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Search Algorithms

Search engines have complex search algorithms which are used to ensure they are able to display the most relevant and useful results to their users. While algorithm changes are common and won’t usually affect a site’s ranking, search engines such as Google will occasionally introduce a major update which may impact search results. Our Hangout Notes cover insights from Google around these algorithms with best practice advice.

You Don’t Need to Have AMP to Appear in Google Discover

Regular HTML pages can appear in Google Discover, it isn’t limited to showing AMP. However, if you want to show large images for your site in Google Discover you need to go to the Help Center and submit a form.

28 Jun 2019

Google Discover is Based on User Interests Rather than Queries

Google Discover isn’t associated with queries as it is based on what Google thinks the user’s interests are, so to show up there you need to focus on topics that interest your users rather than keywords.

28 Jun 2019

The Last Updated Date of a Page Does Not Play a Role in Rankings

While useful from a user’s perspective, the last updated date doesn’t impact the crawling, indexing or performance of a page within search results.

25 Jun 2019

HTML & CSS Validity of A Document Are Not Ranking Signals

John explained that it doesn’t make sense for algorithms to focus on the validity of a page, especially if the content matches a users needs perfectly.

25 Jun 2019

The Site Diversity Update Won’t Affect How Subdomains Are Crawled

The new change that was launched to show more diversity of sites in the search results won’t impact the way subdomains are currently crawled and processed, it will only impact how they are shown in the search results.

11 Jun 2019

Get Feedback From Real Users to Assess Your Site’s EAT

John recommends getting feedback from your users about the expertise, authority and trustworthiness (EAT) of the content on your site to find areas for improvement.

11 Jun 2019

No Need to Optimize Websites Specifically for Quality Raters

You don’t need to specifically optimize sites to be accessible for Google Quality Raters because they won’t be reviewing individual sites. The Quality Raters are simply given a list of SERPs with and without an algorithm change, and they then decide which set of results is better.

11 Jun 2019

Create Clear Separation Between Content That Will & Won’t be Filtered by Safe Search

John recommends having a clear separation between safe search friendly content and content that would be filtered out by these algorithms to give Google the best chance of distinguishing between the two.

31 May 2019

Search Quality Raters Evaluate Results of Algorithm Testing

Google uses Search Quality Raters to evaluate pages when they are testing out changes to algorithms. The teams will test out new ideas and then Raters review the quality of the search results and pages linked from them in different test versions.

31 May 2019

Demographic Information Isn’t Used Explicitly in Search Algorithms

Google doesn’t explicitly use demographic information in its search engine algorithms. However, search results may vary on a per user basis due to other types of personalization.

31 May 2019

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