Winning in the Age of AI Search: How Brands Can Thrive as Search Evolves
Search is changing faster than ever. With the rise of AI-powered features like Google’s AI Overviews and AI Mode, the familiar “10 blue links” are...
Read moreTom Williams runs through this week’s SEO news, including new mobile penalties, confirmation Google is still sending out manual actions post-Penguin, and more.
Having released a statement forewarning its arrival back in August 2016, Google confirmed the roll out of the intrusive interstitials penalty on 10 January. The penalty is designed to punish websites that include invasive pop-ups directly on landing pages accessed from the SERPs on mobile, which can affect user experience.
Any interstitial ads that appear further down the user journey, however, will not result in penalties. Websites that include pop-ups that cover main content, or work as standalone interstitials, may be penalised. Websites with pop-ups that appear for genuine reasons other than advertising purposes, such as providing or requesting information, will not be penalised. Banners that use a “reasonable amount of screen space” (i.e. they do not cover the main content area) will also be exempt from the penalty according to Google.
Since the launch of real-time Penguin in September 2016, some users have questioned whether Google is still sending out manual actions for unnatural links. In a Google Webmaster Office Hours, Google confirmed that manual actions are in fact still being sent, and have never been stopped.
Yes, of course, it still happens, yes. The webspam team is still active and taking action on unnatural links on both directions, so that’s not something we’ve stopped doing since Penguin.
This confirmed that unnatural inbound and outbound links are still receiving manual actions.
In response to a Twitter query on 5 January, Google’s Webmaster Trends Analyst John Mueller confirmed that all sites are evaluated on a per URL basis. The query came from one Twitter user who questioned whether 300, 400 and 500 pages in XML sitemaps affected Google’s trust in the sitemap file as a whole. It was subsequently confirmed that they did not.
A new autosuggest feature is being tested in mobile SERPs. The ‘Trending’ feature provides suggestions based on trending news, which when clicked will then take you to a regular SERP showing relevant news stories for that search. The feature has been spotted on iOS for both Chrome and Safari.
The latest Whiteboard Friday details how comment marketing can be beneficial for your company, and why.
Read last week’s SEO News Roundup:Google Confirms It Does Not Manually Control Traffic Patterns
Could your website be holding you back? Book a Technical SEO Audit to find out.
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