WebProNews

Tag: Mobile Search

  • Google Will Now Prioritize Page Speed for Mobile Search

    Google Will Now Prioritize Page Speed for Mobile Search

    A few days ago, Google announced the introduction of an enhanced PageSpeed Insights tool to aid website owners in optimizing the loading speed of their pages. It now turns out that publishers may need to use the enhanced tool a lot more than expected. In a recent announcement, Google finally revealed an important factor that will be used to rank mobile pages and its all about loading speed.

    Starting in July 2018, Google will make changes to the way it prioritizes mobile pages in search ranking results. Called the “Speed Update,” the company will be giving more importance to the page speed in ranking search results.

    Of course, page speed will not be the only factor used to determine the ranking of mobile pages. There will be times where even slower loading pages will still be ranked higher, as long as it still contains the most relevant content relative to the search query. In fact, Google said that the change will only affect a small percentage of total mobile queries.

    “The ‘Speed Update,’ as we’re calling it, will only affect pages that deliver the slowest experience to users and will only affect a small percentage of queries,” Google’s Zhiheng Wang and Doantam Phan explained. “It applies the same standard to all pages, regardless of the technology used to build the page. The intent of the search query is still a very strong signal, so a slow page may still rank highly if it has great, relevant content.”

    In February 2016, Google gave the indication that loading speed would matter in search query results ranking by highlighting pages using AMP (Accelerated Mobile Page) technology. By April of last year, Google News started giving priority to news articles published on AMP sites.

    Of course, Google’s end goal is to give a better experience for mobile users of its search engine. At the moment, it’s not yet clear if the same algorithm change will be adapted to desktop users as well.

    [Featured image via Flickr]

  • Google Completes Rollout Of Mobile-Friendly Search Boost

    Google Completes Rollout Of Mobile-Friendly Search Boost

    Google Webmaster Trends Analyst John Mueller tweeted that the boost it earlier posted about favoring mobile-friendly sites is now live for all search results. If your site is not mobile-friendly you will see your Google search referrals go down and if your site works great in all mobile devices you should see some improvement. In essence, if two sites are equally targeted to be a top search result for a given query the site that is the most mobile friendly will show up while the other site will move down the list.

    Google recommends that you check your site with its Mobile-Friendly Test tool. You can also read Google’s Webmaster Mobile Guide for more information.

  • Yahoo Updates Mobile Web Search

    Yahoo Updates Mobile Web Search

    Yahoo announced some updates to Yahoo Search on the mobile web with new Twitter integration, new image search, a results refresh, and AMP compatibility.

    “Before 2015 comes to a close, we’d like to share some of the many improvements we’ve made in recent weeks to Yahoo Search on mobile web in the U.S.,” says director of product Alok Agarwal. “Through constant iteration and experimentation, our aim is that collectively, these small but mighty changes will connect you more immediately with the answers you’re looking for, and help you discover interesting and related information.”

    With the Twitter integration, Yahoo will show users top tweets related to celebrity searches in the results pages. It looks pretty similar to Google’s recent integration:

    On the new image search, Agarwal says, “We’re bringing you a new way to discover pictures of your favorite celebrities. Find photos of the celebrity first, then explore additional photo sets based on trending content that other users have engaged with– be it photos of Angelina Jolie’s wedding dress, tattoos, red carpet look and more.”

    With the results revamp, the latest news stories are highlighted and the algorithm has been tweaked to surface the most recent and popular stories at the top of the news results stream.

    Finally, with AMP compatibility, Yahoo joins Google’s open source efforts to make mobile web pages load faster and satisfy users more quickly.

    More on AMP here.

    Images via Yahoo

  • Google Adds Entertainment Info To Mobile Results

    Google Adds Entertainment Info To Mobile Results

    Google announced on Friday that starting today it will now give more details on musicians, actors, TV shows, and movies in search results.

    Product manager Satyajeet Salgar says, “Wondering if your favorite singer is playing near you? Or looking for some new music suggestions?Or maybe you’re watching a TV show and can’t remember where you’ve seen that actor before? No matter what music, actors, movies or shows you love, our new update will keep you in the know.”

    “And for TV shows and movies, it’s easier to explore past and upcoming episodes, get a recommendation on what to watch next, check out the cast and find showtimes near you,” Salgar adds.

    The feature is available for Android for now. It will hit iOS in the near future.

    Images via Google

  • The Next Big Phase of Google Search Is Coming Early Next Year

    The Next Big Phase of Google Search Is Coming Early Next Year

    Last month, Google announced Accelerated Mobile Pages, a new open source project, which is basically its answer to Facebook’s Instant Articles. Like Instant Articles, the purpose of the project is to enable web pages to load more quickly on mobile devices.

    Google announced on Tuesday that it will begin sending traffic to AMP pages in Google search beginning early next year. They didn’t give a specific date, but said they intend to share “more concrete specifics on timing very soon.” Stay tuned for that. It remains to be seen whether or not these pages will get a ranking boost by default, but given Google’s emphasis on the mobile experience, it seems very likely that AMPs will benefit.

    Are you planning to implement Accelerated Mobile Pages? Let us know in the comments.

    “We want webpages with rich content like video, animations and graphics to work alongside smart ads, and to load instantaneously,” Google explained when the project was announced. “We also want the same code to work across multiple platforms and devices so that content can appear everywhere in an instant—no matter what type of phone, tablet or mobile device you’re using.”

    The program utilizes a new open framework called AMP HTML, which is built on existing web technologies, and is aimed at letting websites build light-weight pages.

    As far as ranking goes, Danny Sullivan said in a tweet last month that AMP pages won’t rank better because they’re AMP, but noted that Google already rewards speedy pages, so they can still benefit.

    Google has already made mobile-friendliness a ranking signal, and the whole point of AMPs is to make for a better mobile experience. It’s hard to imagine a scenario in which AMPs aren’t benefiting in rankings.

    “Thousands of publishers have expressed interest in AMP since the preview launched with the likes of the BBC, Sankei, New York Times, News Corp, Washington Post and more,” write David Besbris (Vice President of Engineering, Google Search) and Richard Gingras (Head of News, Google) in a blog post. “Since then, many others have committed their support to the project, including R7.com and NZN Group in Brazil; CBS Interactive, AOL, Thrillist, Slate, International Business Times/Newsweek, Al Jazeera America and The Next Web in the US; El Universal and Milenio in Mexico; The Globe and Mail and Postmedia in Canada, as well as many more across the globe. The Local Media Consortium (LMC), a partnership of 70+ media companies collectively representing 1,600 local newspapers and television stations, has also voiced their support.”

    The two also announced that Outbrain, AOL, OpenX, DoubleCLick, and AdSense are working within the project’s framework to improve the ad experience for users, publishers, and advertisers. More information on this will come in the near future, they say.

    “Ensuring that traffic to AMP articles is counted just like current web articles is also a major focus of the project,” they write. “comScore, Adobe Analytics, Parse.ly and Chartbeat have all stated that they intend to provide analytics for AMP pages within their tools. They have since been joined by many others: Nielsen, ClickTale and Google Analytics. This development is significant for the AMP Project because publishers developing for AMP will not skip a beat in terms of analytics and measurement — analytics for AMP are real time and will work within your existing provider.”

    According to Google, there are over 4,500 developers expressing interest in AMP with over 250 contributions of new code, samples, and documentation having been made. Discussions are also underway related to analytics and template features.

    With Google Search the mobile experience has been they key narrative throughout 2015, and it looks like that will continue throughout next year, largely driven by AMP.

    Has this development been on your radar thus far? What do you think of the project? Discuss.

    Image via Google/AMPProject.org

  • Check Out Bing’s New iPhone App

    Check Out Bing’s New iPhone App

    Microsoft unveiled a new Bing app for iPhone, which it says will let users find and do things faster. According to the company, it goes so far as to “re-think search”.

    Take a look:

    “Mobile search is different from search on a PC. With mobile, we want instant answers and the ability to take immediate action,” says Richard Qian, CVP Bing UX Engineering. “We want to book it, buy it, watch it now. We want to touch more and type less. We want to search once in a single app. The new Bing app for iPhone helps you search and take action from one place so you can focus on the things that you want to find and do, rather than where and how to accomplish them. Here are a few examples.”

    Microsoft is touting the app’s use of app deep linking to help people find movies to watch and songs to listen to. Searching a movie might bring you app results from Netflix, Amazon, iTunes, and/or Vudu, for example. For a song, you might be presented with Spotify, YouTube, iTunes, and/or Amazon results.

    “Ready for a night out? The Bing app helps you find the perfect restaurant,” says Qian. “Narrow down choices based on the things that are most important to you with our touch-optimized interface. Get reviews, menus, directions, make a reservation and get a ride right there from the apps you trust. And the night doesn’t need to stop there. We’ll help you find movies in nearby cinemas, and of course, you can book tickets right from the app.”

    Google is also doing more with apps on mobile search. The company announced today that it is utilizing its app indexing in a new way to actually display content from apps right in search results.

    Images via Microsoft

  • Facebook Lets Google Index Mobile App

    Facebook Lets Google Index Mobile App

    Google is now reportedly indexing Facebook’s mobile app as part of its app indexing efforts.

    Google has been encouraging app developers to utilize its app indexing resources to enable mobile users to get to content within apps from Google search results. Google has even made app indexing a ranking signal.

    Apparently Facebook wasn’t getting involved until now. The Wall Street Journal is reporting that Facebook is now allowing Google to crawl in-app content. Of course the content is the same stuff Google was already accessing on the web version, such as public profile information. From the report:

    The agreement means that results from Google searches on smartphones will display some content from Facebook’s app, including public profile information. The listings will appear as “deep links” that will take users to the relevant part of the Facebook app, the spokeswoman said.

    Google can’t show content shared through logged-in and private Facebook app sessions, meaning it is still locked out of most information inside the walled garden of Facebook’s social network. For those searches, users will have to use Facebook’s search service, which it recently updated.

    Facebook has been going to great lengths to improve its own search service. The company recently announced some major improvements to search across personal connections and public posts, and is now testing in-profile search.

    It’s unclear from the Journal’s report whether Google is indexing Facebook’s app on just Android, just iOS, or both. The ability to index Android apps has been around for a longer time, but Google recently expanded its efforts to include iOS.

    For more on app indexing, view our related coverage here.

    Image via Google Play

  • This Google Stat Has Major Implications For Your Site

    This Google Stat Has Major Implications For Your Site

    In May, Google casually noted in a blog post that mobile searches have overtaken desktop searches in ten countries including the United States and Japan. It didn’t elaborate on what the other countries were.

    Do you get more mobile traffic than desktop traffic? What’s the split like? Discuss.

    The following month, Google mentioned another country by name, adding the United Kingdom to the list. Matt Jackson at SocialMediaToday reported at the time:

    During a presentation at London Tech Week, Google’s Eileen Naughton said that not only are more searches conducted on UK mobile devices than on UK desktops, but that more UK YouTube searches were also conducted on mobile devices.

    The YouTube part is interesting as well, as Google hadn’t mentioned that before when talking about this subject, at least to my knowledge.

    The growing mobile search trend obviously illustrates why Google has put so much emphasis on websites being mobile-friendly and begun taking app indexing into account when ranking search results.

    The world is going mobile, and websites that don’t follow are going to be left behind. A recent study found that the mobile-friendly update bumped down about half of pages it threatened to, but it’s still early days. It’s not as if mobile-friendliness is going to become less of a factor going forward.

    Last week, Search Engine Land spoke with Google, and was told that mobile searches have now exceeded desktop searches worldwide. In other words, more than 50% of Google’s searches happen on mobile.

    Danny Sullivan wrote, “It’s important to note that this doesn’t mean that desktop searches have diminished. Stats on desktop search from comScore routinely show the overall amount has risen from month to month. Rather, it’s that mobile searches have been a growing new segment that have caught up and now overtaken desktop search. On the whole, desktop search has grown. As a percentage, it has dropped.”

    Google’s John Mueller said in a Google+ post (via Search Engine Roundtable), “More than half of Google’s searches are now coming from mobile. If you haven’t made your site (or your client’s sites) mobile-friendly, you’re ignoring a lot of potential users.”

    On the app indexing front, Google has also indexed over 100 billion pages within apps so far, and it’s only really getting started with this on iOS.

    Yahoo’s Flurry recently released a report looking at people’s addiction to their mobile devices. In short, addiction is on the rise.

    “On June 29th Bank of America released the findings of its second annual report on Consumer Mobility,” said Simon Khalaf, SVP of Publisher Products at Flurry. “The report showed that the US population is perpetually plugged-in with 71% of those surveyed disclosing they actually sleep with their smartphones. This prompted us to revisit the study we conducted in Q2 of 2014 in which we first uncovered the rise of a new breed of mobile users: the Mobile Addicts.”

    According to the report, worldwide mobile addicts grew 59% over the last year.

    Year over year, the total population of smart devices measured by Flurry grew from by 38% from 1.3B to 1.8B. Regular Users (those who use apps between once and sixteen times daily) grew by 25% from 784 million to 985 million. Super Users (those who use apps between 16 and 60 times daily) grew 34% from 440 million to 590 million. Mobile addicts (those who launch applications 60 times or more per day) grew 59% from from 176 million to 280 million.

    According to Flurry, if the amount of mobile addicts were the population of a country, it would be the fourth largest just behind the United States.

    Flurry shares more analysis on its findings here.

    Related Reading: Will ‘Accelerated Mobile Pages’ Help Google Rankings?

    Is your site in good shape when it comes to reaching mobile users or do you have some work to do? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Google, Flurry

  • Google Names Another Country Where Mobile Searches Have Overtaken Desktop

    Google Names Another Country Where Mobile Searches Have Overtaken Desktop

    Last month, Google casually noted in a blog post that mobile searches have overtaken desktop searches in ten countries including the United States and Japan. It didn’t elaborate on what the other countries were.

    Now, Google has mentioned another country by name. You can add the United Kingdom to that list. Matt Jackson at SocialMediaToday reports:

    During a presentation at London Tech Week, Google’s Eileen Naughton said that not only are more searches conducted on UK mobile devices than on UK desktops, but that more UK YouTube searches were also conducted on mobile devices.

    The YouTube part is interesting as well, as Google hasn’t mentioned that before when talking about this subject, at least to my knowledge.

    The growing mobile search trend obviously illustrates why Google has put so much emphasis on websites being mobile-friendly and begun taking app indexing into account when ranking search results.

    The world is going mobile, and websites that don’t follow are going to be left behind. A recent study found that the mobile-friendly update bumped down about half of pages it threatened to, but it’s still early days. It’s not as if mobile-friendliness is going to become less of a factor going forward.

    Image via Google

  • Google Starts Indexing iOS App Content

    Google Starts Indexing iOS App Content

    Google just took its App Indexing initiative to the next level with the announcement that it is bringing app indexing to iOS apps.

    This is huge news considering that many app developers build for iOS before Android if they even bother to build for Android at all. Google recently named app indexing as a ranking signal in mobile search results as well.

    Product manager Eli Wald says in a blog post:

    We’ve been helping users discover relevant content from Android apps in Google search results for a while now. Starting today, we’re bringing App Indexing to iOS apps as well. This means users on both Android and iOS will be able to open mobile app content straight from Google Search.

    Indexed links from an initial group of apps we’ve been working with will begin appearing on iOS in search results both in the Google App and Chrome for signed-in users globally in the coming weeks.

    Google says it wants to make the technology available to more app developers ASAP, so if you want to get a head start, you should add deep linking support to your iOS app, make sure it’s possible to return to search results with one click, provide deep link annotations on your site, and let Google know you’re interested.

    For Android, read: How To Set Up App Indexing For Ranking In Google

    Google I/O is about to begin this week, and you can count on there being plenty of content related to this coming from there.

    Last week, Google Search Console (formerly Webmaster Tools) added new reports to show how Google understands and treats app content in search results.

    Image via Google

  • This Isn’t Really How Yahoo Expects To Compete In Search Is It?

    Yahoo held a conference call on Tuesday to discuss its Q1 earnings. Over the course of the call, CEO Marissa Mayer said a lot about search in her prepared remarks before talking about the subject even more in the Q&A session.

    It turns out that she was apparently alluding to an actual product the company is building, which would aim to compete with things like Siri, Google Now, and Microsoft’s Cortana. If Yahoo wants to compete in mobile search, which it obviously does, it would certainly make sense for the company to have its own take on this type of search/virtual assistant product.

    Some words from Mayer (via SeekingAlpha’s transcript of the call):

    I really think that there are two types of products that are emerging. The classic web search, call it deep reference web search which is classic Google search, Bing search, and there’s a new class of products that’s really arising with Cortana, Siri, Google Now. And those products are really heavily differentiated both from each other as well as from the historic legacy products and so that’s really where we see an opportunity to play, in something that’s mobile and as it moves to, for example, the watch and on to television screens and video, we think that there’s a really interesting place to play there to help people make better sense of the content they already have access to, content in their mail, using more context to actually provide higher quality results.

    I’ve given examples, things like, for example, searching for JFK producing essentially my boarding pass and the gate number on a search results page en route to the airport, rather than just producing the John F. Kennedy Wikipedia page. I’ve used an example like that on previous calls, so that’s really where we see a big opportunity. And the profile for searching people’s personal information, pulling in context, searching entities and making search more action oriented is a very different problem than crawling a trillion or more URLs and perfectly ordering millions of results.

    We think that’s something that’s potentially more relevant to users of technology as we move forward. And that’s really where we’re excited to invest and that’s why we’ve worked on things like Aviate, like Search My World and we’ve been making investments there and we’d like to do more with that and that’s what I’m referring to, the classic web search has a different cost profile than that future oriented mobile search that’s more personal.

    When Mayer says they’d like to “do more with that,” she seems to be referring to a product Yahoo is building that it expects to have at least preliminarily built in Q2. That is according to a new report from Business Insider’s Nicholas Carlson, who recently had a book about Mayer published. He writes:

    According to this source, the product’s code-named is Index. It’s going to be a smartphone app. Mayer has set a company-wide goal to have a pilot version of Index built sometime during the second quarter. Advertising engineers are already involved in the project, so it’s likely the product will be ad-supported. The product’s development is being led by executives named Jeff Bonforte and Peter Monaco.

    According to the report, Yahoo is betting on being able to compete with Google because of the length of time people have been using Yahoo, and Yahoo Mail in particular. The thinking is that Gmail has only been around for ten years, and that Yahoo Mail has been around for much longer, and that that older information is of great value. At least that’s what I’m taking away from Carlson’s report.

    With all due respect, Mayer knows a whole lot more about search, email, and Yahoo users than I ever will, but this concept seems pretty misguided to me. Is there really that much value to users in being able to more easily recall content from 15 years ago?

    From Carlson’s report:

    “Gmail users have only had their accounts for 10 years,” says our source. “Yahoo has many 20 year old accounts. Back then people used to email themselves a lot — store things. To surface that kind of data usefully is exciting.”

    Our source imagined a user who has been talking about a particular baseball team with his friends for the past decade or so. By scanning that user’s inbox, Yahoo will know to keep that user abreast of everything going on with that baseball team.

    Wow, I hope they’ve got something better up their sleeve than that. Certainly Yahoo must get into this kind of search if it hopes to compete, but I’m afraid that I don’t see people’s fifteen to twenty-year-old Yahoo Mail messages being a game changer.

    Of course this is just one random source’s presumably random example of what they’re trying to do, but if you’re going to spill the beans to the media, you should probably come up with something better than that, unless that really is the height of what we’re talking about here.

    “We do deeply believe in the search,” Mayer said on the call. “It’s deep in Yahoo!’s DNA from the very start of the company. That said, we are particularly interested in search in the mobile sector, what happens when you involve context. What happens when you involve personal information, from things like e-mail, and so that’s really where we’ve been putting a lot of our innovation on the user search experience side.”

    Well, at least they’ve got Firefox. According to Mayer that partnership is profitable so far, and they’re even higher on that deal now than they were when they made it. In other words, it’s working out better than they even expected.

    Mayer has expressed great interest in getting a similar deal with Apple to make Yahoo the default search experience in that browser, but somehow the name Safari didn’t come up a single time on the conference call this time around.

    Now that would help Yahoo compete much more significantly with Google (and especially its partner Microsoft) in the search space. It wouldn’t only put Yahoo in a very popular space, but it would knock Google out of one, assuming that the vast majority didn’t immediately switch back over to Google.

    New research is out from StatConter saying that Safari accounted for over half (55%) of U.S. mobile and tablet Internet usage in March.

    “This emphasises the potential prize in the rapidly growing mobile space for Yahoo, Bing or others if Apple decides to end its default search deal with Google,” said CEO Aodhan Cullen.

    “While Safari is the major player in the US for mobile and tablet, it is ranked number four on the desktop with just 10.5% of internet usage share. From a desktop perspective, this makes it less significant than the recent Yahoo deal with Firefox,” Cullen added.

    StatCounter also analyzed search engine preferences of Safari users. Unsurprisingly, Google dominates at 83% in the U.S. and 87.9% worldwide. Yahoo is at 4.7% for the U.S. and 2.5% worldwide.

    Even still, a Safari deal with Apple, who has already been doing a great deal to distance itself from Google, could give Yahoo a significant boost. Never underestimate the power of users who simply don’t care enough to make the switch. As long as Yahoo could provide a service that doesn’t turn them off, it would likely gain some significant ground.

    But again, Safari didn’t even come up in the conversation on the conference call, and some have been pretty skeptical of the company’s ability to even compete for the deal with Google likely wanting to renew and Microsoft also reportedly showing interest. And with the newly reworked deal between Microsoft and Yahoo announced late last week, it seems like those companies might be getting along much better now. Maybe Yahoo is backing off a little on that. Or maybe participating analysts just didn’t ask the right questions.

    Images via Wikimedia Commons, StatCounter

  • Google Launches New Ranking Signal, Sets Date For Another

    Google Launches New Ranking Signal, Sets Date For Another

    Google announced that it will be expanding its use of “mobile-friendliness” as a ranking signal beginning on April 21. That gives you a little less than two months to make sure your site fits the bill. The change will go into effect across all languages, and Google says it will have a “significant impact” in its search results.

    Are you looking forward to the mobile-friendly update? Let us know in the comments.

    You know if Google is saying the impact is going to be “significant,” it’s probably not something to take lightly. As a result of the change, Google says users will find it easier to get relevant, high quality search results optimized for their devices.

    “When it comes to search on mobile devices, users should get the most relevant and timely results, no matter if the information lives on mobile-friendly web pages or apps,” says Google in a blog post. “As more people use mobile devices to access the internet, our algorithms have to adapt to these usage patterns. In the past, we’ve made updates to ensure a site is configured properly and viewable on modern devices. We’ve made it easier for users to find mobile-friendly web pages and we’ve introduced App Indexing to surface useful content from apps.”

    Now, they’re getting ready to implement the expanded ranking signal and also, starting today, they’re using information from indexed apps as a ranking signal for signed-in users who have said apps installed. Users may start seeing more content from apps they use displayed more prominently in search results.

    With regard to mobile-friendliness, Google notes that it has talked about such an algorithm update in the past, but that this is the first time it’s attached a date to it.

    Throughout 2014, Google made quite a few moves showing it was focusing on improving the mobile search experience for users. In November, they added a mobile-friendly label to mobile search results for sites that meet the criteria. The company mentioned that it was experimenting with using the same criteria for a ranking signal.

    Last month, webmasters were getting warnings from Google when their sites weren’t mobile-friendly, suggesting that that ranking signal might be creeping up. It’s not a surprise that Google is about to implement it, though it is somewhat of a surprise that they gave a launch date. They’re not usually so kind in announcing these things.

    Here’s what the webmaster warnings look like:

    When Google announced the labels, it also laid out some criteria for earning them. For one, a site should avoid software that isn’t common on mobile devices. It specifically mentioned Flash, following its previous shaming of Flash sites in mobile search results when it started showing messages in mobile search results for sites that may not work. Messages said things such as “Uses Flash. May not work on your device.”

    Google says sites should use text that is readable without zooming, and should size content to the screen so that users don’t have to scroll horizontally or zoom. Links should also be placed far enough apart so that the correct one can be tapped easily.

    Google has a Mobile-Friendly Test tool here. You can enter a URL, and Google will analyze it and report if it has a mobile-friendly design.

    If a URL passes the test, it will tell you that the page is mobile-friendly, and give you some additional resources, including information about how Googlebot sees the page.

    If the URL fails the test, you’ll get reasons why the page isn’t mobile-friendly, as well as info about how Googlebot sees it, and resources to help you fix issues.

    Last fall, Google Webmaster Tools added mobile usability tracking. This includes graphs that look at mobile issues over time, so you can see any progress you’ve made.

    “A mobile-friendly site is one that you can easily read & use on a smartphone, by only having to scroll up or down,” said Google’s John Mueller at the time. “Swiping left/right to search for content, zooming to read text and use UI elements, or not being able to see the content at all make a site harder to use for users on mobile phones. To help, the Mobile Usability reports show the following issues: Flash content, missing viewport (a critical meta-tag for mobile pages), tiny fonts, fixed-width viewports, content not sized to viewport, and clickable links/buttons too close to each other.”

    “We strongly recommend you take a look at these issues in Webmaster Tools, and think about how they might be resolved; sometimes it’s just a matter of tweaking your site’s template!” he said.

    If you have a mobile app, don’t forget the app indexing signal. You can find a step-by-step guide on getting it set up here. This might be more motivation for some businesses to build mobile apps. On top of that, Google just announced paid search results in the Google Play store, so Android apps will get some new visibility opportunities there. This is only in the pilot phase for the time being, however.

    Are you happy with Google’s latest moves? Discuss.

    Images via Google

  • Google Still Uses Desktop Page Speed For Mobile Ranking

    As you may know, Google has been focusing on how it can better rank mobile search results. The big news last week was that it added a “Mobile-Friendly” label to results, and would give such sites a ranking boost.

    Google said this week that it will still use desktop signals for ranking mobile results. John Mueller (who we’ll pretty much consider the new Matt Cutts at this point) talked about this in a Webmaster Central hangout (via Search Engine Roundtable):

    The subject comes up at about 18 minutes and 50 seconds into the video, when someone asked him if it is correct that Google uses the page speed of a site’s desktop version as a ranking signal for the mobile version. He said that this is correct at the moment (he thinks…he tends not to completely commit to a lot of these answers).

    Mueller went on to say:

    So we need to focus on the desktop page for the search results for the most part. That’s also the one that you use with the rel canonical. As we pick up more information from mobile friendly pages or from mobile pages in general, then I would expect that to flow into the rankings as well. So that’s something to keep in mind there.

    I’d still make sure that your mobile friendly pages are as fast as possible, that they work really well on mobile devices, that you’re going past just essentially the required minimum that we had with the mobile friendly tool, and really providing a great experience on mobile. Because lots of people are using mobile to kind of make their decisions, to read content, and if your site is kind of minimally usable on mobile, but really a bad user experience, really, really slow, then that’s something that users will notice as well and they’ll jump off and do something else or go to a different site.

    It’s pretty much common sense that you want your site to be as optimal as possible, but it is interesting that Google is still using desktop signals, especially considering that there are likely more signals to glean from mobile devices.

    Image via YouTube

  • Google Adds ‘Mobile-Friendly’ Label To Results, Gives Sites Ranking Boost

    Google Adds ‘Mobile-Friendly’ Label To Results, Gives Sites Ranking Boost

    Update: Google’s official announcement is now live.

    Much of Google’s work in search this year, as well as its guidance for webmasters, has been related to mobile search. Google has really ramped up its efforts of late to improve the mobile search experience, as more and more people perform more and more searches from their smartphones.

    Now, the company is putting a special emphasis on sites that are “mobile-friendly,” while giving them possible ranking boosts.

    Barry Schwartz at Search Engine Land reports (we’re not seeing the official announcement on the web just yet) that Google has officially launched the mobile-friendly label in mobile search results, while Danny Sullivan says Google is “experimenting” with giving sites that have earned the label “some type of special treatment within its ranking algorithm”.

    Sullivan shares this quote from a Google post, which doesn’t appear to be live yet: “We see these labels as a first step in helping mobile users to have a better mobile web experience. We are also experimenting with using the mobile-friendly criteria as a ranking signal.”

    According to Schwartz’s report, sites can earn the label by avoiding software that’s not common on mobile devices (such as Flash), using readable (without zooming) text, sizing content to the screen so users don’t have to scroll horizontally or zoom, and placing links far enough apart so the right one can easily be tapped.

    Menawhile, Google is asking mobile users to rate search results.

    A couple weeks ago, Google announced a new feature in Webmaster Tools to help webmasters track mobile usability.

    Prior to that, it had been notifying webmasters about sites with faulty redirects in mobile results to save users the “common annoyance” of tapping a search result only to be redirected to a site’s mobile homepage. Google has also been noting when pages “may not work on your device” because of things like Flash.

    Images via Google

  • Google Webmaster Tools Adds Mobile Usability Tracking

    Google Webmaster Tools Adds Mobile Usability Tracking

    Google announced the addition of a new Mobile Usability feature to Webmaster Tools, which shows you issues Google has found with your site. It includes graphs that look at issues over time, so you can see any progress you’ve made.

    The offering further underscore’s Google’s emphasis on the importance of the mobile experience to webmasters. If your site sucks on mobile, then it doesn’t look good on Google’s part either when it shows that site in search results. You don’t want to sacrifice your search positioning just because you haven’t taken the time to provide a pleasant experience on mobile devices.

    Google Webmaster Trends Analyst John Mueller writes in a blog post, “A mobile-friendly site is one that you can easily read & use on a smartphone, by only having to scroll up or down. Swiping left/right to search for content, zooming to read text and use UI elements, or not being able to see the content at all make a site harder to use for users on mobile phones. To help, the Mobile Usability reports show the following issues: Flash content, missing viewport (a critical meta-tag for mobile pages), tiny fonts, fixed-width viewports, content not sized to viewport, and clickable links/buttons too close to each other.”

    Mueller adds, “We strongly recommend you take a look at these issues in Webmaster Tools, and think about how they might be resolved; sometimes it’s just a matter of tweaking your site’s template! More information on how to make a great mobile-friendly website can be found in our Web Fundamentals website (with more information to come soon).”

    Earlier this month, we learned that Google is likely adding mobile user experience as an actual ranking signal, and the addition of the new feature to Webmaster Tools, would seem to confirm that.

    Google has already been giving users notifications in search results when a result uses Flash. It’s also been notifying webmasters about faulty redirects, trying to save users from tapping on results that would redirect them to the site’s mobile homepage.

    There’s no question that improving the mobile web has been a major focus of the search engine in recent months.

    Image via Google

  • Google Changes Search Ads On Smartphones

    Google announced some tweaks to the way it displays mobile search ads on smartphones. Beginning on October 15th, ad extensions may show instead of the second line of ad text.

    Here’s the before and after:

    Google says the adjustments are aimed at making it easier and faster for consumers to find things while on the go.

    “Description line 2 may or may not show, depending on how well it’s expected to perform,” says product manager Senthil Hariramasamy. “These improvements are designed to show more relevant and useful information to your customers. Many advertisers have already optimized their ad text in a way that’s updated for longer headlines in keeping with our ads best practices, so no action is required in many cases.”

    Hariramasamy adds, “By showing ad extensions in this more prominent location, consumers will have easier access to information about your business, like your location and product offerings. Advertisers will see improved ad performance because you’ll be able to: Highlight featured products and services in a more pronounced way using callouts; provide useful and timely local information with location extensions; [or] take customers to relevant pages on your site, like to the sale or promotion page, with sitelinks.”

    Google notes that after the update, users may see a Google Maps marker that shows the location of a place as well as the URL, ad creative, and online order form, all within one ad.

    Image via Google

  • Google Notifies Webmasters About Their Annoying Faulty Redirects

    Google announced a couple months ago that it would start calling out sites in mobile results for faulty redirects. This was aimed at saving users the “common annoyance” of tapping a search result only to be redirected to a site’s mobile homepage.

    This happens when a site isn’t properly set up to handle requests from smartphones. As Google noted, it happens so frequently that there are actually comics about it.

    Now, webmasters are getting notifications from Google Webmasters Tools indicating when their sites are guilty of this. Here’s one Marie Haynes tweeted out:

    This was reported on earlier by Search Engine Land, which also reports that Google has added a new color-coded syntax to the Fetch as Google feature within Webmaster Tools, which should make things a little easier at times.

    Image via Google

  • Google To Note When Pages May Not Work In Mobile Results

    Google is going to start letting mobile searchers know when results include pages that may not work on their devices. On a device that doesn’t support Flash, for example (which includes iOS and Android versions 4.1 and higher), Google will include a message with the result that says, “Uses Flash. May not work on your device.”

    “A common annoyance for web users is when websites require browser technologies that are not supported by their device,” write Google’s Keita Oda and Pierre Far. “When users access such pages, they may see nothing but a blank space or miss out a large portion of the page’s contents.”

    Here’s what one of the results may look like:

    “Fortunately, making websites that work on all modern devices is not that hard: websites can use HTML5 since it is universally supported, sometimes exclusively, by all devices,” the Googlers say. “To help webmasters build websites that work on all types of devices regardless of the type of content they wish to serve, we recently announced two resources: Web Fundamentals (a curated source for modern best practices); and Web Starter Kit (a starter framework supporting the Web Fundamentals best practices out of the box).”

    You can find Web Fundamentals here. On the site it’s described as a comprehensive resource for multi-device web development. It includes sections on multi-device tools, multi-device layous, forms and user input, images/audio/video, optimising performance, and device access.

    Web Starter Kit is here. From the site, you can download the beta kit, which includes a responsive boilerplate, a style guide, cross-device sync, live browser reloading, performance optimization, a built-in HTTP server, PageSpeed Insights reporting, and Sass support.

    Google also notes that you should not block crawling of any Googlebot of CSS, JavaScript or images with robots.txt or otherwise.

    Image via Google

  • Google Calls Out Sites In Mobile Results For ‘Faulty Redirects’

    Google is calling out webistes with “faulty redirects” in mobile search results to save users from having to deal with the “common annoyance” of tapping a search result only to be redirected to a site’s mobile homepage.

    This occurs when a site isn’t properly set up to handle requests from smartphones. As Google notes, it happens so frequently there are actually comics about it. They point to this one from xkcd:

    Google is simply noting in the search results that the result “may open the site’s homepage,” and provides a link to “try anyway.”

    To avoid this happening to your site, Google recommends first searching on your own phone to see how your site behaves, and then checking Webmaster Tools to see if Google has sent you a message about detecting any of your pages redirecting smartphone users to the homepage. Luckily, Google is kind enough to show you actual faulty redirects it finds in the Smartphone Crawl Errors section.

    After that, Google says to investigate the faulty redirects an fix them by setting up your server so it redirects smartphone users to the equivalent URL on your smartphone site, and if the page on your site doesn’t have such an equivalent, to keep users on the desktop page, rather than sending them to the smartphone site’s page.

    “Doing nothing is better than doing something wrong in this case,” says Google Webmaster Trends analyst Mariya Moeva.

    She notes that you can also try using responsive design. Google’s full guidelines for building smartphone-optimized websites can be found here. Google also has a help center article specifically on faulty redirects here, which you might find useful.

    The new disclaimer feature is only appearing in English search results in the U.S. for now.

    Images via xkcd, Google

  • Google Moves Forward With App Indexing

    Google Moves Forward With App Indexing

    Last fall, Google began testing app indexing, and released guidelines for webmasters to have Google index deep links within their app. This is so users searching Google from smartphones can get to in-app content (if they have the app installed) just as they would website content.

    Google announced on Thursday that it has enabled over 24 more applications that users will start seeing in search results. These include: 500px, AOL, BigOven, Bleacher Report, Booking.com, Eventbrite, Glassdoor, Goodreads, Huffington Post, Merriam-Webster, Pinterest, Realtor.com, Seeking Alpha, TalkAndroid, TheFreeDictionary, The Journal, TripAdvisor, Tumblr, Urbanspoon, Wattpad, YP, Zagat, Zappos and Zillow.

    They also made app deep links in English content available globally.

    “We’re continuing to onboard more publishers in all languages” says Google software engineer Michael Xu. “If you haven’t added deep link support to your Android app or specified these links on your website or in your Sitemaps, please do so and then notify us by filling out this form.”

    He runs down some best practices here.

    “When Google indexes content from your app, your app will need to make HTTP requests that it usually makes under normal operation,” says Xu. “These requests will appear to your servers as originating from Googlebot. Therefore, your server’s robots.txt file must be configured properly to allow these requests.”

    He also says you need to make sure your back button behavior leads back to the search results page.

    Image via Google

  • Yahoo Gemini Puts Mobile Search, Native Ads In One Marketplace

    Yahoo announced the launch of a new mobile search and native advertising marketplace called Yahoo Gemini. Advertisers can use it to buy, manage and optimize mobile search and native ad spend from a single place.

    The product is available through Yahoo Ad Manager, the company’s existing self-service buying platform.

    “Mobile is the fastest-growing market segment, and we have innovated how our users communicate, consume content and search for information across multiple devices,” said Yahoo’s Jay Rossiter and Adam Cahan in a joint blog post. “We are equally committed to building products that simplify the buying process and improve the experience for advertisers. Yahoo Gemini is the latest way we are helping advertisers reach millions of people directly on their mobile devices with smart, integrated, multi-channel campaigns.”

    A Yahoo representative told AdWeek it believes the offering can help it attract more brand marketers.

    As the report notes, Yahoo’s mobile search ads used to be available via the Bing Ads Platform. Perhaps Gemini is part of Yahoo’s apparent strategy of relying less on its partnership with Microsoft, which CEO Marissa Mayer “hates,” according to reports.

    Image via Yahoo