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Tag: EMD Update

  • Webmasters Think Google Has Eased Up On EMD Sites

    Back in 2012, Google launched the EMD update, which the company described as a small update, affecting 0.6% of English-US queries to a noticeable degree. It was designed to demote low quality exact match domain sites.

    We don’t really hear that much about the update anymore, but there were quite a few complaints from webmasters hit by it when it launched.

    There is some new discussion in the webmaster community with people thinking Google has eased up on this repeating update.

    Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Roundtable points to some chatter in the Webmaster Word forum, and more people chimed in in the comments of his post saying they’ve been seeing more EMD sites ranking for various industry-specific searches.

    Gareth Miller suggests that they didn’t really punish low quality EMD sites, calling it “another case of Google doing something and then exaggerating its impact to discourage spammers from pursuing the tactic”

    I don’t know. I wouldn’t say Google exaggerated it, considering they said it was small to begin with, though I’m sure he has a valid point about Google discouraging spammers.

    Apparently, if these sites are appearing as frequently as some say, it didn’t discourage them enough.

    Of course there are plenty of EMD sites that do offer quality content, and deserve to rank just as much as the next site. We talked about this with Todd Malicoat (aka: Stuntdubl) last year.

    Image: DenverLawyers.com

  • Google EMD Update: What Is Its Real Impact?

    Google EMD Update: What Is Its Real Impact?

    As you may have noticed, Google has been announcing a lot of algorithm changes lately. This big round of “weather reports” kicked off a couple weeks ago, when Matt Cutts announced the EMD update. He described it as a “minor” weather report, indicating that that it was a “small” change designed to reduce low-quality exact-match domains in search results. He said it would affect 0.6% of English-US queries to a noticeable degree, noting that it was unrelated to Panda/Penguin.

    Do you consider any of Google’s recent updates to be minor? Let us know in the comments.

    The update may have been small as far as Cutts was concerned, but the flood of complaints from webmasters claiming to have been hit suggested otherwise. However, Cutts later revealed that a Panda update had also launched around the same time, and even since then, he has announced a Penguin data refresh and a new update to the Page Layout algorithm. There is plenty going on in Google land that webmasters are finding they need to pay attention to (not to mention those 65 changes Google announced last week that took place in August and September).

    So in light of all of this, how big was the EMD update really? Well, if your site was hit and you do not operate any exact-match domains, it’s probably safe to assume that you were not hit by that update. For the many who do operate EMDs, however, it’s not so simple. Remember, the update is not necessarily going after sites with EMDs. It’s going after low quality sites with EMDs. Much like Panda, it’s really about quality.

    We had a discussion with Todd Malicoat (aka: Stuntdubl), SEO Faculty at MarketMotive.com, who has a fair amount of experience with EMDs and even wrote The Exact Match Domain Playbook: A Guide and Best Practices For EMDs for SEOmoz after the update hit.

    “It’s important to remember that Google does at least a couple changes per day on average,” he says. “A lot of times, they will save up several updates, and release them simultaneously. Exact match domains have been on Matt and his team’s radar for well over 2 years. I think it’s a very difficult thing to ‘draw the line’ of which domains are okay and which aren’t. Google continues to find relevant sites based on page quality, offsite value, domain authority, and keyword relevance. The EMD update is just one in a lot of changes Google has done in the last few weeks, but it is obviously significant.”

    As Malicoat pointed out in his playbook, Cutts actually hinted at this update early last year in one of his Webmaster Help videos. “We have looked at the rankings and weights that we give to keyword domains and some people have complained that we’re giving a little too much weight for keywords in domains,” Cutts said at the time. “And so we have been thinking about adjusting that mix a little bit and sort of turning the knob down within the algorithm so that given two different domains, it wouldn’t necessarily help you as much to have a domain with a bunch of keywords in it.”

    “Anytime an ‘update’ is named it will be a filter or factor that plays a role in how the algo works,” continues Malicoat. “How wide of an impact is not quite as important in trying to determine what changed. Unfortunately, I think even the best of SEO folks are still struggling with exactly what happend in the ‘animal updates’. I try not to make too many assumptions about an update before there’s some time to really experience how it changes a handful of sites and the search results experience. I think as a consultant you can only react to best practices after you understand what they are.”

    “People have been using EMD’s and anchor text for the last few years as a best practice, and I believe it was,” he says. “Those practices have definitely changed, and I think those who move quickly are trying to figure out just HOW MUCH these things have changed. It’s very difficult to tell with a very limited release where only a small percentage of queries are originally effected. Sometimes even seemingly small changes have lasting effects. The bigger issue at play is how significant the changes to keyword anchor text will be.”

    Google has reportedly confirmed that it will launch refreshes for the EMD update periodically, much like it does for Panda and Penguin.

    All of these updates are designed to increase the quality of Google’s search results. Beyond the EMD update, Google has recently made other changes to how it handles domains in different cases. Before the EMD update, Google announced the Domain Diversity update, for example. In its recently announced list of 65 changes from the past two months, Google revealed another domain-related tweak related to freshness to help users find the latest content from a given site when two or more documents from the same domain are relevant for a given query. Is Google getting better at delivering relevant results thanks to such changes?

    “I don’t think anyone can argue that Google results are becoming LESS relevant in most verticals – Google’s results have always shown consistent improvements overall,” says Malicoat. “Relevance is rather subjective depending on who you ask though. Unfortunately, there’s always issues for someone. There’s only so many results, and organic search has become an important part of the marketing mix. It’s hard to support a business without Google sending at least some relevant users to your website.”

    “I don’t always agree with relevance changes, but I come at it from a much different perspective than most,” he notes. “It’s important to embrace the changes and be able to change your strategy with them if you’re going to be an SEO practitioner.”

    When asked if he believes Google’s results have improved in general, in light of recent updates, he says, “I really don’t think I’m the ‘average user’ to ask that sort of question unfortunately. I would come to the conclusion of what makes ‘relevant’ search results with a much different bias than most after being a search user for well over a decade. I’m also the co-owner of Marauder Sport Fishing which uses MiamiFishing.com as our domain, so my opinion is certainly biased.”

    “In my opinion, there are plenty of conflicting interests under the G umbrella these days,” he adds. “That means relevance alone can’t really ALWAYS be the main priority. The one thing they are not lacking is data. They have data and intelligence to make relevance decisions like no other company or entity on earth.”

    “Panda and penguin are both upgrades that raised the bar on the quality a website needs to demonstrate to receive organic search traffic,” he says. “That can be good or bad depending on perspective. It means more authoritative sites are ranking, and websites that don’t display all the quality signals necessary will not attract the traffic. The barrier to entry for new sites is higher, but the occurrence of spam is lower. There’s always some tradeoff in those two things I think.”

    And really, regardless of all of these updates and their various functions and names, they tend to have one main thing in common. They’re designed to improve search results’ quality. Panda is flat out about quality content. Penguin is about getting rid of spam (which makes for a low quality experience). The EMD update goes after EMDs with low quality content. Google’s main message is that you should just produce quality content, and you’ll be fine. Still, quality is subjective, and there are plenty of webmasters getting hit by algorithm updates who would argue that it’s not that simple – webmasters who really believe they do provide quality content.

    “Google is forcing sites to EARN traffic rather than just get it,” says Malicoat. “I think we’ve seen this before, and we’ll see it again. As an optimizer, I don’t look at many of the changes as good or bad – only a change that requires a change in strategy to keep relevant traffic flowing to a website.”

    Businesses and sites need to decide how important Google traffic is. For instance, do Google referrals outweigh the benefits of other potential benefits that could be received by not going the “please Google” route? Since the Penguin update, we’ve seen a lot of sites frantically asking for other sites to stop linking to them. In some cases, the sites asking for the removals admit that they would like to have these links out there, but are having them removed for fear of Google not liking them (even when there is no direct evidence that these links in particular are hurting their Google rankings). In other words, they have become so desperate to combat the negative Penguin experience that they’re overreacting and removing genuine, natural links.

    As Malicoat points out, there are benefits to having EMDs.

    “EMD’s definitely have lots of benefits – though you have to take my opinion with some bias – I own more than a few of them,” he tells us. “In the current Google climate, EMD’s are the symptom of a problem, and therefore an easy target. Link anchor text was a very large part of the Google algo, and is being slowly dialed down. EMD’s were where anchor text problems were MOST apparent. Most competitors were amazed how easily EMD’s ranked in the last few years, and complaints started.”

    “There’s still lots of benefits in EMD’s,” he reiterates. “They are great for: attracting keyword anchor text, attracting social mentions with targeted keywords, better for dominating a small niche, saying what you do in a geo vertical (DenverLawyers.com, DuluthDentists.net, etc.), targeting long tail variations in a small keyword set, and making brand mentions and keyword mentions the same.”

    Not to beat a dead horse, but the key seems to be making sure the quality of your site and its content are as good as they can be. You can have a domain like DenverLawyers.com. Just don’t treat it like a useless piece of crap, and perhaps Google will not either.

    If you want to review the things Google is thinking about when it comes to quality, I’d suggest running through these bullet points Google put out after the Panda update last year.

    Out of Google’s recently announced updates, which do you believe has had the greatest impact on webmasters? On search results? Which has had the greatest impact on you? Share your thoughts in the comments.

  • Matt Cutts Warned Us About The EMD Update Over A Year Ago

    Todd Malicoat wrote an interesting article about the exact match domain update for SEOmoz this week. In that, he points to a Webmaster Help video from Google’s Matt Cutts from early 2011, where he hinted that Google would be “turning down” exact match domains as a ranking signal. Here’s what he said exactly:

    “We have looked at the rankings and weights that we give to keyword domains and some people have complained that we’re giving a little too much weight for keywords in domains. And so we have been thinking about adjusting that mix a little bit and sort of turning the knob down within the algorithm so that given two different domains, it wouldn’t necessarily help you as much to have a domain with a bunch of keywords in it.”

    Malicoat also points to an article from Bill Slawki from last year looking at a patent for Systems and methods for detecting commercial queries, which talks about exact match domains.

  • Google EMD Update: It Will Be Back Repeatedly

    Not that this will come as much of a surprise, but Google’s EMD update, which Matt Cutts announced a week ago, will be an ongoing, periodic update, much like our other algorithmic friends Panda and Penguin.

    Danny Sullivan confirmed as much with Google. He writes, “Google confirmed for me this week that EMD is a periodic filter. It isn’t constantly running and looking for bad EMD domains to filter. It’s designed to be used from time-to-time to ensure that what was filtered out before should continue to be filtered. It also works to catch new things that may have been missed before.”

    Like I noted here, Sullivan says the advice for EMD recovery is pretty much like that for Panda recovery. “After you’ve removed the poor quality content, it’s waiting time. You’ll only see a change the next time the EMD filter is run,” he says. “When will that be? Google’s not saying, but based on the history of Panda, it’s likely to be within the next three months, and eventually it might move to a monthly basis.”

    Google, if you haven’t heard, actually did launch a new Panda update to roll out alongside the EMD update, so webmasters have had to deal with both updates at the same time, trying to figure out which one they’re actually being affected by. Luckily, the cure is probably the same for both. Quality.

    By the way, Google has been making other changes to its algorithm related to the quality of pages. More on that here. There was also another recent domain-related algorithm tweak (in addition to the domain diversity update).

  • Google Reveals Yet Another Domain-Related Algorithm Tweak

    Google finally released its big lists of algorithm changes for the months of August and September. There are 65 changes on the lists in all. We’ll be discussing various components in different articles.

    The first thing that strikes me about the two-month list is that the word “domains” is only mentioned once. We know that Google launched the “Domain Diversity” update in September, as Google’s Matt Cutts tweeted about it when it happened. Then, this past Friday, he also tweeted about the EMD update targeting exact-match domains. With both of these actually announced via Twitter, it seemed to indicate a new focus on domain-related signals from the search giant.

    That’s why I’m a bit surprised that there aren’t more entries to this list that are directly related to domains. In fact, there aren’t even two (which would account for both of the ones Cutts tweeted about). Perhaps they didn’t bother to include them, because they thought the tweets were enough (though they still included a previously tweeted about Panda refresh).

    Anyhow, here’s the one domain-related entry from Google’s latest lists, and it happened sometime in September, interestingly enough, under the “Freshness” project banner:

    #83761. [project “Freshness”] This change helped you find the latest content from a given site when two or more documents from the same domain are relevant for a given search query.

    So what do we know about how Google is treating domains differently now? For one, the domain name signal itself appears to have been reduced with the exact-match domain update. Google is wanting to show less results from the same domain in more instances (with the domain diversity update), and for search results pages that do still show multiple results from the same domain, Google is likely to rank the newer one higher (based on the listing above).

    Another domain-related tweak

    This does indeed suggest a new focus on domain-related signals, and given that much of this has come to light only around the end of September, it seems entirely possible that Google will continue this focus into October. Of course, at this rate, we’ll have to wait until sometime in December to even know about them.

    We’ll talk about about freshness more in a coming article.

  • Google: By The Way, A Panda Update Is Rolling Out Alongside The EMD Update

    Last Friday, Google announced the EMD update. It was billed as a small and minor update, but the effects seemed to be fairly large, with many webmasters claiming to have been hit. Google’s Matt Cutts made it a point to say that the algorithm change was unrelated to both Panda and Penguin.

    He then said it was not the only update that was rolling out during that timeframe, noting that Google makes changes every day (over 500 a year). He didn’t happen to mention that there was a new Panda update, however. Finally, he has dropped the news that there was indeed a Panda update going on at the same time as the EMD update (and it’s still rolling out).

    Were you impacted by one of these updates? Are you able to discern which one it was? Let us know in the comments.

    Search Engine Land reports that Google released a Panda algorithm update (not a data refresh, but an actual update) on Thursday, and that it impacts 2.4% of English search queries (and is still rolling out). That’s significantly larger than the 0.6% of English-US queries Cutts said the EMD update affected. So, it seems that the majority of those claiming to be hit by the EMD update were likely hit by Panda (which would explain those claiming to be hit, that didn’t have exact match domains).

    Here’s the exact statement from Cutts that the publication is sharing: “Google began rolling out a new update of Panda on Thursday, 9/27. This is actually a Panda algorithm update, not just a data update. A lot of the most-visible differences went live Thursday 9/27, but the full rollout is baking into our index and that process will continue for another 3-4 days or so. This update affects about 2.4% of English queries to a degree that a regular user might notice, with a smaller impact in other languages (0.5% in French and Spanish, for example).”

    Couldn’t he have just said that in the first place? Google had to know the confusion this would cause. Since the original Panda update, Google has made more of an effort to be transparent about algorithm changes, and it certainly has been. It seems, however, like delayed transparency is becoming the trend recently.

    For months, Google was releasing monthly lists of updates that had been made the prior month. The last time, they left people waiting before finally posting a giant list for two months’ worth of changes. It seems that Google is doing this again, as we have yet to see lists for August or September (assuming Google is about to release these lists).

    Either way, it appears the Panda continues to wreak havoc on webmasters. Wait until they get a load of the next Penguin.

    For those sites that were hit, obviously if there is not an exact match domain involved, that makes the problem a little easier to figure out, at least in terms of which update the site was actually hit by. It seems unlikely that the EMD update would have done much to impact you if your site does not use an EMD. Which leaves Panda (and of course, any other updates that Google hasn’t told us about – they do make changes every day, and often more than one in a day).

    While Cutts said that the EMD update is unrelated to Panda, that is not necessarily the case, depending on how you view the comment. Algorithmically speaking, I presume Cutts means the two have nothing to do with each other. However, in concept, the two are very similar in that they go after low quality. So, doesn’t it stand to reason that if you improve the quality of your content, you could actually recover from either update? That is assuming that the EMD update is one that can be recovered from. Let’s put it this way: if it’s possible to recover from the EMD update (which most likely it probably is), improving the quality of your site and content should be the main objective.

    This just happens to be the same objective for recovering from Panda. Of course quality is subjective, and Google has it’s own view of what this entails. Luckily for webmasters Google has essentially laid out exactly what it is looking for from content, specifically with regards to the Panda update.

    Googe has pretty much given webmaster the rules of the road to Panda recovery, even if they’re not official rules. You’ve probably seen the list before, but if you were never hit by the Panda update until now, maybe you haven’t. Either way, here are the questions Google listed last year as “questions that one could use to assess the quality of a page or an article:

    • Would you trust the information presented in this article?
    • Is this article written by an expert or enthusiast who knows the topic well, or is it more shallow in nature?
    • Does the site have duplicate, overlapping, or redundant articles on the same or similar topics with slightly different keyword variations?
    • Would you be comfortable giving your credit card information to this site?
    • Does this article have spelling, stylistic, or factual errors?
    • Are the topics driven by genuine interests of readers of the site, or does the site generate content by attempting to guess what might rank well in search engines?
    • Does the article provide original content or information, original reporting, original research, or original analysis?
    • Does the page provide substantial value when compared to other pages in search results?
    • How much quality control is done on content?
    • Does the article describe both sides of a story?
    • Is the site a recognized authority on its topic?
    • Is the content mass-produced by or outsourced to a large number of creators, or spread across a large network of sites, so that individual pages or sites don’t get as much attention or care?
    • Was the article edited well, or does it appear sloppy or hastily produced?
    • For a health related query, would you trust information from this site?
    • Would you recognize this site as an authoritative source when mentioned by name?
    • Does this article provide a complete or comprehensive description of the topic?
    • Does this article contain insightful analysis or interesting information that is beyond obvious?
    • Is this the sort of page you’d want to bookmark, share with a friend, or recommend?
    • Does this article have an excessive amount of ads that distract from or interfere with the main content?
    • Would you expect to see this article in a printed magazine, encyclopedia or book?
    • Are the articles short, unsubstantial, or otherwise lacking in helpful specifics?
    • Are the pages produced with great care and attention to detail vs. less attention to detail?
    • Would users complain when they see pages from this site?

    Of course, Google uses over 200 signals in all, but that should get you started on thinking about your site’s content.

    And with regards to the EMD update, remember, Google is targeting “low quality” EMDs. Not simply EMDs in general.

    We’ve provided tons of coverage of the Panda update since Google first launched it. To learn more about it, feel free to peruse the Panda section of WebProNews.

    Do you think Google has improved its search results with this algorithm combo? Is Google being transparent enough about algorithm updates for your taste? Let us know what you think in the comments.

    Image credit: Rick Bucich

  • Google EMD Update: Good Or Bad For Search?

    On Friday, Google’s Matt Cutts revealed that Google was rolling out a new algorithm update geared at reducing “low-quality” exact match domains in search results. He indicated that “the EMD algo” affects 0.6% of English-US queries “to a noticeable degree”.

    As a webmaster or site owner, have you noticed an impact from this update? Have you noticed a dramatic change in search results as a user? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Just to clear up any confusion from the start, Cutts also said the EMD update is unrelated to the Panda and Penguin updates. Here are his exact tweets:

    While 0.6% of English-US queries may not sound like an incredible amount of results impacted, there are already tons of people claiming to have been hit by the update. Here is a small sampling of the comments we’ve received from readers:

    90% of my sites got hit. Yes they had part of a keyword in the domain name but other than one site, I wouldn’t consider the rest of them low-quality sites. Each one had high quality unique content, numerous pages.

    This is utter nonsense. I have a site which was hit that the domain name contained one keyword that I was ranking for. But, I was also ranking for 15 other keywords that weren’t related to the domain name, but they are also nowhere to be seen in google. This is a site with 100′s of pages of unique, quality content, all hand written by me, with a high quality well followed facebook fan page. Just gone. I’m just glad I can rely on facebook for quality traffic, as it doesn’t seem that google can provide that anymore.

    Okay, at least I know what happened. Two of my websites are gone. Good sites, with unique content and a lot of backlinks and work behind.

    Some readers appear to welcome the update. Here are a few of the more positive comments we’ve received:

    I’ve been waiting for an update like this for a long time. I’ve speculated that something like this has been in the works because a brand is almost always going to be more valuable than a spammy exact match domain.

    Good Authoritative content is all that has ever mattered & has been the Google mantra from the start, The EMD with “Good Authoritative” root domain content will always have the edge…

    I was waiting for this update it may brings my blogs up in the google search. I have blogs which don’t have keywords in urls. This updates helps a lot.

    Here’s some additional reaction from Twitter:

    Dr. Peter J. Meyers at SEOmoz put together some research on the update using MozCast “Top-View” metrics, indicating that despite Cutts’ wording of “upcoming,” the change appears to had already begun:

    EMD data from SEOmoz

    “We measured a 24-hour drop in EMD influence from 3.58% to 3.21%,” writes Meyers. “This represents a day-over-day change of 10.3%. While the graph only shows the 30-day view, this also marks the lowest measurement of EMD influence on record since we started collecting data in early April.”

    The following sites are some examples of those who got hit, according to Meyers (though he acknowledges he can’t prove they were definitely because of this specific update – it does seem highly likely): bmicalculatormale.com, charterschools.org, playscrabble.net, purses.org, and teethwhitening.com. None of these had actually ranked number one for their respective keywords, according to Meyers, but they went from postions like 3, 4 and 7, to dropping significantly.

    It will be interesting to see if more domain-related changes are announced. This is the second one Cutts has tweeted about in recent weeks. He recently talked about a domain diversity update.

    When Google releases its monthly (sometimes) lists of algorithm changes, there is often a visible theme from month to month. In June, for example, there were quite a few updates related to how Google handles natural language. I wonder if we might see more domain-related tweaks when Google finally releases the September (and August) lists. Perhaps there will be more heading into October.

    What do you think of the EMD update? Good move on Google’s part? Let us know in the comments.

  • Google EMD Update Was Accompanied By At Least One Other Update

    Update: Apparently the other update people are experiencing was a new Panda update. Google transparency at its finest.

    As you probably know by now, Google’s Matt Cutts announced an algorithm change on Friday – the EMD update. The change was designed to reduce low low-quality exact match domains in search results. Cutts deemed the change “small” and tweeted about it as a “minor” weather report.

    Based on all of the complaints we’re seeing (you can read plenty of them in the comments of this article), it may not have been all that minor. Cutts said that the change affects 0.6% of English-US queries to a noticeable degree, and noted that it was unrelated to Panda or Penguin. Still, based on all of these sites claiming to have been hit, you would think it was Panda or Penguin.

    Some webmasters claim to have been hit, but not necessarily on sites with exact match domains. So why would they have taken such a hit? Well, it’s not news that Google launches various changes to its algorithm on a day to day basis. The company often gives the “over 500 a year” number. This time is no different.

    Search Engine Roundtable is pointing to a reply Cutts gave to one person on Twitter about the situation, where he noted that he knows of one change that was also released during the same timeframe as the EMD update. Here’s the exchange (with another interesting one about Google’s struggle with quality thrown in):

     
     
     
     
     
     

    While it’s not that interesting that Google launched another change the same time as the EMD update (again, it’s common knowledge that Google pushes changes every day), it is interesting that so many people are complaining about being hit when the update Cutts tweeted about was said to be so small, and that many of those claiming to have been hit were not dealing with exact match domains. If another change had as big of an impact, a greater impact, or anywhere close to the impact as the EMD update, why wouldn’t Google announce that one?

    Meanwhile, we’re still waiting on Google to be “transparent” about the changes it has made over the course of August and September, with its monthly (at least they used to be) lists. All of that combined with new updates to Google ‘s Webmaster Guidelines should be enough to keep webmasters busy for a bit.