AMA with Google highlights: The core search algorithm update, mobile-first index status & more
Core search algorithm update
Johns noted the core search algorithm update started to roll out on March 7. Most SEOs believed it started to roll out either on March 8 or 9. He reiterated that this core search algorithm update is designed to “reward under-rewarded sites,” and if your site saw a drop, just keep working on making your site better, it does not indicate a penalty.
The mobile-first index and speed update
With the mobile-first index, there is nothing new to add; it is still “chugging along,” Johns said, and overall, this is a big effort and a big change, so Google is taking its time with it. The speed update is coming in July, and thus, speed and mobile-friendliness are most important. Everyone should be working on that for their websites if they have not done so already.
Voice search
There were a number of presentations during SMX West addressing voice search and how site owners can prepare their content for surfacing in voice. Johns did not have specific information to share with respect to numbers or other data but did note:
- Voice search is growing and getting better all the time. It is baked into new products all the time, and more and more people use it daily.
- Voice search data in the Google Search Console reports is something that is on Google’s radar, but Johns has no idea if the reports will come to the search community or not.
Ranking signals
Several audience members asked questions related to various ranking signals (or presumed ranking signals), and Johns clarified:
- Social media isn’t a ranking signal. Google looks at links in social media just as they look at links on any web-page. Google has no special treatment for social media.
- Google doesn’t treat adult sites any differently from other websites, other than knowing that it is an adult site and that SafeSearch is being used as a filter for those who want to remove adult content from the search results.
- Google doesn’t treat .com TLDs differently from any other TLD, outside of ccTLDs that may get geotargeted.
- He was unable to comment about how “unlinked brand mentions” help or don’t help a site rank. For example, if someone mentions your brand on their site but does not link to your site, does the unlinked mention drive any ranking benefit for your website?
Nofollow
There were a surprising number of questions surrounding use of the “nofollow” link attribute. Nathans advised:
- The nofollow attribute for links has not changed at all. It still works the same way it did when Google first began supporting it.
- Don’t think or worry about using the nofollow attribute for crawl budget purposes. Crawl budget isn’t something you should worry about.
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