Showing posts with label Google Panda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Panda. Show all posts

Friday, April 1, 2016

Create a Valuable and Rank-Worthy Quality Content

1. Google, you read my mind!

So first off, if I search for something like "best granola brands," what I find is this page ranking first. It's from Eat This Supermarkets, granted your mileage may vary. You might get a different search result given your geo or that kind of thing. The page is called "The World's 10 Healthiest Granolas."
Quality Content
Now Google is looking at a bunch of things here, but one of the things they are obviously looking at and still looking at, very much so, is things like keyword matches. And not just raw pure matches, although that's important too, but synonyms, word uses, intent matching. Essentially Google's trying to parse out, all right, when someone searches for "best granola brands," they could mean the "best" meaning the most flavorful, they might mean the ones that are most popular, they might mean the ones that are healthiest, or maybe some combination of all these qualities. 

In this case, they've taken "healthiest." "Healthiest" was, in fact, a bunch of the top 10 results, so I think Google is actually saying, "Hey, maybe in the world of granola, 'best' and 'healthiest' have some synonymity, have some overlap, some confluence. Perhaps a lot of people who are searching for best are searching for healthiest in the world of granola that is." So they've put that there. 

When you're thinking about evaluating your content, we've done this for years and years in the SEO world, but we should be thinking about how do my keywords match up, particularly my title and my headline and the first bits of my content. 

2. Related topics

Number two, topic associations, related term and phrase matches, co-occurrence, keyword co-occurrence. It is the case that if Google sees that a lot of the time, when words like "best granola brands" or "granola brands" or "best granola" appear on the Web, they also see words and phrases like "healthy." They also see words like "nutritious." They see words like "fat and sugars." They see "calories."
If they're seeing these words frequently associated with this other topic, they're going to essentially reward content that uses those terms and phrases intelligently, and they might actually penalize pages that don't have them. Google might for example say, "Gosh, it is very odd to have a page about granola that nowhere on the page mentions nuts, because we frequently see nuts and granolas mentioned together, and so that is a peculiar one to us." Or it could be the case that when they see granola brands, they almost always see a comparison of things like calories and fat and sodium and sugar, and so when they see a page that doesn't have those elements, that's also peculiar to them.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Google Panda 3.9 Aftermath

Last July 24, 2012 Google Panda Update 3.9 has been confirmed. I didn't notice that there was a Google update til I saw a post from Search Engineland Panda Update 3.9, not reading the date of the post I even posted in Forum that it was to be rolled that same night I posted there but I was a day late with the news.

Unknowingly that there was an update I already notice an increase in traffic on this blog, my excitement grew even more when I learned that there was a Google Panda Update. I am on the 1st page in just a week of doing Off-page SEO before the update I was at rank #7 to be exact. When the update came my rank when from #7 to rank #5 then the following day it went to #4 then just yesterday it was on rank #3 which makes me really happy that I have a working SEO Strategy, so I thought to aim the #1 position before July ends and increase my other keyword ranks.