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Do This Before Google’s Next Algorithm Update



Nervous about Google’s seemingly constant algorithm updates? You’re not the only one – but there’s a ton that you can do to stay ahead of the curve.

00:00 Intro
01:43 Go Into Google Search Console
03:34 Keep Track of Your Biggest Money Pages

RESOURCES & LINKS:
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Ubersuggest: https://neilpatel.com/ubersuggest/
AnswerThePublic: https://answerthepublic.com/
Google Search Console: https://search.google.com/search-console/about
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Do you know how many updates Google does every single year? The number might shock you. Although you typically only hear about a few major ones every year, the real number is way higher. Can you guess what it is? Well in 2020, Google made 4,500 changes to its search algorithm. Here’s a great way to stay ahead of Google’s next big algorithm update.

The strategy, includes ongoing optimization into your content plan. Look, you probably already know that Google heavily factors in user experience when it comes to search rankings, but if you’re not actively updating your content on a consistent basis, you’re putting your entire website at a disadvantage for when the next update comes around. So here’s what I want you to do.

Step one, go into Google Search Console. And what I want you to do is click on your site portfolio, look at your traffic, and compare year over year. You can actually compare the last 30 days to what happened in the previous year. And you can do that using their date picker. I want you to see all the pages that have decreased the most in traffic, and I want you to update those pages. Have you noticed that anytime you do a Google search, Wikipedia is continually ranking at the top? Why is that? It’s because their content is continually fresh with things like GPT-3 and all these AI tools that just make you being able to write content at the snap of your fingers, it’s easy to produce content. Everyone’s doing it.

We need people to continually update their content more frequently. And when Google sees that you’re updating your content more frequently, they know it’s fresh, not outdated, that’s more likely to provide the most value to users. Now the way I recommended you to update your content is you look at the pages that decrease in their traffic the most. Those are the pages that can provide your biggest traffic gains. Because those have the most opportunity. If they lost rankings, it’s usually because they’re not as fresh as the competition or more thorough or more in depth. And you can see what keywords those pages rank for ’cause Google Search Console shows you and you can just do Google searches for those keywords to see what other people are doing that you’re not, and that’ll give you ideas on how to keep your page the most user friendly, up to date, and providing the most value.

Now, the second thing I want you to do is, on a monthly basis, keep track of all your main money pages. These are the pages that are getting most the traffic to your website from Google. And I want you to keep track of, all right, here are the main pages, just spend a quick few minutes on the top 30, 40, 50 pages, shouldn’t take you more than a few hours a month and create a list of the ones that you think should be updated to provide people the most value.

Even if that means that, hey, your traffic isn’t dropping. Just because your traffic isn’t dropping doesn’t mean that page shouldn’t be updated. You want to do what’s best for the user and not focus too much on Google. That’s how you stay ahead of their update. because what does Google do? You think Google cares about how many backlinks you have, or how cool your site looks? Sure these are all factors in their algorithm.

What they really care for is what a user likes and what they don’t. Because even if you had a million backlinks, if users go to your website and they all bounce and click the back button ’cause they think your content sucks, Google’s not going to rank you high. Yes, there are all these SEO factors, but what they care the most about is, is the user satisfied and happy when they land on your website? If they are, over time, you rank higher. If they’re not, you don’t rank as higher. That’s why you need to continually update your content.

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26 thoughts on “Do This Before Google’s Next Algorithm Update”

  1. Neil, Let's suppose Person A purchased cheap hosting which has a slow server speed and Person B purchased expensive hosting which has a fast server speed.

    Then if both are connected their websites to CDN for fast delivery of content to users as per their geographical location.

    So in such case both person's website content will be delivered from the CDN server.

    Ok, then if the content is going from the CDN server, then what is the advantage by using fast hosting in terms of site speed.

  2. Should I remove blog posts on my site with high bounce rates? Some of them are over 90% and I know its because they're just bad articles. Will that affect overall search ranking of the site's other pages?

  3. Neil, what do you think is the average conversion rate for a saas landing page for a paid account, like if the traffic is all good from good developed countries, and also from quality sources like social media or email etc, what do you think will be the average conversion rate for a landing page for a paid saas?

  4. I hope that Google is crushed by ChatGPT competitors over the next few years. It's a disgrace that one search engine holds all the power….worldwide. It's time for it to be stopped and share the market.

  5. Thx Patel. Great mentoring. A very respectful request. Please reduce those sound effects by 50% in loudness. I know you're trying to emphasise a point, but do it subtly. For me it breaks the stream of consciousness and train of thought. Maybe a light ping is enough. Thank you for all your work helping us with SEO. Cheers.

  6. Thank you Neil for this post. Great and to the point as usual. Any specific advices for the ecommerce? Do we also need to change the content often on the existing products? I'm an artist and sell oil paintings and prints. And the second question, adding the urls in my articles to the Wikipedia articles, help with ranking or not?

  7. solid and on point as always. Do you have any insight on this: with wordpress or any other CMS, does google see the "last modified date" or just the "published date"? and does leaving the published date as the original date demonstrate longevity or does that even matter anymore?

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