Google will be rolling out a new update for the helpful content system in the coming month. This update will allow Google Search to “more deeply understands content created from a personal or expert point of view,” the company wrote.
What is changing. Google said, “we’re also improving how we rank results in Search overall, with a greater focus on content with unique expertise and experience.” “We’ll roll out an update to this system that more deeply understands content created from a personal or expert point of view, allowing us to rank more of this useful information on Search,” Google added.
This update will help Google Search show more “hidden gems” within the Google search results, Google explained.
More on the helpful content update. Google’s helpful content update specifically targets “content that seems to have been primarily created for ranking well in search engines rather than to help or inform people.”
This algorithm update aims to help searchers find “high-quality content,” Google told us. Google wants to reward better and more useful content that was written for humans and to help users.
Content written for the purpose of ranking in search engines – what you might call “search engine-first content” or “SEO content,” has been frequently written about lately and discussed across social media.
In short, searchers are getting frustrated when they land on unhelpful webpages that rank well in search because they were designed to rank well.
Google’s new algorithm aims to downgrade those types of websites while promoting more helpful websites, designed for humans, above search engines.
Google said this is an “ongoing effort to reduce low-quality content and make it easier to find content that feels authentic and useful in search.”
Why we care. This new update has not rolled out yet, but it will in the “coming months.” We will notify you when the update does launch and what to expect from this update for your sites, content and your clientele.
Just keep building out create, helpful content and you should hopefully be fine in the long run.
Source link : Searchengineland.com