Category Archives: On-page SEO

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How could Google Pigeon affect websites and SEO

The change in Google’s Pigeon Rank Algorithm has affected the local search listings, and this is visible on the Google Web and Google Maps Search Results page. Major changes have been made behind the curtain, and the ripples are beginning to show on the surface. Due to this change, local businesses might have noticed slight amounts of increase or decrease in the leads generated, website referrals and online business. The latest Google Search Engine Algorithm shares deeper roots with their search results capabilities, consisting of the numerous ranking signals that are used every day in web search along with search tools such as spelling correction, Knowledge Graph and synonyms, etc. In addition to these factors, the latest Google Algorithm Updates improve on their present distance and location ranking parameters.

Who Benefitted From the Pigeon Update?

Not everyone complained after the latest local algorithm update. As previously mentioned, directories seemed to get a boost, and, so did certain queries. The latest analysis using BrightEdge’s massive data set from June to August shows an uptick in the results for queries related to the following:

  • Hospitality (28 percent growth in Google Places results)
  • Food (19 percent growth in the Google Places results)
  • Education (13 percent growth in the Google Places results)

Additional wins occurred in smaller percentages for queries related to:

  • Spa +4.64 percent
  • Shop +4.32 percent
  • Law +3.55 percent
  • Medical +1.83 percent
  • Transportation +1.31 percent
  • Fitness +1.12 percent

Who Experienced a Loss From the Pigeon Update?

According to the analysis in BrightEdge’s data set, we found queries related to the following topics being the most negatively impacted by Pigeon:

  • Jobs (68 percent decline in Google Places results)
  • Real estate (63 percent decline in the Google Places results)
  • Movies (36 percent decline in the Google Places results)
  • Insurance (11 percent decline in the Google Places results)

Reports across the Web from multiple sources show real estate queries experiencing dire consequences from Pigeon, and as you can see, the BrightEdge data confirms the same.

Other queries related to the following showed somewhat negligible losses:

  • Finance -6.21 percent
  • Furniture -3.34 percent
  • Government -0.07 percent

The following is a table of the findings. Note that some of the queries were difficult to classify in the analysis, so the industry data by row does not add up to “all” data.

google-pigeon-impact

How does “Pigeon” affect you and your business?

1. A lower number of queries included in a local listing pack on SERPs (there are usually 7 listings)

MozCast’s data shows a 23.4% decrease in the queries that are showing a local listing pack.
You may experience a drop in your website’s traffic due to the disappearance of some of your local listings.

2. Local rankings are taking an old-school route

Local search rankings are now being influenced more by traditional Web search ranking signals (domain authority, backlinks and many other SEO ranking factors).
If you see a decline in your local rankings, it may mean your competition’s general website/page SEO characteristics are stronger than yours.

3. Yelp and other well-known local directories are now your new best friend

Data shows that local directories have gotten a major boost in search rankings.
Your official business website or store pages may be displaced by store listings from directories.

4. Local Carousel still has your back

Judging by the looks of it, local carousel results remain unchanged so you’ll still be able to get some extra exposure from it.
Make sure you pick out a nice, high-quality photo for your Google+ business profile because that is the picture that is going to show up in the carousel.

and what else?

According to the first post-update research, Yelp and other local directory sites have seen a considerable boost in rankings. For some queries, the entire SERP (search engine results page) is built from well-known local directories only.

If over the past few days your website has encountered a traffic drop, this may well be due to the disappearance of your local listings on the first page of Google. If that is the case, in the short run you may need to cover the traffic losses with a PPC campaign, and in the long run — focus on getting Web search listings for those keywords.

Google is going back to the more traditional ranking signals such as domain authority, backlinks and all kinds of other SEO rankings factors. Simply speaking, this may mean that local rankings will now be more determined by how well your meta data is structured, the age of your site and how you use your header tags.

Read more What is exactly Google Pigeon Algorithm?

_______________________________________________________________________________

Please contact us for seo service packages at TDHSEO.COM.

TDHSEO Team

Email: tdhseo@gmail.com
Skype: tdhseo
https://www.facebook.com/tdhseo

Thank you!


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How to test Mobile Friendly Compatibility for your website

The mobile-friendly algorithm is a page-by-page signal, so it can take time for Google to assess each page, and that may be why it will be a gradual rollout. And depending on how fast Google crawls and indexes all of the pages on your site, the impact can be slow to show up.

It is believed that this rollout will have less impact than the original mobile-friendly update, which was called “Mobilegeddon,” which was supposed to have a significant impact on the mobile results, but not everyone said it had that much of an impact.

If you are not mobile-friendly, or if you want to ensure you are, check the Google mobile-friendly tool, and check Google’s mobile guidelines.

Here’s the guide

Does Your Website Pass the Mobile-Friendliness Test?

Google is making it simple for companies to test their website and ensure that you have a mobile-friendly site. They have created a tool called the “Mobile-Friendly Test” where you can type in your web address and see if you meet the new standard. When you pass the test, it looks something like this:

Screen_Shot_2015-04-20_at_1.38.34_PM

If you don’t pass the test Google will give you insights as to why it didn’t pass and will look something like this:

Screen_Shot_2015-04-20_at_1.49.49_PM

What Happens if You Don’t Pass?

If your site isn’t fully optimized for mobile devices, you will likely see a hit to your ranking on mobile searches. What that means is you need to have a mobile site up and running in the near term. Here’s where to start:

Decide How You Will Optimize for Mobile

There are several approaches for optimizing your site for mobile devices. Choose one of the following that works for you:

  • Responsive Design – Responsive Design is the number one choice by Google for mobile optimization design patterns. Choosing responsive design is desirable because it only uses one URL for your site rather than a mobile URL and a desktop URL.
    NOTE: If you’re already hosted on HubSpot’s COS then you’re optimized with responsive design. If you’re not already hosted on the COS but need to move to it now,
  • Dynamic Serving – Dynamic serving changes the HTML of your website while keeping the same URL. Instead of shrinking and optimizing one design, dynamic serving figures out what kind of device the user is experiencing your website with and changes up to code to show something different. This is a more complicated process, but offers an optimized result as well.
    NOTE: This approach is known to be a lot more error-prone so beware before choosing this option.
  • Separate Mobile Website – When mobile optimized sites first started to come to light, this was the way to create them. Instead of using one URL, a mobile website is essentially a new website built for your company for mobile purposes. It’s onerous for Google though. It means that they have to crawl two websites and two versions of your content. If you already have this in place, make sure it works properly. If you’re considering this option, make sure the other two aren’t better fits first.

Read more What to know about Google Mobile Friendly Algorithm Update

_______________________________________________________________________________

Please contact us for seo service packages at TDHSEO.COM.

TDHSEO Team

Email: tdhseo@gmail.com
Skype: tdhseo
https://www.facebook.com/tdhseo

Thank you!