Category: News
-
Here Is What Changed With The Google Helpful Content Guidance – Page Experience & More
Yesterday, Google announced it made some changes to its guidance around what makes content considered helpful, including adding in good page experience to the equation
-
What is evergreen content and why it’s important for SEO
Here’s why creating evergreen pieces, not just trends-focused or timely ones, is key for a winning content marketing mix.
-
7 Reasons Why Content Needs Amazing Images, Videos & Visuals
Learn why you should use amazing images, videos, and visuals to help convey ideas and captivate audiences in high-quality online content.
-
5 reasons your Google Business Profile might get suspended
Some “unwritten” rules can trigger your GBP’s suspension and impact your local search visibility. Here are some violations to watch out for.
-
Google Introduces New Crawler To Optimize Googlebot’s Performance
Google introduces GoogleOther, a new web crawler, to optimize operations, streamline R&D tasks, and reduce strain on Googlebot.
-
Are ChatGPT, Bard and Dolly 2.0 Trained On Pirated Content?
Is it true that ChatGPT, Bard and Dolly 2.0 are trained on text from pirated books?
-
The role of page experience in creating helpful content
Helpful content generally offers a good page experience. That’s why today, we’ve added a section on page experience to our guidance on creating helpful content and revised our help page about page experience. We think this all will help site owners consider page experience more holistically as part of the content creation process.
-
Google’s Antitrust Showdown: 17 States Involved In DOJ Lawsuit
Nine additional U.S. states joined the Justice Department’s antitrust lawsuit against Google over its digital ad technology.
-
Google Search Console Launches “Subscribed Content” Report
Google’s is rolling out a new “Subscribed Content” report in Search Console for publishers using Reader Revenue Manager.
-
Google Search Console page experience report going away
The Google Search Console page experience report, at least how we know it today, is going away. It will be replaced by a content page that links to Google’s general guidance about page experience.