SEO
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SEO Basics12 Topics|1 Quiz
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What is SEO
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Google Algorithm For SEO
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SEO Terms and Ranking Factors
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Types of Search Engine SEO Factors
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Content & Search Engine Success Factors
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Site Architecture & Search Engine Success Factors
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HTML Code & Search Engine Success Factors
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Trust, Authority & Search Rankings
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Link building & Ranking in Search Engines
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User Context Signals & Search Engine Rankings
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Toxins & Search Engine Spam Penalties
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Emerging Verticals in Search
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What is SEO
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Semantic Core12 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Is Semantic Core
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Selecting Semantic Keywords
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Commercial Keywords
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Keyword Frequency and Density
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Mid-Range Keywords
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Low-Frequency Keywords
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Low Competition Keywords
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Competitors Research
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Collect The Competitor`s Semantics
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Analyzing Semantic Core
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Keywords With Small Traffic
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Relevant Similar Keywords
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What Is Semantic Core
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Keywords Clustering14 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Are Keywords Clustering
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Lemma-Based Clustering and Serp-Based Clustering
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Keyword Research
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Competitors Keywords Analysis
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Find Keywords Ideas
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Cheсking Keywords Data
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Search Volume
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Search Intent
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Types Of Keyword Intent
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Research Intent
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LSI And Synonyms
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Cost-Per-Click
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The Relevance
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Segment Keywords Into Groups
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What Are Keywords Clustering
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Website Structure11 Topics|1 Quiz
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On-Page SEO55 Topics|1 Quiz
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What Is On-Page SEO
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Meta-Tags
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Content
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Text
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Structural Text Elements
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Graphics
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Videos
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Design
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URL Structure
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Internal Linking
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Internal Links And Structure
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Types Of Internal Links
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Navigational Links
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Contextual Links
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Puproses of Using Internal Links
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Internal Links Strategies
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Cornerstone Content and Internal Linking Features
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Internal Links Audit
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Software For Internal Linking
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Canonicalization
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What Is a Snippet
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Types of Snippets
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Rich And Regular Snippets
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Featured Snippets
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Translating Content to Structured Data
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What Is an SEO Title
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What Is A Meta Description
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How To Write Meta Description
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Tools For Checking Meta Descriptions
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How To Improve Your Title Tag
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How To Improve Your Meta Description
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Breadcrumbs Navigation
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What Is Anchor Text
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How Does Anchor Text Affect SEO
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Types Of Anchor Texts
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Anchor Text HTML
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How To Optimize Anchor Text For SEO
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How To Improve Your Anchor Link Texts
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What Is The Anchor Tag
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The Difference Between Hyperlink And Anchor Text
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Anchor Text Manipulation
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Anchor Text And Backlinks
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Image’s Alt Attribute
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How To Optimize Images
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The Image's Size
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Title Attribute
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The Caption
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The File Name
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How To Add Alt Text To Image
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Adding Alt Text Based On The Purpose Of The Image
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Tips For Writing Alt Tags
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Tools For Adding Alt Tags
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Yoast: Local, Video, News SEO
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Yoast SEO Content Functions
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WooCommerce SEO
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What Is On-Page SEO
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Technical SEO9 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Reporting38 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Audit
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What Is The Google Search Console
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What Is Google Search Console Used For
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The Main Sections Of The Google Search Console Interface
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What Are Impressions, Position, And Clicks
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CTR
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How To Use Google Search Console To Improve Your SEO
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Resource And Setting Management
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Site Settings Management
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Adding a Resource
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Deleting a Resource
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Linking And Unlinking Resources With Other Services
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Moving Site To Another URL
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Tracking Indicators
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Indexing Status
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AMP Status
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Rich Results Status
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Sitemap Status
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Basic Internet Metrics (LCP, FID, CLS)
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Page Speed
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Troubleshooting
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Why Is The Page Or Site Missing From Google
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Why Isn't My Rich Result Showing On Google Services
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Problems With Decreasing Traffic Volume
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Problems With The Deterioration Of Site Rankings
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Problems With Page Descriptions In Search Results
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Testing
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URL Inspection Tool
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Amp Test
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Signed Exchange Issues
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Mobile-Friendly Test Tool
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Rich Results Test
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Robots.Txt File Checker
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Scanning And Indexing
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Submitting A Request To Google To First Crawl Or Re-Crawl Your Page
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Temporarily Exclude Pages And Images From Google Search Results
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Submitting A Scan Request Or Rescanning
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Submitting Sitemaps And Tracking Their Status
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SEO Audit
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External SEO8 Topics|1 Quiz
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SEO Strategy2 Topics|1 Quiz
Participants 286
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Google Algorithm For SEO
11.02.2022
What is Google algorithm?
Google search algorithm is a complex system that allows Google to find, rank and return the most relevant pages for a certain search query.
To be precise, the whole ranking system consists of multiple algorithms that consider various factors such as quality, relevance or usability of the page.
What is a Google algorithm for SEO?
Google algorithm partially uses keywords to determine page rankings. The best way to rank for specific keywords is by doing SEO. SEO essentially is a way to tell Google that a website or web page is about a particular topic.
How does Google search algorithm work?
Factors that influence what results will be returned for a certain query:
1. Meaning of the query
To return relevant results, Google must understand what exactly is the user searching for and what’s his search intent.
They must understand and assess various things:
- Meaning of the words – what exactly do the used words mean in the natural language?
- Search intent behind the query – what does the user wants by using the particular query – definition, review, purchase, finding a specific website?
- The need for the freshness of content – is the query time-sensitive and requires fresh information?
Sometimes it’s pretty straightforward. If someone uses the search query “buy new iPhone“, it’s pretty clear in all the aspects – meaning, intent and the need for freshness.
But sometimes, especially with general queries, it’s hard to understand what exactly the user meant. In these cases, Google shows what it considers to be the best results but offers additional choices that help to specify the search results. For example, look at this disambiguation for the keyword “rock”:
2. The relevance of pages
Secondly, the search engine has to find what pages are relevant to the search query. In other words – to find the pages that answer the user’s search query in the best way possible.
It does so by regular crawling and indexing of all the websites on the internet and analyzing their content. The key role is played by keywords. If the search query and the phrases that are related to the search query appear on the page, there’s a high chance the page is relevant for the user.
3. Quality of content
There are likely millions of pages for each search query, so Google has to prioritize the ones that offer quality content and demonstrate:
- Expertise
- Authoritativeness
- Trustworthiness
One of the key elements is the so-called PageRank algorithm that takes into account the quality and quantity of links pointing to a page.
Google PageRank
PageRank algorithm (not to be confused with an obsolete PageRank metric from Google Toolbar) is one of many algorithms that are part of Google’s ranking system.
PageRank is a numeric value assigned to each page to help prioritize the search results.
It is based on an assumption that more important pages are likely to receive more backlinks from other authoritative websites.
There are 3 main factors that influence the PageRank of a page:
- quantity of backlinks
- quality (PageRank) of the linking page
- number of links on the linking page
To put it simply: The more backlinks from quality pages you get, the higher is the chance that Google will consider you a high-quality page.
Furthermore, Google uses a number of spam algorithms that detect low-quality pages trying to rank using spammy black-hat SEO techniques.
4. Usability of pages
Now that Google covered the relevance and quality of content, they have to make sure the website has good usability and user-friendliness.
This includes technical aspects such as:
- Page responsiveness
- Correct appearance in all the browsers
- Page speed
- Security of the website
These may not be the most important factors but they are certainly taken into account when other factors (like relevance and quality) are equal.
5. Context and settings
Last but not least, the search results are heavily influenced by the individual circumstances and preferences of the user.
These may include things like:
- Location of the user
- History of searches
- Search settings
Google Search Quality Raters
Besides the algorithms and machine learning systems (like RankBrain), Google also uses input in the form of feedback from real people.
Google hires thousands of external employees – Search Quality Raters – to evaluate the actual search results and rate the quality of the ranked pages.
Major algorithmic updates that significantly impact the SERPs
Panda (2011)
Google Panda is a filter focused on low-quality pages, thin content, keyword stuffing and duplicate content. It was incorporated into the core algorithm in 2016 and rolls out regularly.
Penguin (2012)
An important algorithm update that focused on any kind of manipulative (low-quality, spammy, irrelevant, over-optimized) links.
Hummingbird (2013)
Hummingbird update improved the way Google understands and interprets search queries; a shift from exact keywords to topics
Pigeon (2014)
Pigeon focused on the improvement of the local results both in terms of quality and accuracy.
Mobile Update (2015)
This update is also known as Mobilegeddon in the SEO community. It favors mobile-friendly pages in mobile search results.
RankBrain (2015)
As mentioned earlier, RankBrain is a machine-learning component of Google’s Hummingbird algorithm that helps provide more relevant search results.
Fred (2017)
Fred is an unconfirmed update that seemed to focus on low-quality, ad-centered content that violates Google Search Quality Guidelines.
Medic (2018)
A broad core algorithm update that heavily affected the so-called YMYL (your money your life) pages, especially health-related content.
Bert (2019)
Another machine learning algorithm focused on a better understanding of the context of a search query. It is based on the natural language processing model called BERT.
Each broad core algorithm update usually leads to a wide variety of speculations and discussions on SEO social media groups and forums. Since 2020, Google tends to prevent the naming of the big algorithm updates by the SEO community by announcing their names in advance
What to do if you’ve been hit by a Google algorithm update?
- Be patient – Most core updates roll out for several days, so it’s always good to wait till the dust settles down. Rushing into “quick fixes” can do more harm than good.
- Rely on trusted sources – Do not trust every forum “expert” with “100% verified” advice you’ll find (there are many of them). Instead, wait for analyses by trusted experts and publications like Search Engine Journal or Moz.
- Make sure you need a fix – Sometimes, the best thing to do after you’ve been hit by an algo update is doing nothing. Many updates are slightly improved or reverted after a couple of weeks so make sure you don’t fix things that don’t need to be fixed.
- Improve – Last but not least, if you realize that there’s a problem on your website that may have been the reason for your drops in rankings, it’s time to fix it. Or, maybe re-think your whole SEO strategy to focus more on quality rather than quantity.