It is already known that SEO companies have to work hard to guess how Google indexes pages, and no one really knows how the algorithms change and evolve to favour relevant sites. One of the most important points however to maintain a high ranking is relevancy, and this is where Google Search will be making SEO specialists work for their money as well as their page rankings. Google Search allows searches to be narrowed down through options such as videos, blogs, forums and reviews so that users can access exactly what they are after. There is no doubt that this is a move geared towards satisfying internet users.
According to others in the industry, optimisation will also have to start pleasing people, not just such engine spiders. Out will go ‘Google fodder’ and in will come people friendly content, especially as ‘rich snippets’ play a part in attracting traffic to a site once listings appear from a search enquiry. Rich snippets are written into the coding, moving away from HTML and toward XHTML. This allows extra, and essentially more relevant, information to be crawled and presented to the searcher. This may not satisfy the spiders, but it will increase traffic.
By bringing structured data to the surface, SEO companies will be optimising for the people; but what about the search engine spiders? It transpires that the date and time filtering options have been the most popular. This can mean only one thing – fresh content needs to be added to web pages if companies want to stay ahead of their competitors. With news that the filtering options could be refined to ‘the last minute’ and ‘the last second’, this could be a tough job, as spiders will be indexing more rapidly for fresh, user friendly content.
Constant updating will of course have to be paid for, and between big brands this could mean a whole army of SEO specialists working on just a handful of sites. Ultimately, Google Search has been developed to keep Google the number one choice for searchers through providing the most relevant results; the tight parameter options are testament to this. As a result, successful SEO will rest on meeting the new set of Google algorithm rules – whatever they turn out to be.
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