SNYCU Ep. 145 - August 12, 2020 - Light Version
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In this episode we discuss the massive Google glitch this week, more on the possible July update, how SEO has changed over the years, see if you've lost PAA boxes in SEMrush and more!
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In this episode:
- Algorithm Updates
- The great outage that looked like a massive Google update
- MHC Announcements
- This week’s exclusive SEMrush deal!
- How to see if you’ve lost PAA boxes for a particular url with SEMrush
- Google Announcements
- Support for Article structured data in the Rich Results tool
- Google SERP Changes
- Individual listings now available in Search?
- SEO Tips
- Google has released Q&A for the July Rich Results & Search Console Webmaster Conference Lightning Talk
- What’s the best way to signal the publishing date on articles migrated to a new site?
- Google explains crawl delay tokens in robots.txt files
- Web accessibility tips
- Google Help Hangout Tips
- Google on handling forum profile pages
- What to know if you’ve got NSFW content
- Local SEO - News from SterlingSky
- Why you might not want a Featured Snippet
- Google adding call buttons in local Knowledge Panels
- Google My Business adds an online operating hours feature
- Which category should a family lawyer use in Google My Business?
- Which GMB categories have the new review attributes?
- New menu management features in GMB for restaurants
- Recommended Reading
- Jobs
- Want More?
Paid members also get the following:
- Very early analysis of the August 2020 Google Glitch (Premium Subscribers only)
- How to tell if you were affected by an update by checking hourly traffic
- More on the July 21 / July 27 Google updates
- Did you have a big drop in FAQs in July? You’re not alone
- Infrastructure changes to the Search Console API
- How insights from people around the world make Google Search better
- Has SEO changed over the years? Here’s one SEO’s opinion
- Signals that Google has said are not ranking factors
- Things to know about meta tags and snippets
- Did Google really say that guest post links have zero value?
- Link building outreach tips!
- CLS metrics may be hiding deeper concerns -- pay attention!
- Testing the impact of FAQ schema markup
- Affiliate and review sites, listen up! Here’s what might be happening when your URL(s) is not getting indexed
- Should eCommerce sites be indexing your on-site search result pages?
- Could a poor reputation online hinder your rankings?
- Why might other sites be outranking you for your own content?
- Interesting comment about how Google may be canonicalizing your URLs targeting different countries
- Screaming Frog conducted a study to see how many sites would pass the Core Web Vitals test
- This major retailer also slashes affiliate commissions
- Reminder to clean up who has manager or owner access on your GMB listing(s)
- Useful tip for WordPress site owners
- Structured Data testing tool alternative
- Cumulative Shift Layout tool with handy GIF generator
- An app to check your Core Web Vitals
- My tl;dr summary of some awesome recent SEO and Local SEO articles
Algorithm Updates
The great outage that looked like a massive Google update
Monday this week was quite interesting for site owners who keep a regular eye on their traffic. Many websites saw a sudden spike or decrease in rankings and traffic starting at some point in the afternoon or late evening of Monday, August 10, 2020. Here is hourly traffic compared to Monday last week for one site which we monitor:
This site was not an outlier (although the effects seen on this site are more than others). The vast majority of the hundreds of sites that we have Google Analytics access for saw some type of significant change.
Barry Schwartz has a good summary of the SEO forum chatter from yesterday. Barry said, “To be honest, this reminds me of the old days of when Google would release Penguin or Panda updates. The chatter in the time period is off the scales. Either this is a massive Google search bug or Google pushed out something serious with its ranking algorithm in search.”
It turns out that this actually was caused by a bug of some sort.
On Monday we detected an issue with our indexing systems that affected Google search results. Once the issue was identified, it was promptly fixed by our Site Reliability Engineers and by now it has been mitigated.
Thank you for your patience!— Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) August 11, 2020
On Tuesday, Gary Illyes from Google shared to some degree what happened in a series of tweets. He explained how there are many components to the indexing system including rendering data, extracting links, extracting and computing some signals, and more, and then pushing the results to the index. Apparently something went wrong with one of those components, leading to a glitch where some odd pages started to rank well.
It was interesting to see that there were slightly more people in my Twitter timeline who told us that their rankings declined with this issue.
In the massive Google update that ended up being a glitch yesterday, how did you fare?
— Marie Haynes (@Marie_Haynes) August 11, 2020
We thought it was quite interesting when Gary ended his tweet thread by saying, “Don't oversimplify search for it's not simple at all: thousands of interconnected systems working together to provide users high quality and relevant results. Throw a grain of sand in the machinery and we have an outage like yesterday.”
Although it is challenging to analyze a Google change that only lasted for a few hours, we did note some very interesting patterns when looking at which sites saw increases and which saw declines. For our premium readers, in the next section you’ll see our very early analysis of this update and hear Marie and the team’s theories on what happened and how SEOs can learn from this where a site may have significant issues that might cause Google’s algorithms to treat it as lower quality.
Premium readers will also see a section to explain how to look at hourly traffic in Google Analytics.
MHC Announcements
This week’s exclusive SEMrush deal!
Last week we announced our partnership with SEMrush where our readers and podcast listeners will get special promotions! This week we have a one week Guru and CI add-on (traffic analytics and market explorer) trial. This is normally an additional $200 cost to your SEMrush membership, so you won’t want to miss out!
You can read more about SEMrush’s competitive intelligence add-on here.
How to see if you’ve lost PAA boxes for a particular url with SEMrush
In our analysis of the late July algo turbulence that is in the premium section of newsletter, we mentioned how we noted that several of our clients saw significant changes in the number of PAA boxes they had.
Here’s how you check that on SEMrush:
You can change the date back, as we did above, to see that SEMrush detected that this particular URL held 126 PAA boxes. When we change the date to show August of 2020, we found that that url had 245 keywords that triggered a PAA.
As mentioned elsewhere in this newsletter episode, if you want to try out SEMrush to test this for yourself, we’ve given you a discount code for a one-week Guru plan and access to the Competitive analysis add on.
Google Announcements
Support for Article structured data in the Rich Results tool
If you’re looking for support for your Article structured data, it’s here! You can test your pages or learn more about Article structured data and proper implementation in G’s documentation.
We are happy to announce support for Article structured data in the Rich Results Test tool. Read more about the markup in our developer documentation https://t.co/8osWelZNwu or test your pages at https://t.co/AGp8xwSsDK pic.twitter.com/YjuomwwnMl
— Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) August 10, 2020
Google SERP Changes
Individual listings now available in Search?
This looks cool. It’s currently only available in India, but some SEOs have managed to get their own listing. We included a cool hack from Alexander Außermayr as well so you can try this yourself!
This is an interesting feature. pic.twitter.com/oq6OoKpczy
— Ryan Jones (@RyanJones) August 11, 2020
You want to use #PeopleCards, but live outside India? Try this:
1 Open Chrome & DevTools
2 Simulate a mobile device
3 Search [add me to search]
4 Scroll to footer
5 Settings > Search Settings
- Region: India
- Language: English
6 Save & search [add me to search]
7 Have fun 💕 pic.twitter.com/utqRACghpi— Alexander Außermayr (@aussermayr) August 12, 2020
SEO Tips
Google has released Q&A for the July Rich Results & Search Console Webmaster Conference Lightning Talk
Google released a super informative Q&A session on their blog from a recent Google Lightning Talk on the topic of Rich Results and Search Console.
Google cleared the air on topics like what exactly FAQ clicks and impressions are based on and will Google show rich results for reviews made by the review host site.
Check out the blog post for more information on structured data and the new rich results testing tool.
What’s the best way to signal the publishing date on articles migrated to a new site?
According to over 1k SEOs, the majority has appropriately indicated that it’s best to maintain the former dates.
Let' say you migrate 100 articles from an existing blog to a new site.
What do you do with the 'Date Published' of the migrated articles on the new site?
— Lily Ray 😏 (@lilyraynyc) August 4, 2020
For more info on how Google determines dates as well as general best practice, Google’s post from early 2019 is highly recommended.
Google explains crawl delay tokens in robots.txt files
In Gary Illyes’ original tweet, he asks how “Crawl-delay: 10” will affect Googlebot’s fetch rate. The majority of voters in the poll got the correct answer - Googlebot will ignore this directive. For actual help in changing the crawl rate check out this resource.
Googlebot ignores the non-standard crawl-delay token in robotstxt files, it has no effect at all. For slowing Googlebot crawls down, use Search Console or submit a problem with Googlebot. https://t.co/4jwcF1jt8T
— Gary 鯨理/경리 Illyes (so official, trust me) (@methode) August 11, 2020
Web accessibility tips
Alison Iddings brings a few tips on web accessibility and the importance of Universal Web Design. Here are our favourite tips from her article:
- Always have alt text for visual elements: This can be crucial for users who are visually impaired. Alt texts can also provide search engines with extra context about your website.
- Keep headings and subheadings appropriate to each section of your page: Users who are visually impaired depend heavily on text-read softwares. By adding the appropriate h1s, h2s and h3s, you can significantly improve user experience.
- Provide more than one way to navigate your page: While this isn’t common for most websites, providing users with options can help them better understand and navigate your page.
How accessable is your website?https://t.co/DGhqGNKUFo
— Bill Slawski ⚓ 🇺🇦 (@bill_slawski) August 6, 2020
Google Help Hangout Tips
Google on handling forum profile pages
The quality of your forum pages matters! We have seen good results in advising clients to noindex massive quantities of profile pages and other types of content that very few people would want to land upon from search.
This is interesting to me as we have seen nice improvements after advising clients to noindex massive amounts of forum content such as profile pages.
This is an older example, but all we did here was work on improving the quality of which pages got indexed from this site's forum. pic.twitter.com/mOBGXqni0f— Marie Haynes (@Marie_Haynes) July 30, 2020
What to know if you’ve got NSFW content
We briefly touched on this last week, but if you have a site that contains NSFW content, it could trigger the Safe Search algorithm and impact your ranking. If you only have some NSFW content, it’s best to separate it otherwise it could impact your site altogether.
Got NSFW content on your site? If only some of your content is adult, it's best to separate that out. Otherwise, Google may decide all of your content is not suitable to show for users with safe search on.https://t.co/X4R1YeRzwv pic.twitter.com/BXGD5V81OO
— Marie Haynes (@Marie_Haynes) July 30, 2020
This is a great example of this in action. Be cautious of what kind of language you are using and how you use it or you may also see similar impacts:
When your content triggers an adult filter 👮♀️👮🛑🚫
1 image and one "adult" word repeated caused this in an article. Site went back when I removed it from the article.
If you want to rank, don't swear.
* not TransferWise
** @bill_slawski obviously covered this long ago pic.twitter.com/dLIUDJ34Kw— Fabrizio Ballarini (@Pechnet) August 6, 2020
Local SEO - News from SterlingSky
Happy "OMG I'M SO GLAD IT WASN'T AN UPDATE" Day!
Wow, that was a bit of a roller coaster. Not Disney level, more like county fair death trap level. A ranking flux overnight from 8.10 to 8.11 seemed to shake things up with really poor, mixed, and nonsensical results. We woke up to a tweet from John Mueller stating it was a glitch on Google's end (then again confirmed by the @GoogleWMC account), and most of our clients are bouncing back to near normal within 12 to 18-hours.
Why you might not want a Featured Snippet
38,000 page views in 1-year - 90% of phone calls thinking you're Google - that's what being in a Featured Snippet resulted in for Sterling Sky. Colan Nielsen and Dave DiGregorio take us through a case study into why a featured snippet might not be such a money tree and can turn into a time suck!
When Featured Snippets Suck & Why You Might Not Want One.... A case study from @ColanNielsen and @deegs20.
38,000 page views
️ 90% of phone calls
So. Many. Livechats.https://t.co/VxxswmCgbO pic.twitter.com/QHV4svHgB3— Sterling Sky Inc (@SterlingSkyInc) August 11, 2020
Google adding call buttons in local Knowledge Panels
Call buttons are not an entirely new thing - but in a desktop Knowledge Panel, they're definitely new. If your computer has the capability (like Mac + FaceTime) you could make the call directly from your laptop or desktop. Android/Windows is a bit harder. It will be interesting to see how this impacts GMB insights for call volume and if they'll split it out mobile vs desktop.
🤙 Google Adding Call Buttons in Local Knowledge Panels
️ Call buttons are now visible on Local Knowledge Panels to logged-in users - clicking brings up the option to call available to your operating system (ie windows, android & mac are different).https://t.co/WTJg0lo0hY pic.twitter.com/Sj4GV4jYKR
— Local University (@localuniv) August 6, 2020
Google My Business adds an online operating hours feature
This new attribute will let you add a label that says you have online operating hours - implying you might be answering phones outside of the brick and mortar opening hours. - but it does not affect the "open" and "closed" labels on your GMB listing.
Google My Business Adds "Online Operating Hours" feature.
️ Along with options like "Senior Hours" businesses add the label "online hours" BUT - the open/closed labels will still refer to your posted hours. What's your use case? https://t.co/piD7r2CRHY pic.twitter.com/yc3gzKG4pP
— Local University (@localuniv) August 7, 2020
Which category should a family lawyer use in Google My Business?
Joy guest posts over at the Family Lawyer Magazine discussing which primary category a family law attorney should choose. While it depends upon what kind of law that lawyer or firm prefers - if we're talking volume, the divorce attorney category delivers. It's a reminder that, in most cases, specific is best - although in practice|practitioner settings - that could be something you look at tweaking. Bottom line - test test test.
Which category should a family lawyer choose in Google My Business?#familylaw #familylawyer #GMB #googlemybusinesshttps://t.co/gdaMMxLVD2
— Family Lawyer Magazine (@FamilyLawyerMag) August 6, 2020
Which GMB categories have the new review attributes?
Mike Blumenthal gathers a nearly complete list of the GMB categories that feature review attributes. For those that don't know, the review attributes are the phrases that a reviewer can choose that are pre-populated in the review window - this helps add sentiment-focused context to a review.
The (Almost) Complete List of Google Review Attribute Categories | @GatherUp
For those of you that were just itching to know which Google categories sport Review Attributes we have assembled a first pass list. https://t.co/C7hOW4aRLg
— Mike Blumenthal (@mblumenthal) August 10, 2020
New menu management features in GMB for restaurants
Google is now linking Restaurant GMB dashboards to SinglePlatform in an attempt to help them update their menus. Unfortunately - if you update at SinglePlatform, they'll charge $109/mo. Thibault Adda of the Darden Restaurant Group pointed out on Twitter a new ability to go to Single Platform to update, as well as upload your own menus. Mike Blumenthal indicated that you CAN get the SinglePlatform info taken down - but you have to get pretty insistent with SinglePlatform to get it done. The recommendation is to remove your SinglePlatform menu and upload your own via GMB.
@mblumenthal @rustybrick GMB informing restaurants in the Menu tab if their menu data is provided / sourced from Single Platform. pic.twitter.com/2r5kQwZlwj
— Thibault Adda (@thibaultadda) August 10, 2020
Recommended Reading
SEO for Images: See What You’re Missing in Your Visual Search Strategy – Danny Goodwin
https://www.searchenginejournal.com/seo-images-visual-search-strategy/376594/
August 5, 2020
As Google Images drive more traffic to sites, big brands are investing heavily in new ways of optimizing their sites to appear in image queries. Sites that have content related to news, how-to, recipes, media and even local eateries, can benefit from optimizing their pages for images. In his recent article, Danny Goodwin talks about the most valuable practices webmasters can utilize to, possibly, improve their traffic.
Jobs
I am hiring an SEO Analyst for my team at DICK’S if anyone is looking! Must relocate to PGH if interested. #seo #techseo
— Tessa Bonacci Nadik (@tessabonacci) August 5, 2020
Due to recent wins, we are looking at hiring for a digital PR strategist here in Sheffield to join the @riseatseven team
Please get in touch - don't worry about CV's I don't read them (shock news). Just show me what makes you awesome
— Carrie Rose (@CarrieRosePR) August 7, 2020
Want More?
Paid members also get the following:
- Very early analysis of the August 2020 Google Glitch (Premium Subscribers only)
- How to tell if you were affected by an update by checking hourly traffic
- More on the July 21 / July 27 Google updates
- Did you have a big drop in FAQs in July? You’re not alone
- Infrastructure changes to the Search Console API
- How insights from people around the world make Google Search better
- Has SEO changed over the years? Here’s one SEO’s opinion
- Signals that Google has said are not ranking factors
- Things to know about meta tags and snippets
- Did Google really say that guest post links have zero value?
- Link building outreach tips!
- CLS metrics may be hiding deeper concerns -- pay attention!
- Testing the impact of FAQ schema markup
- Affiliate and review sites, listen up! Here’s what might be happening when your URL(s) is not getting indexed
- Should eCommerce sites be indexing your on-site search result pages?
- Could a poor reputation online hinder your rankings?
- Why might other sites be outranking you for your own content?
- Interesting comment about how Google may be canonicalizing your URLs targeting different countries
- Screaming Frog conducted a study to see how many sites would pass the Core Web Vitals test
- This major retailer also slashes affiliate commissions
- Reminder to clean up who has manager or owner access on your GMB listing(s)
- Useful tip for WordPress site owners
- Structured Data testing tool alternative
- Cumulative Shift Layout tool with handy GIF generator
- An app to check your Core Web Vitals
- My tl;dr summary of some awesome recent SEO and Local SEO articles
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