SEO is extremely dynamicits constantly changing day by day, the latest being Googles algorithm update referred to as the Mobilegeddon or Google Mice, which focuses on mobile rankings and everything related that was instigated last April 22. As Forbes (@Forbes) contributor and SEO guru Jayson DeMers (@jaysondemers) puts in his article The Top 7 SEO Trends That Will Dominate 2015, the SEO industry in 2014 and beyond is virtually unrecognizable from that of 2011 and earlier.
That being said, the constant changes that come to SEO also influence the best practices for the industry, as well as how companies should execute their SEO campaigns. If you havent been following the latest SEO news on online publications like the Marketing Digest (@mktgdigest), this article aims to get your feet wet on the latest updates. Here are a few to get you started.
Page Rank/Domain Authority is Losing Its Importance
According to the article The Future Of SEO And Googles Search Algorithm in 2015 and Beyond, websites with high page ranks will not automatically dominate search engines in the future as they currently do. Take this analogy: if SEO is a team sport, all the starters on a team would be veterans (based on existing algorithms). The rookies, meanwhile, would be left on the bench and given limited playing time because they are thought of as inexperienced despite showing equal promise in athletic ability. From here on out, it will be a level playing field.
Mobile-Friendly SEO Will Be Bigger
Google and competing search engines are increasingly putting more focus on the mobile user experience, thereby making mobile-friendly SEO a hotter topic by the minute. This is mainly due to mobile internet surpassing desktop internet well through 2015estimates put that there will be as many as 50 billion local searches done from mobile devices this year alone. With a number like that, focusing largely on mobile doesnt seem like a waste of time at all.
Semantic Searches
The release of Googles Hummingbird algorithm update paved the way for a revolution in search queries: semantic searching, otherwise known as conversational searches. With the update, Google is paying more attention to each word in a query, ensuring that the entire phrase is taken into account rather than particular words. The end result produces pages that match the query much better.
Content is Still King
The days of taking advantages of loopholes in search engines and applying quick (and often unethical) fixes are long gone. Ranking in search engine results pages (SERPs) means that websites have to deliver actual shareable content which Googles search algorithms try to make sense of to the best of its abilitiessomething that shouldnt be excluded from ones critical SEO insights and considerations anytime soon.
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