolls out, even if you do take the time to search engine optimize that content with keywords and relevant links. If your writing is driven by keywords, however, we predict it's more likely you'll suffer some search ranking slips.
What's the difference between a keyword-driven content strategy and a topic-driven content strategy? A content strategy driven by what readers want, not what search engines want, is the direction that Google has been actively working toward rewarding even since last year's Panda updatesrolled out. So if you're selecting topics based on what your audience would find helpful, you're doing content strategy right. If you're choosing what to write about based on the keywords you want to be found for, you don't have the reader top of mind; and Google is doing everything they can in its algorithm not to reward such sites in the SERPs.
Said Cutts on the panel, "Make a compelling site. Make a site that's useful. Make a site that's interesting. Make a site that's relevant to people's interests...We're always trying to best approximate if a user lands on a page if they are going to be annoyed...All of the changes we make are designed to approximate, if a user lands on your page, just how happy they are going to be with what they're going to get."
Marketers, business owners, and SEOs could also take a cue from Bing's Duane Forrester, who was also on the panel and addressed the attendee's question after Matt Cutts' initial response. He highlighted the importance of social sharing as a signal others actually like your content -- one of the key indicators of relevancy for search engines. "Does the rest of the world think you have a great product?" Forrester asked. "If they do, they will amplify this. If you're not engaged socially, you're missing the boat because the conversation is happening socially about you and about your content. Those are really important signals for us. Whether you're involved or not is your choice, but those signals still exist whether you're in the conversation or not."
Thankfully, Danny Sullivan asked the burning question we all had (or still have) on our minds -- whether Google is going to release an algorithm update that's designed to hurt the kinds of SEO activities that have been recommended to marketers to help their search rankings. In short, no; this algorithm update won't do that. Cutts clarified by saying, "SEO can often be very helpful. It can make a site more crawlable; it can make a site more accessible; it can think about the words users are going to type whenever they come to a search engine to make sure those words are on a page. The same things you do to optimize your return on investment and make sure things spread virally or socially are often the same things that work from a search engine perspective...but there are some people who take it too far. If you're white hat or doing very little SEO, you're not going to be affected by this change."
So marketers, it sounds like the same rules still apply. Create great content with readers in mind first, search engines in mind second. Then make sure your site is easily crawlable so bots can actually read and index that content. As more information is released, we'll keep you updated on whether this algorithm update will affect the way you approach your content or search engine optimization strategy.
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