As if 2020 wasnβt bad enough already, Google has let us know about an upcoming algorithm update, theΒ User Experience Update that will most definitely send SEO guruβs into a frenzy.
Whenever Google rolls out an update, everyone panics. Itβs no wonder when a one position drop in your search rankings means you can lose 80% of your organic traffic.
This time itβs different. Usually, we have no idea when Google is planning to update its algorithm.
The SEO tools are pretty good at picking up inferences that suggest an update. But in most cases, we have no time to prepare and no idea as to what the update has changed.
This time we know. Itβs a strange position for web admins to be in. We know what we need to do to get our website ready for the next big algorithm update. This time, Google has shifted the focus to user experience.
Is your website ready?
Natalka Antoniuk, Content Writer for Quadrant2Design, shares everything she knows to help you get ready for Googleβs user experience (UX) update.
#1. What do we know about Googleβs Algorithm?
Googleβs algorithm is secret. We know nothing. We have made educated guesses, some of which work and some of which donβt.
Thatβs what the founding fathers of SEO spent all of their time doing, guessing which factors Google uses to rank a website.
And weβre not very close. SearchΒ engines look at over 200 factors when they crawl, index, and rank a site. We know at least 20 for sure. And can probably make a good guess at another 50-70.
Currently, any website designer looking to optimize their site for search engines would look at factors such as:
#2. White Hat Vs. Black Hat SEO
Because we know so little about Googleβs algorithm, much of what we do is guesswork. Occasionally, somebody discovers something that had a tremendous impact on rankings. But it isnβt necessarily βgood behaviorβ in Googleβs eyes.
Search engines approve white hat SEO tactics. Generally, these strategies aim to improve the website design making it easier for the user and the search engine bots to understand.
Black hat SEO might land you in trouble. Tactics such as keyword stuffing, cloaking, and using private blog networks can get your site ranking higher in the search results. But, more often than not, your site will be penalized and removed from the index altogether.
Previous updates have made it very easy for Google to spot black hat tactics. By 2016, the Penguin and Panda updates were part of Googleβs core algorithm. This was one of the most significant changes to search engine results in Googleβs history.
#3. Penguin and Panda Penalties
The Penguin update targeted manipulative link-building tactics. The Panda update targeted poor quality content. Using things like content farms, private blog networks, and spammy links will land you a penalty.
A Penguin penalty could affect a single page of your site or your entire domain. Furthermore, it could affect the sites that you link to. This means if a site linking to yours gets a penguin penalty, you could suffer the consequences.
A Panda penalty is easier to avoid and easier to remove. Ensure all of the content on your site provides value for your users and doesnβt resemble spammy guest posts or forums filled with spam. This update came about after thousands of users complained about the poor experience due to low-quality content appearing in the search engines.
#4. What is User Experience (UX)?
User experience (UX) has been on Googleβs mind for some time. At least since the Panda update. It makes sense, given 92.71% of searches are done on Google. They have to keep their customers happy.
To deliver a good UX, Google crawl every URL they find to add them to an index. This is a vast database containing everything available on the internet, organized into categories. Google goes to its index when somebody searches something and uses the different factors and categories to rank URLs in the search engine results pages.
Google aims to deliver the searcher a web page that answers their query and matches search intent. But, now they have promised an updated algorithm with even more focus on UX.
Before we get into five ways to get your website ready for the update, make sure youβre currently optimizing your content as per the above. If you arenβt answering the query and search intent, then you arenβt going to rank. Whether you make these changes or not.
Once youβre sure that all of your content is highly relevant, useful, and targeted towards your audience, you can get started preparing for the next algorithm update.
#5. How to Improve the User Experience
If youβre certain your content is good to go, itβs time to prepare for Googleβs user experience update. Here are five things you should do to your website before any algorithm changes take place.
5.1. Make it Mobile-Friendly
Almost two-thirds of searches come from a mobile. Some businesses think they donβt need to bother optimizing this platform as it makes up such a small percentage of their traffic.
Theyβre wrong.
The new algorithm update will check that your site is mobile-friendly, whether users experience your brand that way or not. Google wants to make sure that the search engine results page is full of URLs that deliver a great user experience.
If you donβt optimize your website for mobile, you arenβt delivering a great UX to almost two-thirds of an audience. This will cost you rank positions.
Further readings on how to make your website mobile-friendly:
- All You Need to Know About Mobile-First Indexing
- How Can a Mobile-Friendly Website Improve Your SEO Rankings? – Monetize.info
- How To Make A Website Mobile Friendly – HostGator blog
- Relaunch Your Website For the Mobile-First Experience – Monetize.info
5.2. Update and Improve Content
Google likes to see fresh content to ensure it is relevant and answers search queries with up-to-date information. This is great news for content marketers.
Writing evergreen content takes time. The beginning of the process requires keyword research, referencing, and fact-checking. You can only start writing after a solid few hours of reading up on your subject.
External references have to be fact-checked, and the domainβs authority and relevancy to your site are scrutinized before you can include any external links. The writing itself takes time, even if you are an expert in the field.
Updating old content is much faster. Including up-to-date facts and statistics shows Google that your content is relevant and valuable. It suggests that your webpage is in the best position to answer the searcherβs query. And it shows that you are more likely to deliver a great UX.
Further readings on how to update and improve your content:
- 10+ Unique Ways to Get Free Content for Your Blog
- How to get free, high-quality content on your blog [2020 Guide] – Monetize.info
- How Updating Your Old Content Can Help With Your Rankings – NeilPatel.com
5.3. Speed Up Your Site
We know speed has always been an imperative factor when it comes to your rankings, but itβs about to become much more critical. Already we see a 16% decrease in customer satisfaction with just a one-second delay in page load times.
Core Web Vitals are a set of real-world, user-centered metrics that quantify critical aspects of the user experience. They measure dimensions of web usability such as load time, interactivity, and the stability of content as it loads are search signals for the User Experience update.
Core Web Vitals Metrics are signals for the Google User Experience UpdateThis one-second delay can also cause an 11% drop in organic traffic, proving that Google cares about your site speed.
You can download and install the WP Rocket plugin if your site runs on WordPress. This allows you to minify and combine files to reduce the number of requests your site makes to load. It sounds more complicated than it is.
Another thing you can do is enable browser caching. This means that your site wonβt have to reload every element every time a returning user clicks through, as it is already stored in their cache.
Further readings on how to speed up your website:
- How To Speed Up Your WordPress Site in 9 Easy Steps – Monetize.info
- How to Improve Page Speed from Start to Finish – Ahrefs.com
5.4. Reduce Bounce Rate
Letβs not get into the SEO argument about bounce rate. Anyone that doesnβt believe Google takes this data into account when deciding the ranking order for the search engine results pages must have been hiding under a rock for the last five years.
Bounce rate is the number one indicator of user experience. Whenever somebody Googleβs something, they do so with intent. Maybe they intend to find information. Maybe itβs to make a purchase. If your page doesnβt match their intent, they arenβt going to stay on your website. They bounce off, giving you a high bounce rate.
A high bounce rate indicates a poor user experience. To improve yours, look at the keywords that you are currently ranking for and match them to the pages that appear in the search engine results.
Make sure that your content aligns itself with search intent. If you deliver what the user wants to see, you will deliver a great UX. Searchers wonβt need to bounce off your site, and your bounce rate will improve.
Further readings on how to reduce the bounce rate:
- How to Improve Your eCommerce Content Marketing with Google Analytics [GUIDE] – Monetize.info
- 13 Ways to Reduce Bounce Rate and Increase Your Conversions – Neil Patel blog
5.5. No more pop-ups
Last but not least, get rid of the pop-ups. So many sites feature pop-ups. Why?
You hate them. I know you hate them because everybody hates them.
Why do so many sites still bother?
Pop-ups block the content that people have come to your website to see. If someone is trying to exit your site, a pop-up wonβt stop them from leaving; better content will.
Not only do they ruin the user experience, but they increase your site speed as well. Just because everybody else does, it doesnβt mean that itβs right or that you should. Just get rid of pop-ups.
If you want to promote a discount or incentivize people to sign up to your mailing list, you can do so in a bar on the bottom of the screen. Pop-ups are unnecessary and will hurt your site when Google rolls out the next algorithm update.
Further readings on how to get rid of the pop-ups:
- Popups: 10 Problematic Trends and Alternatives – NNGroup.com
- How To Drive More Conversions With Exit-Intent Popups
- How To Start An Effective Email Marketing Campaign
#6. Google User Experience Update: The UX Shift
Google has given us a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get ahead of the next algorithm update. We know they are focussing on delivering a better user experience. This guide has helped you improve the UX on your website.
First, you need to make sure all of your content is useful, engaging, and up-to-date. Remember, this is great news for content marketers because it is quicker to update old content than to create new stuff.
Once youβre happy with your content, get to work on improving the speed of your site. Try minifying and combining files so that search engines donβt have to render them individually. Make sure you have caching enabled.
Even a one-second delay could cost you 11% of traffic.
Is your site mobile-friendly yet?
We are expecting this to be one of the most important factors in the new update, whether you target mobile searchers or not.
With two-thirds of searches taking place on a mobile, you canβt ignore this segment anymore, so get to work. And finally, get rid of those pop-ups.
Further readings:
How to use Chrome User Experience Report to improve your siteβs performance
Suppose youβve read this entire article to try to prepare your website for the Google User Experience update but have decided to ignore these steps because you think you know better. In that case, all I can say is congratulations. Youβve just wasted 15 minutes of your day.
I lost my site ranking after Google update but i don’t under stand why now i notice in you article pop up are also factor thanks for this information i improve my site ads specially pop ads