Google Search Testing Updated Search Quality Algorithms?
Some of the more focused and obsessive SEO/Webmaster forums are taking notice of Google’s search results shifting around a bit too much. Some are saying that over the past couple days, the Google results for some of their web sites have dropped…
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The Formula for Successful Newsjacking
Capitalizing on news that’s already out there can help you earn links back to your website – if you know how to do it effectively.
Google to Acknowledge Mobile Friendly Factors in New Algorithm Update
A new post from www.davidnaylor.co.uk. BAZINGA!
The post Google to Acknowledge Mobile Friendly Factors in New Algorithm Update appeared first on UK SEO Blog by Dave Naylor – SEO Tools, Tips & News.
Six thoughts on Google’s ‘mobile-friendly’ search announcement
1. This will be a big, big talking point, but do try not to panic
Lots of SEO agencies will send out emails to their clients instructing them they need to go responsive. Clients will most likely bite their tongues rather than replying ‘tell me something I didn’t know five years ago’.
The fact that Google put out the message may help some gain extra buy-in to push ahead with dev changes but, realistically, unless you’re a small site or the project is already in motion, six weeks isn’t long enough for most businesses to make a full change.
It’s important to note here that:
- We won’t actually know the scale of the effect here until April 21st.
- Google does say it will be ‘expanding’ mobile-friendliness as a ranking signal, which implies it is already in place, therefore it’s not something entirely new.
In summary: try to avoid panicking, but do take logical actions based on your business’s position.
If you’re a small site & have done nothing around becoming mobile-friendly so far, it may be worth the risk to try and quickly shift.
If you’re a medium/large site & have not yet sorted out the mobile side of things, do get planning. It’s likely you already began to plan several years ago, it’s worth putting some actual timelines on achieving this.
2. Is tablet considered ‘mobile’?
In some instances Google considers Tablets to be ‘mobile’, in others it does not.
Google has not said explicitly one way or the other whether these ‘mobile as a ranking signal’ changes will affect tablet. I’d assume for now it won’t affect tablets (as Ahmed Khalifa pointed out – Google’s mobile testing tools focus on phones), but wouldn’t rule it out.
3. Look at your own search landscape
To some this will seem obvious, to others perhaps not: if none of your search competitors have mobile friendly sites, your traffic probably won’t drop too much.
If all of your competitors are already mobile friendly, and you are not, Google’s announcement indicates you may suffer lower results on mobile while your competitors remain afloat.
Take a look at your top referring search terms (often you have to now take these from Google Webmaster Tools, as Google hobbled the ability to see most organic keywords), check on a phone to see where you sit among competitors for each of the larger ones, and which of your competitors are currently marked ‘mobile friendly’.
From that you can get a rough idea of whether you’re likely to gain extra traffic, or sink.
An obvious strategy if it looks like you’re going to lose traffic is to try to bridge the gap with paid search.
It’s surprising how well some ‘non-mobile’ sites convert on mobile (in some cases not so far behind roughly equivalent mobile sites; I’ve even done a couple of A/B tests where the desktop view of a site has outperformed mobile view on phones, albeit admittedly that’s rare).
If your site does convert well on a phone, despite not being mobile friendly, it may be worth upping your mobile bids after you’ve seen the effects of this change.
If you don’t fancy spending hours checking mobile search engine results page, Chrome has a neat little feature for emulating various phones. Open up Developer Tools (settings > more tools > developer tools, or ctrl+shift+i on a PC) and click the little phone Icon to open it up.

4. Languages
Google’s post says the change applies to all languages. It’s important to remember that different countries are at wildly different points on the mobile uptake curve.
For example – in the UK it’s not totally uncommon to see a site that bumps above 50% phone traffic at certain times in the day. In Germany that’s far rarer.
Depending on your primary markets, this change may be a worry, or you may have some breathing space.
5. Behaviour
Do spend some time taking a look at the difference in organic mobile behaviour for your sites vs organic desktop behaviour. Often it varies quite dramatically.
‘Homepage landers’ vs ‘non-homepage landers’ is a particularly important split to look at: Often on mobile, a greater proportion of organic traffic lands on the homepage.
In all likelihood, sites will probably not drop in search results for their brand terms, which usually drive the bulk of homepage traffic.
6. New vs repeat Visits
It’s also worth mentioning that the change *may* affect repeat visitors less than new.
If you’ve visited a site before on your phone, you’ll notice Google are very quick to suggest that autocompleted suggestion as the page you may be looking for even before you’ve finished typing the brand name (ie. the search result never appears, simply the URL as an autocomplete).
It will also be interesting to see whether Google amend their ‘new visitor’ autocomplete behaviour on the basis of this. On Android it’s not uncommon to start typing a search term into your phone, only to be presented by the actual URL you’re looking for as an autocomplete suggestion, even when you have not previously been to that site/page.
Thoughts?
Of course this is a highly subjective area. Google put out limited information (for example, as Ginny Marvin pointed out recently, they themselves have avoided discussing their own mobile performance for quite a long time).
If you have any thoughts, or any advice for anyone looking at this Google announcement with worry, do add them to the comments below.
My Favorite 5 Analytics Dashboards – Whiteboard Friday
Posted by KitsapKing
Finding effective ways of organizing your analytics dashboards is quite a bit easier if you can get a sense for what has worked for others. To that end, in today’s Whiteboard Friday the founder of Sixth Man Marketing, Ed Reese, sh…
Responsive Design for Mobile SEO
Why Is Mobile So Important?
If you look just at your revenue numbers as a publisher, it is easy to believe mobile is of limited importance. In our last post I mentioned an AdAge article highlighting how the New York Times was generating over half their traffic from mobile with it accounting for about 10% of their online ad revenues.
Large ad networks (Google, Bing, Facebook, Twitter, Yahoo!, etc.) can monetize mobile *much* better than other publishers can because they aggressively blend the ads right into the social stream or search results, causing them to have a much higher CTR than ads on the desktop. Bing recently confirmed the same trend RKG has highlighted about Google’s mobile ad clicks:
While mobile continues to be an area of rapid and steady growth, we are pleased to report that the Yahoo Bing Network’s search and click volumes from smart phone users have more than doubled year-over-year. Click volumes have generally outpaced growth in search volume
Those ad networks want other publishers to make their sites mobile friendly for a couple reasons…
- If the downstream sites are mobile friendly, then users are more likely to go back to the central ad / search / social networks more often & be more willing to click out on the ads from them.
- If mobile is emphasized in importance, then those who are critical of the value of the channel may eat some of the blame for relative poor performance, particularly if they haven’t spent resources optimizing user experience on the channel.
Further Elevating the Importance of Mobile
Modern Love, by Banksy. @SachinKalbag pic.twitter.com/Xzcxnkmmnx— Anand Ranganathan (@ARangarajan1972) November 29, 2014
Google has hinted at the importance of having a mobile friendly design, labeling friendly sites, testing labeling slow sites & offering tools to test how mobile friendly a site design is.
Today Google put out an APB warning they are going to increase the importance of mobile friendly website design:
Starting April 21, we will be expanding our use of mobile-friendliness as a ranking signal. This change will affect mobile searches in all languages worldwide and will have a significant impact in our search results.
In the past Google would hint that they were working to clean up link spam or content farms or website hacking and so on. In some cases announcing such efforts was done to try to discourage investment in the associated strategies, but it is quite rare that Google pre-announces an algorithmic shift which they state will be significant & they put an exact date on it.
I wouldn’t recommend waiting until the last day to implement the design changes, as it will take Google time to re-crawl your site & recognize if the design is mobile friendly.
Those who ignore the warning might be in for significant pain.
Some sites which were hit by Panda saw a devastating 50% to 70% decline in search traffic, but given how small mobile phone screen sizes are, even ranking just a couple spots lower could cause an 80% or 90% decline in mobile search traffic.
Another related issue referenced in the above post was tying in-app content to mobile search personalization:
Starting today, we will begin to use information from indexed apps as a factor in ranking for signed-in users who have the app installed. As a result, we may now surface content from indexed apps more prominently in search. To find out how to implement App Indexing, which allows us to surface this information in search results, have a look at our step-by-step guide on the developer site.
Google also announced today they are extending AdWords-styled ads to their Google Play search results, so they now have a direct economic incentive to allow app activity to bleed into their organic ranking factors.
m. Versus Responsive Design
Some sites have a separate m. version for mobile visitors, while other sites keep consistent URLs & employ responsive design. How the m. version works is on the regular version of their site (say like www.seobook.com) a webmaster could add an alternative reference to the mobile version in the head section of the document
<link rel=”alternate” media=”only screen and (max-width: 640px)” href=”http://m.seobook.com/” >
…and then on the mobile version, they would rel=canonical it back to the desktop version, likeso…
<link rel=”canonical” href=”http://www.seobook.com/” >
With the above sort of code in place, Google would rank the full version of the site on desktop searches & the m. version in mobile search results.
3 or 4 years ago it was a toss up as to which of these 2 options would win, but over time it appears the responsive design option is more likely to win out.
Here are a couple reasons responsive is likely to win out as a better solution:
- If people share a mobile-friendly URL on Twitter, Facebook or other social networks & the URL changes, then when someone on a desktop computer clicks on the shared m. version of the page with fewer ad units & less content on the page, then the publisher is providing a worse user experience & is losing out on incremental monetization they would have achieved with the additional ad units.
- While some search engines and social networks might be good at consolidating the performance of the same piece of content across multiple URL versions, some of them will periodically mess it up. That in turn will lead in some cases to lower rankings in search results or lower virality of content on social networks.
- Over time there is an increasing blur between phones and tablets with phablets. Some high pixel density screens on cross over devices may appear large in terms of pixel count, but still not have particularly large screens, making it easy for users to misclick on the interface.
- When Bing gave their best practices for mobile, they stated: “Ideally, there shouldn’t be a difference between the “mobile-friendly” URL and the “desktop” URL: the site would automatically adjust to the device — content, layout, and all.” In that post Bing shows some examples of m. versions of sites ranking in their mobile search results, however for smaller & lesser known sites they may not rank the m. version the way they do for Yelp or Wikipedia, which means that even if you optimize the m. version of the site to a great degree, that isn’t the version all mobile searchers will see. Back in 2012 Bing also stated their preference for a single version of a URL, in part based on lowering crawl traffic & consolidation of ranking signals.
In addition to responsive web design & separate mobile friendly URLs, a third configuration option is dynamic serving, which uses the Vary HTTP header to detect the user-agent & use that to drive the layout.
Solutions for Quickly Implementing Responsive Design
New Theme / Design
If your site hasn’t been updated in years you might be suprised at what you find available on sites like ThemeForest for quite reasonable prices. Many of the options are responsive out of the gate & look good with a day or two of customization. Theme subscription services like WooThemes and Elegant Themes also have responsive options.
Child Themes
Some of the default Wordpress themes are responsive. Creating a child theme is quite easy. The popular Thesis and Studiopress frameworks also offer responsive skins.
PSD to HTML HTML to Responsive HTML
Eeek! … 11% Of Americans Think #HTML Is A Sexually Transmitted Disease http://t.co/np0irmI1DW via @broderick— L2Code HTML (@L2CodeHTML) January 10, 2015
Some of the PSD to HTML conversion services like PSD 2 HTML, HTML Slicemate & XHTML Chop offer responsive design conversion of existing HTML sites in as little as a day or two, though you will likely need to do at least a few minor changes when you put the designs live to compensate for issues like third party ad units and other minor issues.
If you have an existing Wordpress theme, you might want to see if you can zip it up and send it to them, or else they may make your new theme as a child theme of 2015 or such. If you are struggling to get them to convert your Wordpress theme over (like they are first converting it to a child theme of 2015 or such) then another option would be to have them do a static HTML file conversion (instead of a Wordpress conversion) and then feed that through a theme creation tool like Themespress.
Other Things to Look Out For
Third Party Plug-ins & Ad Code Gotchas
Google allows webmasters to alter the ad calls on their mobile responsive AdSense ad units to show different sized ad units to different screen sizes & skip showing some ad units on smaller screens. An AdSense code example is included in an expandable section at the bottom of this page.
<style type=”text/css”>
.adslot_1 { display:inline-block; width: 320px; height: 50px; }
@media (max-width: 400px) { .adslot_1 { display: none; } }
@media (min-width:500px) { .adslot_1 { width: 468px; height: 60px; } }
@media (min-width:800px) { .adslot_1 { width: 728px; height: 90px; } }
</style>
<ins class=”adsbygoogle adslot_1″
data-ad-client=”ca-pub-1234″
data-ad-slot=”5678″></ins>
<script async src=”//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js”></script>
<script>(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});</script>
For other ads which perhaps don’t have a “mobile friendly” option you could use CSS to either set the ad unit to display none or to set the ad unit to overflow using code like either of the following
hide it:
@media only screen and (max-width: ___px) {
.bannerad {
display: none;
}
}
overflow it:
@media only screen and (max-width: ___px) {
.ad-unit {
max-width: ___px;
overflow: scroll;
}
}
Before Putting Your New Responsive Site Live…
Back up your old site before putting the new site live.
For static HTML sites or sites with PHP or SHTML includes & such…
- Download a copy of your existing site to local.
- Rename that folder to something like sitename.com-OLDVERSION
- Upload the sitename.com-OLDVERSION folder to your server. If anything goes drastically wrong during your conversion process you can rename the new site design to something like sitename.com-HOSED then set the sitename.com-OLDVERSION folder to sitename.com to quickly restore the site.
- Download your site to local again.
- Ensure your new site design is using a different CSS folder or CSS filename such that they old and new versions of the design can be live at the same time while you are editing the site.
- Create a test file with the responsive design on your site & test that page until things work well enough.
- Once that page works well enough, test changing your homepage over to the new design & then save and upload it to verify it works properly. In addition to using your cell phone you could see how it looks on a variety of devices via the mobile browser testing emulation tool in Chrome, or a wide array of third party tools like: MobileTest.me, iPadPeek, Mobile Phone Emulator, Browshot, Matt Kersley’s responsive web design testing tool, BrowserStack, Cross Browser Testing, & the W3C mobileOK Checker. Paid services like Keynote offer manual testing rather than emulation on a wide variety of devices. There is also paid downloadable desktop emulation software like Multi-browser view.
- Once you have the general “what needs changed in each file” down, then use find & replace to bulk edit the remaining files to make the changes to make them responsive.
- Use a tool like FileZilla to quickly bulk upload the files.
- Look through key pages and if there are only a few minor errors then fix them and re-upload them. If things are majorly screwed up then revert to the old design being live and schedule a do over on the upgrade.
- If you have a decently high traffic site, it might make sense to schedule the above process for late Friday night or an off hour on the weekend, such that if anything goes astray you have fewer people seeing the errors while you frantically rush to fix them. :)
If you have little faith in the above test-it-live “methodology” & would prefer a slower & lower stress approach, you could create a test site on another domain name for testing purposes. Just be sure to include a noindex directive in the robots.txt file or password protect access to the site while testing. When you get things worked out on it, make sure your internal links are referencing the correct domain name, and that you have removed any block via robots.txt or password protection.
For a site with a CMS the above process is basically the same, except for how you might need to create a different backup. If you are uploading a Wordpress or Drupal theme, then change the name at least slightly so you can keep the old and new designs live at the same time so you can quickly switch back to the old design if you need to.
If you have a mixed site with Wordpress & static files or such then it might make sense to test changing the static files first, get those to work well & then create a Wordpress theme after that.
Mobile Search Spend Share to Reach 83% by 2018
Recent eMarketer research found that mobile search spend is growing exponentially with no end in sight, even more so than they previously reported.
Google & Reviews Snippets – If It Can Go Wrong It Will Go Very Wrong Category
Last year Google added review snippets that represent general sentiment to the Knowledge Panel. These snippets are determined by algo and are intended to represent the public’s attitude about a business . Like all Google algos sooner or later they screw up and in inimitable fashion Google is unwilling or unable to fix it. Dan Petrovic … Continue reading Google & Reviews Snippets – If It Can Go Wrong It Will Go Very Wrong Category →
Brands Look to Boost Conversions With Google Shopping Campaigns
Google’s local inventory ads, which recently opened up to all advertisers, allow brands like Macy’s and PetSmart to make in-stores sales from their search ads on both desktop and mobile.
Does Yelp Really Matter?
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.@googlewmc Mobile Usability Tool Fails the Test … AGAIN
UPDATE 2015-02-27 Googler Doantam Pham replied to my discussion in the Google Webmaster Forums. As I suspected, the images were the cause of the disparity in the test results between the two sites. The problem remains, though. While I can…
Roundup Posts
I’m increasingly conflicted about roundup posts. You know, the kind where 23 experts answer one burning question and their answers are all put together in one long blog post. Instant content! I don’t produce roundup posts, rarely read them and infrequently contribute to them. Roundup Dynamics The dynamics of a roundup post are pretty clear. The […]
Roundup Posts is by AJ Kohn, originally posted on Blind Five Year Old.
Google Search Algorithm Adds Mobile-Friendly Factors & App Indexing To Ranking
Google’s mobile ranking algorithm will officially include mobile-friendly usability factors and app indexing. Making sure your site is mobile-friendly is now more important than ever.
The post Google Search Algorithm Adds Mobile-Friendly Factors & App Indexing To Ranking appeared first on…
Please visit Search Engine Land for the full article.
Dude, Where’s My Primary Category?!
Google recently rolled out their “primary category” requirement to Google My Business Locations bulk accounts. Instead of associating the first category per location in a bulk account as the “primary category”, the roll out is instead selecting nothing as a primary category for all locations in a bulk account. This means that if you […]
The post Dude, Where’s My Primary Category?! appeared first on Local SEO Guide.
Finding more mobile-friendly search results
Webmaster level: all
When it comes to search on mobile devices, users should get the most relevant and timely results, no matter if the information lives on mobile-friendly web pages or apps. As more people use mobile devices to access the internet, our algorithms have to adapt to these usage patterns. In the past, we’ve made updates to ensure a site is configured properly and viewable on modern devices. We’ve made it easier for users to find mobile-friendly web pages and we’ve introduced App Indexing to surface useful content from apps. Today, we’re announcing two important changes to help users discover more mobile-friendly content:
1. More mobile-friendly websites in search results
Starting April 21, we will be expanding our use of mobile-friendliness as a ranking signal. This change will affect mobile searches in all languages worldwide and will have a significant impact in our search results. Consequently, users will find it easier to get relevant, high quality search results that are optimized for their devices.
To get help with making a mobile-friendly site, check out our guide to mobile-friendly sites. If you’re a webmaster, you can get ready for this change by using the following tools to see how Googlebot views your pages:
- If you want to test a few pages, you can use the Mobile-Friendly Test.
- If you have a site, you can use your Webmaster Tools account to get a full list of mobile usability issues across your site using the Mobile Usability Report.
2. More relevant app content in search results
Starting today, we will begin to use information from indexed apps as a factor in ranking for signed-in users who have the app installed. As a result, we may now surface content from indexed apps more prominently in search. To find out how to implement App Indexing, which allows us to surface this information in search results, have a look at our step-by-step guide on the developer site.
If you have questions about either mobile-friendly websites or app indexing, we’re always happy to chat in our Webmaster Help Forum.
Posted by Takaki Makino, Chaesang Jung, and Doantam Phan
SMBs Benefit From New YP Local Search Feature
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Optimizing Local SEO Strategy for Multi-Location Businesses
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Apps Could Be an Innovative Approach to Local Search
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