Friday, 19 May 2017

7 Unannounced updates to Google My Business in 2017

Google has been rolling out new features and updates on Google My Business over several months. 


Google constantly launching updates to their products. Check below to know the update details.

1. Google Remove Permanently Closed Listing from the Local Finder

If you look at the picture from my article last year about permanently closed listings, you’ll see that there used to be tons of “permanently closed” listings ranking in the Local Finder. They would typically show up at the end of the list (after the open ones), and if you edited a ranking listing to make it appear permanently closed, it would instantly drop to the back of the list.


I haven’t seen a single “permanently closed” listing in the Local Finder in months. This is mostly a good thing.

Tip: Search for all your existing and former practitioners on Google by name + city and make sure you don’t have any of these out there.


2. Google removes the ability to access the classic version of Google Plus:

Google came out with the new version of Google Plus back in 2015, but up until a couple of months ago, they still kept the classic version accessible and it was the version that Google cached in their search results.

The classic version had all the Name, Address, Phone Number (NAP) data on it that we loved so much, and the new version gives you none of this info. Many of us used the site:plus.google.com search to find duplicate listings for clients, and this function no longer works, since the cached version of Google Plus has no phone number, no address and no reviews.


3. Google launches a platform for reviewing edits to business listings on Google Maps on Desktop:

Since MapMaker shut down, lots of people are under the impression that reviewing edits to business listings is no longer possible. Google has had the ability to review edits on the Google Maps app for quite some time, but since those of us in the local SEO industry rarely sit around doing client work on our phones, lots of people don’t realize this is possible.

In March, Google also launched a “Check the Facts” feature on Desktop for Local Guides. This is a very simplified version of editing and isn’t really comparable to what we used to have on MapMaker, but it does allow for users to approve or deny each other’s edits to business listings.




4. Google removes pending edits for a listing’s status from showing up on the Google Maps app:

I outlined in this article how spammers were attacking legit business listings by reporting their listings as spam just to get the pending status to show up on their listing on mobile. Indeed, these spammers shifted their focus to Trump Tower at one point, and searching for it on the Google Maps app produced the following listing:




5. Google rolls out the Snack Pack to more industries in the USA:

Different from the 3-pack, the “Snack Pack” refers to the local layout that that is missing the links to the business website or driving directions; instead of seeing these (useful) buttons, you get an image.

For some reason, Google decided earlier this year that all of us who search on Google would love to see pictures of bugs when searching for pest control instead of a website that would tell us more about the company we’re potentially hiring.




6. Businesses can now access 18 months of data from Insights inside their Google My Business dashboard;

In April, Google added bulk insights to the dashboard, which might look unimpressive at first if you don’t catch the fact that you can now select a custom date range for data and aren’t stuck looking at one-week, one-month, or one-quarter intervals! This is a huge plus for agencies who onboard new clients and want the ability to see how their stats look before they start improving things.



7. Google starts actively showing local pack ads on mobile:

Here is a picture of what they look like that I took using Mobile Moxie’s Mobile Search Simulator:




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Google Confirms Google for Jobs Job Search Rolling Out in Coming Weeks

After completed testing process, Google has confirmed at Google I/O they are rolling out a job search feature.



Google has announced at I/O that they are rolling out a job search feature called "Google for Jobs" in upcoming weeks. Check below example images for the results


Google would not originally confirm that they were launching a job search feature, but now they have at I/O. 


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Thursday, 18 May 2017

Are you a featured snippet If so google testing dropping your website listing

Google has confirmed they are listing are removing the featured snippet from google web search.



Being a "featured snippet" had allowed sites effectively double-dip with google search results, but the search engine testing a change that ends this.

Usually, a site that’s selected as a featured snippet appears both at the top of Google’s search results in a special box and again as one of the 10 web search listings further below. However, it’s been spotted that Google is dropping that web listing if a site is already featured.

Screenshots of Google Testing Removing ads:

Featured Snippet:



Featured Snippet is Removed:


Again, Google confirmed they are indeed testing this but has not commented on if this will be rolling out to everyone or not.

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Sunday, 16 April 2017

Google Image Search adds Style Ideas Goes Live

Google says with the new image search update, they can help to boost your search style IQ.


Google-new-image-search-update-style-ideas-update

Google has announced a new feature within the Google Image Search to find "Style Ideas" based on image searches you do for articles.

The new feature is very similar to a feature they launched earlier this week named "Similar Items" that similar items show similar style images based on the search you are looking at.

This is driven off product schema markup. Like Similar Items, Style Ideas works in Image Search on the Google App for Android and mobile web.





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Tuesday, 11 April 2017

Submit URLs to Google in Googles Search Results page

Google has added a new location to submit URLs to their Index. Now its in Google Search Engine Result Page. 



Google now lets you submit URLs to their index directly in the Google Search Result Page. All you Need to Search for "Submit URL to Google" and Google will comes with a box at the top of the search result that enables you to submit URL to Google Index. 



Of course, submitting a URL to Google for inclusion in their search index does not mean (a) it will be included in the index, and (b) it will be shown in their rankings.
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Thursday, 6 April 2017

Personal Assistant Search Optimization PASO

Have you started considering voice search in your SEO Strategy?. 




Personal assistants (PAs) aren’t just digital assistants that can be used to perform routine tasks. They’re also the future of SEO.

Consider two of the most popular PAs: Siri and Google Assistant. People often use those assistants to retrieve information.

Results are tailored to users:

Another reason that digital personal assistants represent the future of SEO is that search results are tailored to the needs of their users. That’s for two reasons.

First, as we’ve seen, people often use PAs on a smartphone. That means results can be (and often will be) location-specific.

Second, PAs are equipped with a bit of artificial intelligence (AI) to ensure that responses are in line with the expectations of their users. You can expect to see the quality of AI in digital personal assistants improve in the coming years.

Fewer results on a PA search

How many times have you Googled a phrase only to find out that there are something like 38 million results? Even people who have a lot of free time on their hands will find it difficult to sort through all of that information.

By contrast, PAs typically return one to four results. That makes it easier for users to find the answers they’re looking for without scrolling through page after page after page in the search results.

Example: 

Search or Asked to my phone - Where to go skiing?



I get one result, as well as options to click “Search results,” “Aspen Colorado skiing” or “Send feedback.”


As you can imagine, US News & World Report is going to get a ton of traffic from that listing.

If you click the “search results” button, you get the normal Google search results page.

If you click “Aspen Colorado skiing,” you get local results:

This is why PASO is so important — with fewer results being presented to the searcher, the returns will be massive for those who are able to secure one of these limited spots.

Personal assistant results likely have high click-through rates

Here, we see an example of a personal assistant result for my company’s website, Ignite Visibility. The query here is, “How do I translate a YouTube video into a new language?” Just as in the example above, only one result is shown.



Though there isn’t data on this currently, I suspect that in most cases, more users will click on the single search result provided by their digital personal assistant than on the other options at the bottom, especially as Google becomes better and better at honing their search results to provide the best answer to a user’s query.
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Wednesday, 15 March 2017

10 AdWords ad copy testing ideas

Wondering where to begin with ad copy testing? Check below 10 adwords ad copy testing ideas and follow that. 
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Monday, 13 March 2017

30 Basic SEO Interview Questions and Answers

Get the complete list of basics SEO Interview Questions & Answers for Freshers. Freshers who are searching job in a platform of SEO. Below questions are most helpful. That's why I have shared some important SEO Interview Questions, an Interviewer can ask in Interview. 
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3 Free Google Adwords Testing Tools

Check the quick list of Google Adwords testing tool to help create, run and analyze test in adwords.


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Saturday, 11 March 2017

Google Rolls Out Adwords Account Level Call Extensions

Business names in call-only ads, more detailed reporting and an expansion of automated call extensions are on the way.



New CALL ONLY ADS:



Account-Level Call Extensions:

For advertisers that use one main number for call extensions, Google is rolling out account-level call extensions this week. These advertisers will no longer have to apply the same call extension to multiple times within their accounts.


Call Extensions Details at Keyword and Ad Levels:

Reporting columns for “Phone impressions” and “Phone calls” will soon be available to see phone-through rates at the keyword and ad levels in the AdWords interface.


Automated Call Extensions are Coming to more advertisers:

Google is going to be including more advertisers in automated call extensions over the coming months. This is the program, introduced in January, in which Google automatically pulls phone numbers featured on landing pages and sets up call extensions in advertisers’ accounts that don’t already have them. If you’ve got call extensions set up, you don’t have to worry about this. If you intentionally don’t use call extensions, see our previous coverage linked above on how to opt out.



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Mobile Page Speed is Important, But not yet for SEO

Columnist Bryson Meunier suggests that mobile page speed, while good for conversions and customer retention, might not be doing much for your mobile search rankings.



There are plenty of good reasons to make your mobile site fast, and Google just reminded us of them with their new industry benchmarks for mobile page speed.

Among Them,


  • Improving conversion rate and increasing profit, as 40 percent of consumers will leave a page that takes longer than three seconds to load.

  • Customer retention, as 79 percent of shoppers who are dissatisfied with site performance say they’re less likely to purchase from the same site again.

But is SEO one of those reasons? Will businesses that optimize their Google page speed score to 100/100 on mobile be able to rank higher than businesses that don’t?

The answer to the first question is “yes,” in the sense that Google has said that speed is a ranking factor (and has been since 2010), and that this year they will use the speed of your mobile pages instead of desktop when determining your mobile rankings.

But it’s not clear that this is true in practice today, or that businesses that optimize their Google page speed score on mobile will rank higher than businesses that don’t.

If this were the case, the sites with the most organic search traffic would also be the fastest, but this clearly isn’t the case.

I ran the top 1,000 sites from SEMrush’s list of sites with the most organic traffic through Google’s Page speed and Mobile-friendly tool, and 800 of them went through successfully.

The good news is that 93 percent of these top sites were at least mobile-friendly. This is up from 40 percent of the top sites prior to Google’s mobile-friendly update in 2015.

But these sites are not as fast as they are mobile-friendly.

Just 2 percent of these top sites scored between 90 and 100 on Google’s mobile page speed test, and the average page speed score was 55/100.




Desktop sites were faster, but not by much. Just 4 percent of these top sites scored above 90, with the average score being 67.



The average site in Google’s study took between seven and 11 seconds to load. When you consider that a site that loads in nine seconds on mobile gets a page speed score of about 60, it seems that top-ranked sites are very similar to other sites that don’t rank well when it comes to mobile page speed.


Does this mean you shouldn’t care about mobile page speed?

Before you go running into your boss’s office shouting, “STOP THE MOBILE PAGE SPEED PROJECT!!” there is one other thing that I will leave you with.

With the mobile-first index, Google will start using your mobile page speed for ranking, if they’re not doing so already. Speed is so important to them that they’ve taken it into their own hands with the AMP project, giving sites a way to display their content quickly on mobile. Most of the search traffic on Google is mobile, and as we’ve seen with Mobilegeddon, they are not above incentivizing webmasters with ranking increases if they want to change the face of the web.

With that in mind, I’d recommend the following to SEOs thinking about the impact of mobile page speed on ranking:

Increasing page speed for mobile searchers visiting your site shouldn’t be a top priority for SEO at the moment. There’s plenty of evidence that increasing page speed is good for your bottom line, which can increase the quality of SEO traffic you receive, but there’s no evidence that mobile page speed is a significant ranking factor at this time. Make your site as fast as you can, but don’t deprioritize other proven SEO tactics to get a perfect score on the mobile page speed test.

Mobile page speed, like mobile-friendly sites in 2014, could become a more significant ranking factor in the future, especially given the impending rollout of the mobile-first index. If it does, it’s likely that Google will make an announcement, as they did with the mobile-friendly update, at which point you should put resources towards making your native site faster.

In the meantime, prepare for it by making your native site as fast as you can without diverting resources from other projects, investing in AMP where it makes sense and helping whoever in your organization is responsible for conversion optimization to secure the budget by sharing Google’s research on page speed impact on conversions and customer retention with them.




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Friday, 10 March 2017

New Unconfirmed Google Ranking update Fred shakes the world

The webmaster and SEO community, along with the automated Google tracking tools, all show strong signs that there was a Google algorithm ranking update.

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Tuesday, 21 February 2017

Emojis Back In The Google Search Results Snippets

Google has brought back displaying emojis in the search results when the query think it is relevant.



Google has confirmed with Search Engine Land that they have brought the ability for emojis to be displayed in the search result listing page.

In june 2015, google removed emojis for showing up in the results after promising up to disable them over webmaster abuse.

A Google spokesperson told us they added it back when emojis are relevant. “We have added a feature to our snippets to feature emojis where relevant, useful and fun,” Google told us. “You’ll see them crop up across various snippets moving forward,” Google said.
So if you search in Google for emojis, Google will show emojis. For example, my query for [google display emojis] has search results that display emojis in the listings:


But if I search for [google panda], our [panda page] is listed, but even though the title tag has a panda emoji, it doesn’t show in the search results listings.




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Google temporarily disables not mobile-friendly label

Google temporarily disables not mobile-friendly label in search results due to bug. Google is fixing the issue and will restore the label after the problem is resolved.


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Hyper Local Marketing - 5 Tips to stay on top

As mobile continues to grow, consumers are conducting more searches with hyperlocal and google is refining its results in response to this trend. Columnist Jim Yu explains how local businesses can optimize for the hyperlocal reality.






Mobile Vs Hyper local:

Lets go with some example - While searching for "hotels in foster city", we can see mobile display upto 4 ads, followed by 3 local pack which includes a map and three listings. 

Within the local pack , google is displaying filters such as Deals or Cheap to the audience for queries. Also avail with check in dates, reviews, photos, pricing.




Next Refine search part - "hotels foster city emerald hills" search become hyperfocused on the business search results. This search provides hotels in specific city and map is also provide along with search result. 

Four call-to-action buttons - Call, Directions, Share and Website) along with the address and business overview



Check the 5 Steps to succeed with hyperlocal marketing:

Step 1: Master the basics

For your marketing strategy to succeed, you need to make sure that you have your Google My Business page ready and optimized. Fill out every field relevant to your business, ensure that your page has high-quality and appealing pictures, and verify that your businesses is listed in all the correct categories within Google.
Remember, every element added into your Google My Business page can provide important signals to assist with hyperlocal ranking and audience targeting. Your Google profile will determine how your business appears on the local 3-pack, so each step that boosts the appeal of your organization’s page will be beneficial. Encourage past satisfied customers to leave reviews to improve your business’s reputation and increase the positioning within the Google 3-pack.

Step 2 : Focus on your city and things of interest in that area

Develop localized website content that would interest people in your area. Your content can also focus on local point of interest, such as landmarks and destinations, it might help people to find out in your areas. This can boost your geo location targeting and help business sound more appealing to those looking around a particular area.


Step 3 : If you have multiple location, create local landing pages for each

To maximize your appearance in search, you want to have local landing pages for each of your destinations for customers in that specific area.

Use keywords related to your locations, such as name of your city or ZIP Code. Do keyword research to find word applicable to business and would be most beneficial. 

Optimizing your local landing pages for these keywords can helps to draw more traffic.


Step 4 : Include any structured data markup that relates to your business on your content pages

In order to provide google with as much information about your business page, you want to consider incorporating structured data markup (schema markup) on your webpage.  You can precise define various business attributes including business type, hours, address, latitude, longitude, phone number and more.

With your data properly marked up, it becomes easier for your business to appear for relevant queries. Note that on both Google Maps and the local 3-pack, users are able to filter queries based on business hours — so you’ll want to define your business hours with markup to help ensure you’re eligible to appear in these filtered results.



If you have multiple locations, mark up each one with the appropriate markup to ensure that potential clients can find your location nearest to them.

Step 5 : Track your process on a local level

Once you begin to optimize your content for hyperlocal targeting, you need to make sure that you track your progress within the right location. This means monitoring the local search engine results pages serving your particular area. It will do you little good to monitor clicks and ranks for “Italian restaurants near me” on a national scale, for example, when you just want to rank for the keyword in the Springfield, Illinois area.
Instead, track your keyword rankings at your location of choice. The closer you can get to your exact business location, the more accurate your information will be. Use this kind of data to gain insight into the online local search experience of your target audience. You can then use this insight to guide your strategy as you move forward.
Conclusion:

Hyperlocal search has begun to grow as local search.

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Wednesday, 25 January 2017

AMP Not Ranking Factor But If AMP Page Is Canonical, It Will Be Used For Site Quality

AMP is not a ranking factor. Google said this before, many times. Google can judge the quality of your site/pages based on your AMP pages, if your AMP pages are your canonical version. Meaning, if you make your site in AMP and you tell Google that is your primary version, then Google will judge the AMP pages.


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New Google ad label test with green outline on white background

It looks like Google is back at it with testing ad label variations in the search results. After transitioning from yellow to green in 2016, Google appears to be testing a green outlined label.


Twitter user @matibarnes  in the UK shared a screen shot on Twitter Tuesday. Here’s the test treatment he spotted off the ad label with green outline on white background:
New Look:

Current Look:



When Google transitioned from the yellow to green ad label, many questioned whether it made it even more confusing for users to distinguish ads from organic listings. 
The new look was seen in the UK.
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