Search News You Can Use
Episode 102 - September 25, 2019 - Light Version
Looking for the paid members version? Log in here
In this episode, we discuss the September 2019 Core Update, Google's major changes including the new metatags and HTML attribute, updated Search Console, starmageddon, as well as a possible algo tweak on September 17th.
Marie’s Podcast for this episode
We are now publishing our podcast recording of each episode on the same day as the newsletter is published! You can listen to it below.
If you would like to subscribe, you can find the podcasts here: iTunes | Spotify | Google Play
Ask Marie an SEO Question
Have a question that you want to ask Marie? You can ask them on our Q&A with Marie Haynes Consulting page and Marie will answer some of the best questions each week in podcast!
In this episode:
- Algorithm Updates
- Google announces a core update - released September 24, 2019
- Were you negatively affected by the Aug 22-29, or September 13 Google updates?
- MHC Announcements
- Come visit our booth at Pubcon Vegas
- Marie in Sitechecker interview
- Have you read all of our SEO guides?
- Google Announcements
- Google Search News video series coming soon
- 25 years of Friends has introduced new easter eggs!
- Google SERP Changes
- Get a load of this, Google Search bug shows just the URLs in the SERPs
- Favicons and gray URLs in the SERPs -- this must be a test
- Google is showing emojis in suggested search results
- SEO Tips
- #AskGoogleWebmasters covers AJAX crawling, hash-bang URLs, and moving to a different URL structure
- Google Help Hangout Tips
- Indexing images vs web pages
- Other Interesting News
- Check out how the SERPs are changed to show current events
- A reminder that Google Ads will stop showing the average position metric starting September 30th
- Local SEO - Tips
- Reminder to double check your SAB service area as Google has done automatic changes if you have not manually done it yourself
- Local SEO - Other Interesting News
- Are coworking spaces against the GMB guidelines?
- What TripAdvisor tells us about review fraud and spam
- Recommended Reading
- Recommended Reading (Local SEO)
- Jobs
- Want More?
Paid members also get the following:
- September 17, 2019 - Possible small quality tweak
- The latest on starmageddon
- Fresher data arrives in your site’s Search Performance Report
- Snippet controls and new metatags to help you preview your content in Search
- Google Search Console welcomes a new report
- Google adds FAQs surrounding the review snippets algo update
- EU press publication sites will see changes coming in late October 2019
- Irregularities in Indexation
- Online community discusses how to inspire trust in your website
- Using JSON-LD? Here’s where to place your structured data
- It could be easy to rectify your structured data manual action
- Can errors and warnings in your schema markup impact rankings?
- Hreflang is a "per-page annotation"
- A slidedeck you may find helpful in learning more about .htaccess files and how to use it for SEO
- How Google looks at ranking in Search Console
- Advice for recurring events
- How Google will handle crawling nofollow
- Is automatically generated content spam?
- Reasons why syndicated content may outrank the original source
- This is what the SERPs look like when different industries start to use (and abuse?) FAQ schema
- If you sell products on Amazon, is the algorithm against you?
- A light-hearted look back at ASOS product PR over the past year
- Joy Hawkins tell webmasters how many listings SABs can get away with only one address
- Fighting spam? You may want to replicate this document
- Changes ahead to GMB Messaging
- Darren Shaw's team discovered that uploaded photos/videos are automatically getting pulled into the Posts feed
- Auction-Time Bidding for Search Campaigns
- It's ok to have dates in your URLs
- The forecast for evergreen content
- My tl;dr summary of some awesome recent SEO and Local SEO articles
Algorithm Updates
Google announces a core update - released September 24, 2019
We love that Google is now pre-announcing significant updates.
Later today, we are releasing a broad core algorithm update, as we do several times per year. It is called the September 2019 Core Update. Our guidance about such updates remains as we’ve covered before. Please see this blog for more about that: https://t.co/e5ZQUAlt0G
— Google SearchLiaison (@searchliaison) September 24, 2019
In another tweet, Danny Sullivan told us the update started rolling out the afternoon of September 24, 2019 and will take a few days to fully roll out.
As of the morning of publication of this newsletter, Dr. Pete from Moz shared with us that there is some turbulence seen in the SERPS, but nothing too exciting so far.
Early MozCast data (not live yet) shows temps for the first day of the September Core Update around 96°F. High, certainly, but not off the charts (we've had three 90+ days in September prior to this). Sounds like a multi-day roll-out, though.
— Dr. Pete Meyers (@dr_pete) September 25, 2019
As usual, the MHC team will be hard at work analyzing the impact of this update. We will report on what we are seeing next week.
Were you negatively affected by the Aug 22-29, or September 13 Google updates?
We wrote about these updates in past newsletters. We would like to reiterate that this appears to be a significant update in regards to how Google handles links. This week, Marie published a thorough article with several disavow case studies. We found that several of our clients for whom we had filed aggressive disavows saw nice improvements at this time. Also, several of our clients for whom we recommended disavowing, but did not, saw drops.
Each of these sites that saw changes had utilized extensive guest posting or content marketing for link acquisition. We feel that Google is getting much better now at determining whether a link is a legitimate recommendation, or whether it is just there for SEO purposes. It does appear that disavowing links made like this can help improve Google’s assessment of trust for a site.
MHC Announcements
Come visit our booth at Pubcon Vegas
Are you attending the Pubcon conference in Vegas this October? If you are, come say hi to the MHC team in the exhibit hall. We are running a booth and would love to meet our SNYCU readers! You will also have the chance to play to win a one-year subscription! Get practicing, Pubcon is less than two weeks away!
Marie in Sitechecker interview
Sitechecker has been completing a series of interviews with SEOs and digital marketers and the latest is with Marie! If you’ve ever wanted to learn about Marie’s career, learn her perspective on the industry and its future, this interview is an awesome read.
Have you read all of our SEO guides?
As you’ve probably seen in past episodes, the Wix SEO lovers have created guides to help you improve your seo. Here is the full index in case you missed one -- you can topics such as canonicals, internal linking, how to noindex, and more. Feel free to share them if you find them helpful, and tag us @WixSEOLovers on Twitter.
Google Announcements
Google Search News video series coming soon
John Mueller has been incredibly helpful to SEOs via Twitter and the #AskGoogleWebmasters video, and he’s soon taking on another platform -- this time dedicated to Google Search News!
Keep your eyes peeled on the series which we hope to include in newsletter once they arrive.
COMING SOON: Google Search News, a news series dedicated to webmasters, SEOs, publishers, and web creators worldwide! 🎬🗞
Don't miss it! Subscribe to the Google Webmasters channel here → https://t.co/yvJjJaOdWo pic.twitter.com/kMzL5gTOfS
— Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) September 20, 2019
25 years of Friends has introduced new easter eggs!
Google is getting in the Friends 25 years anniversary celebration by welcoming plenty of new easter eggs inspired by your favourite characters. Joey Tribbiani and Phoebe Buffay are amongst our favourites, but you can find them all in here.
This is epic!! https://t.co/TIMl7nbnW0
— Will Hobson (@WillHobson) September 20, 2019
Google SERP Changes
Get a load of this, Google Search bug shows just the URLs in the SERPs
When have you ever seen this!? Numerous reports were sent to Barry Schwartz regarding this so it was not a one-off. Hopefully it’s short-lived!
Google Search bug results in just the URLs being shown in Google’s search results - let's call it the minimalistic UI https://t.co/XSQM438L4K pic.twitter.com/XWBNgkJWWv
— Barry Schwartz (@rustybrick) September 17, 2019
Favicons and gray URLs in the SERPs -- this must be a test
Favicons & gray URLs? 👀 pic.twitter.com/WSQdCWxS1T
— Dave DiGregorio (@deegs20) September 20, 2019
Google is showing emojis in suggested search results
We’re not sure if this is a glitch or a future change for the SERPs, but someone tagged Barry seeing this, and when he typed “what” into the search bar, Google generated emojis in the results for him as well.
SEO Tips
#AskGoogleWebmasters covers AJAX crawling, hash-bang URLs, and moving to a different URL structure
We love our weekly dose of John Mu! AJAX crawling was made 10 years ago in the beginning of JS. Google has since learned how to render pages, so you no longer have to do anything for hashbang URLs - they render them directly. To move to a different URL structure, you need to use JS on these pages to create redirects.
Reminder: everything following the hash is not sent to the server but processed in the browser, so you can’t use server side redirects.
On this week’s #AskGoogleWebmasters @JohnMu covers:
🕷Current status of AJAX Crawling 🕷
#! Hash-bang URLs #!
🕸Moving to a different URL structure 🕸Thanks for the question @olegko 👍👍
Check it out → https://t.co/lBRm0Hd6K9 pic.twitter.com/HiJ76BRO9h
— Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) September 17, 2019
Google Help Hangout Tips
Indexing images vs web pages
In case you’ve seen this, indexing images takes longer than indexing your web pages. So if you’re not seeing the images indexed right away, that may be normal.
"Indexing images takes a lot longer than indexing web pages." - John Mu in a recent help hangout. In case you were wondering why it takes longer for images to rank.
— Marie Haynes (@Marie_Haynes) September 23, 2019
Other Interesting News
Check out how the SERPs are changed to show current events
The process is called QDF and stands for Query Deserves Freshness and is an adjustment Google makes in the SERPs to adjust for current events. With the rugby world cup underway this week, there has been a massive climb for related keywords and ranking.
So how does Google do this? They respond to query changes and make adjustments when a world event correlates. You can see spikes for events like Black Friday as well as keyword changes here.
A reminder that Google Ads will stop showing the average position metric starting September 30th
Thanks Barry for this reminder! If you use average position, G recommends trying the four new metrics. You can learn about the new average position changes here.
Local SEO - Tips
Reminder to double check your SAB service area as Google has done automatic changes if you have not manually done it yourself
We included this initial announcement back in episode 99 and it looks like Google has gone ahead an updated all distance-based service areas to the nearest named area. If you have not manually updated this yourself, we’d advise that your check your listing(s) to ensure that Google’s automated changes are accurate for your business.
All change today - if you didn't change your SAB service area that was set to distance from address manually, @GoogleMyBiz is making these changes automatically 🤖🗺️ #LocalSEO #smallbiz https://t.co/s9UhOTm43B pic.twitter.com/zhgJMvddeX
— Claire Carlile 🕊️ 🌊 🥑 🦥 (@clairecarlile) September 19, 2019
Local SEO - Other Interesting News
Are coworking spaces against the GMB guidelines?
Joy brought this up as her team often uses coworking spaces for meetings, but can you have your GMB address as a coworking space? It’s a yes and no answer. She lists the circumstances in which it can’t be, but if they don’t apply, she also gives recommendations for that. Ultimately, she doesn’t recommend doing this as accounts are often suspended for not meeting the staffing requirements set out within the GMB guidelines.
Are coworking spaces against the Google My Business guidelines? https://t.co/PvZGcYBEE0
— Joy Hawkins (@JoyanneHawkins) September 24, 2019
What TripAdvisor tells us about review fraud and spam
TripAdvisor released their first Transparency Report, and admitted that just over 2% of the reviews submitted in 2018 were fake. Review spam and fraud are hitting all the review platforms, and it seems more important than ever for businesses to be transparent about their reviews in order to retain their trustworthiness.
Recommended Reading
A Guide to the Biggest SEO Myths on The Web – Bill Slawski
https://www.semrush.com/blog/guide-to-biggest-seo-myths-on-web/
Sept 23, 2019
This article is a behemoth from Bill Slawski and it’s well worth your time. Bill starts with a really good explanation of how myths come to be, how to avoid logical fallacies when making arguments, and how to spot one when you see one.
Google Accelerating Its Path to the Transaction Layer of the Internet – David Mihm and Mike Blumenthal
https://streetfightmag.com/2019/09/16/google-accelerating-its-path-to-the-transaction-layer-of-the-internet/
Sept 16, 2019
In this interview transcript, Mike Blumenthal and David Mihm discuss the changes Google is making towards being the “transactional layer” of the internet. As Mike notes, a key point of this is noting that Google recently changed its mission statement from “Organizing the world's knowledge” to “helping you get things done”.
How to Automate Pagespeed Insights For Multiple URLs using Google Sheets – James McNulty
https://moz.com/blog/how-to-automate-pagespeed-insights-for-multiple-urls-using-google-sheets
Sept 17, 2019
Page speed is important, so much so that Google has confirmed it to be a ranking factor. While many great tools are out there to test page speed on a per-URL basis, there seems to be a lack of tools designed to test multiple URLs (think hundreds or thousands) at a time. Fortunately for you, James set out to find a solution, and over the course of the last year, he’s been able to produce an efficient method.
Recommended Reading (Local SEO)
'My derelict pub still got TripAdvisor reviews' – Mary-Ann Russon
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-49725337
Sept 18, 2019
This is an interesting article looking at a pub that despite being closed since 2011, continued to receive TripAdvisor reviews. The reviews spanned from 2014 to 2016 and made claims of eating at the Inn and having poor service. Very interesting read on reviews!
Jobs
https://twitter.com/stephstad/status/1174041582875611136
Want to head up #SEO one of the biggest global brands in the world that's growing organic +50% YoY and with huge growth plans?
You can at Dyson. Link below but it'll be closing soon! https://t.co/ngNEDiCdhY
— Andrew Isidoro 🚀 (@Andrew_Isidoro) September 23, 2019
Want More?
Paid members also get the following:
- September 17, 2019 - Possible small quality tweak
- The latest on starmageddon
- Fresher data arrives in your site’s Search Performance Report
- Snippet controls and new metatags to help you preview your content in Search
- Google Search Console welcomes a new report
- Google adds FAQs surrounding the review snippets algo update
- EU press publication sites will see changes coming in late October 2019
- Irregularities in Indexation
- Online community discusses how to inspire trust in your website
- Using JSON-LD? Here’s where to place your structured data
- It could be easy to rectify your structured data manual action
- Can errors and warnings in your schema markup impact rankings?
- Hreflang is a "per-page annotation"
- A slidedeck you may find helpful in learning more about .htaccess files and how to use it for SEO
- How Google looks at ranking in Search Console
- Advice for recurring events
- How Google will handle crawling nofollow
- Is automatically generated content spam?
- Reasons why syndicated content may outrank the original source
- This is what the SERPs look like when different industries start to use (and abuse?) FAQ schema
- If you sell products on Amazon, is the algorithm against you?
- A light-hearted look back at ASOS product PR over the past year
- Joy Hawkins tell webmasters how many listings SABs can get away with only one address
- Fighting spam? You may want to replicate this document
- Changes ahead to GMB Messaging
- Darren Shaw's team discovered that uploaded photos/videos are automatically getting pulled into the Posts feed
- Auction-Time Bidding for Search Campaigns
- It's ok to have dates in your URLs
- The forecast for evergreen content
- My tl;dr summary of some awesome recent SEO and Local SEO articles
Note: If you are seeing the light version and you are a paid member, be sure to log in (in the sidebar on desktop or below the post on mobile) and read the full article here.
You can subscribe to Dr. Marie Haynes' newsletter by clicking on the Paypal button below. You'll get an action packed email every week.
You'll also have access to past episodes, including this one.
Part of the challenge of SEO is staying on top of industry news, trends, and techniques There is so much information out there that it is easy to get bogged down in information overload and trying to disseminate what's truly important from all that noise can be really time-consuming and challenging.
Marie's newsletter is a game changer because it manages to cut through the fluff and deliver high-quality information that is not only really important for those that do SEO, but it is presented in a format that is really easy to absorb.If you are looking for a trusted information related to search that is highly actionable I would strongly recommend Marie's newsletter.Paul Macnamara - Offers SEO Consulting at PaulMacnamara.com
That's it for this episode! Stay tuned for our Youtube video (my channel is here). If you want to follow me on Facebook, here is my page.