It's that magical time where, once again, I examine my predictions for the year that's just ended, and make new ones for the one ahead. As is my personal tradition, I'm going to first look at the accuracy of what I've suggested would happen in 2015. Based on how I've done, you can get a sense of how seriously to take my ideas for the future. But, if you'd prefer, you can just skip right to the 2016 predictions.
For posterity, here's my post from January 6, 2015, but I won't make you go through it. A short synopsis of each prediction and my relative correctness is below. Here's how I'll grade myself:
- Nailed It (+2) – When a prediction is right on the money and the primary criteria are fulfilled
- Partially Accurate (+1) – Predictions that are in the area, but are somewhat different than reality
- Not Completely Wrong (-1) – Those that landed near the truth, but couldn't be called "correct" in any real sense
- Way Off (-2) – Guesses which didn't come close
If the score is positive, prepare for more predictions, and if it's negative, I'm clearly losing the pulse of the industry and will flee to a remote corner of the Northwest and take up a profession to which my mustache is better suited... Perhaps crafting artisanal contact lenses? Let's tally up the numbers on my 2015 and hope it doesn't come to that:
#1: We'll see the first major not-for-profit university in the US offer a degree in Internet Marketing, including classes on SEO.
+1 This is one where I should have done more research. Several universities already offered degrees in online marketing, and the only technicality may be what one considers "major." That said, given that places like Penn State, Vanderbilt, and Georgetown all either released or announced programs in online marketing in 2015, I'm giving myself partial credit.
#2: Google will continue the trend of providing instant answers in search results with more interactive tools.
+1 While it certainly couldn't be argued that Google backed down from the trend of more instant answers in results, the number of new interactive tools in 2015 was somewhat limited. They tried out a new hotel finder interface, some new home services results, and some fun results for queries like "I'm feeling curious," but the only ones I'd consider truly interactive and pervasive were their rollout of a mortgage calculator and their enhanced, re-launched flight finder, complete with affiliate program.
#3: 2015 will be the year Facebook begins including some form of web content (not on Facebook's site) in their search functionality.
-1 In some ways, you could argue that Facebook's hosting of instant articles (which began in March and now has substantive coverage across many publishers) matches this prediction, but since Facebook technically is putting these articles on their site, I'm marking it as "not completely wrong," rather than "partially accurate."
#4: Google's indexation of Twitter will grow dramatically, and a significantly higher percentage of tweets, hashtags, and profiles will be indexed by the year's end.
+1 It's true that Google's indexation of Twitter grew (as Stone Temple's analysis shows), but the much more substantive gains came from the renewed partnership between Twitter & Google, which my prediction didn't perfectly cover.
#5: The EU will take additional regulatory action against Google that will create new, substantive changes to the search results for European searchers.
+2 The EU filed formal antitrust accusations against Google in April. We may not see resolution for a while, but this certainly fits with what I thought might happen.
#6: Mobile search, mobile devices, SSL/HTTPS referrals, and apps will combine to make traffic source data increasingly hard to come by.
-1 Mostly thanks to Facebook correcting their lack of referral passing on mobile and in their app, this trend reversed in 2015, and we're seeing less misreported "direct" traffic than in the two years prior. That said, as Marshall Simmonds showed at MozCon, a large portion of search traffic is still "dark," and isn't giving search marketers the credit they deserve. There's more detail in his public SMX presentation on the topic.
#7: The content advertising/recommendation platforms will continue to consolidate, and either Taboola or Outbrain will be acquired or do some heavy acquiring themselves.
-2 As best I can tell, neither Taboola nor Outbrain made any big acquisitions in 2015, and there wasn't much M&A activity in the space overall. The biggest transaction by far was Taboola's $117mm financing round, which I assumed would lead to them making some purchases — but so far, no dice.
#8: Promoted pins will make Pinterest an emerging juggernaut in the social media and social advertising world, particularly for e-commerce.
+1 In December, Pinterest finally opened up promoted pins via self-service (and claimed one million active business accounts), but even before that, it appears the program's been going gangbusters. Unfortunately, I couldn't find any specific numbers, so it's hard to know how well the testing and ramp-up has gone, which is why I'm only giving myself a "partially accurate" score.
#9: Foursquare (and/or Swarm) will be bought, merge with someone, or shut down in 2015 (probably one of the first two).
-2 Despite a struggling business, Foursquare and Swarm both stayed alive and independent. The company is now raising a rough down-round (they were valued at half the valuation of prior funding rounds, which sucks for employee shareholders and founders), and pundits are saying a sale to Microsoft or another tech giant is likely, but it hasn't happened yet, so my prediction loses out.
#10: Amazon will not take considerable search share from Google, nor will mobile search harm Google's ad revenue substantively.
+2 No one touched Google's market share in 2015 (91%+ globally), and Google appears to be making great steps to continue their ad-driven growth in mobile. Their stocks, revenue, and market position feel just as unassailable today as they did a year ago, despite all the chatter suggesting otherwise.
FINAL SCORE: +2
I skated in just above the cutoff and so will continue my tradition of trying to predict the future. This year, I'm going to focus a bit more heavily on web marketing and SEO, rather than going broader across the tech industry.
Rand's 10 Predictions for 2016
#1: Data will reveal Google organic results to have <70% CTR
For many years, Google gave public numbers about the ratio of ads to organic click-through rate. Historically, these were between 80–85% for organic results and 15–20% for ads. But for years now, Google's been getting incredibly aggressive with non-organic results (knowledge graph, various AdWords formats, instant answers, etc). I think 2016 is the year we get better data and real results despite the search giant's silence on the subject.
That's in part going to come from the search marketing industry, where folks like AWR have built tools to track CTR reported in Google Search Console, and from outsiders like SimilarWeb and/or Jumpshot, who have access to clickstream-level data.
My prediction is that, on average, across Google's billions of daily searches, even accounting for searches that generate multiple clicks, less than 70% of searches result in at least one click on an organic result.
That's not particularly gloomy though, given Google's growth. Even if we found the number to be 50%, there's still more opportunity in Google's organic results today than there was 4 years ago thanks to the incredible growth rate of searches (desktop's flattened, but hasn't shrunk in that time, and mobile's skyrocketed to more than double total search volume).
#2: Mobile will barely cut in to desktop's usage and its growth rate in developed countries will slow
I'm not sure if 2015 was the year of mobile, but I think 2016 will be the year that growth rates for mobile begin tapering off. Note — I'm not saying we're at "peak mobile," but I am saying the growth rate has reached its apex and I think in 2016, the percentage growth numbers will fall.
Mobile isn't killing desktop. It's killing all our free time. pic.twitter.com/pXb7F7aWsP
— Rand Fishkin (@randfish) December 20, 2015
Simultaneously, I think we may have reached the peak of desktop/laptop decline, and I expect that in 2016, desktop usage rates will stay largely unchanged. Most everything that mobile was going to replace or take away from desktop use has been taken, and I'm skeptical that things like creative work, programming, long-form writing, computer gaming, and other tasks that big monitors and full keyboard+mouse inputs were made for can be successfully cannibalized by the screen that fits in our pockets.
#3: Twitter will figure out how to grow again
It's been a rough couple years for Twitter, but I'm bullish on the company in 2016 and long term. It takes new CEOs some time to right the ship and it takes time for changes in a company's leadership to impact their growth. It might be toward the end of 2016, but I believe we're going to see numbers from Twitter that improve their market position and their stock price (note: I hold no public market stock).
Via Twitter Has a Serious Growth Problem
For marketers, this means investments in Twitter will pay bigger long-term dividends. I think folks who learn how to effectively advertise with Twitter, how to earn an audience there, and how to leverage the conversations — not just to promote, but to learn and participate — will have remarkable opportunity. There's flexibility in the features afforded by Twitter, combined with the way their stream and amplification function makes for much greater creative and content potential than the limits imposed by Facebook and Instagram in their organic streams (which is not to say that Facebook and Instagram aren't incredible opportunities themselves — they both are).
#4: Social content engines will become a force
In 2015, I started using 5 new content recommendation engines:
- Pocket's New, Beta Recommendations which recommends content to me based on how other Pocket users are employing it, and lets me follow other Pocketers who publicly "recommend" content they read. BTW — if you want to follow my recommendations, you can see those here.
- Nuzzel – A great app and website that's very nearly a replacement for my favorite content engine of all time, the long-defunct Trunk.ly. It aggregates links shared on Twitter and Facebook by folks you follow, and shows content from "friends of friends," too.
- ProductHunt – A popular website in the startup & tech world that works like Reddit for software and apps. Creating an account and following others can help personalize the site's suggestions and what appears in their daily emails.
- Snapzu – a new(ish) service that aggregates content that's been shared in other places. They call themselves a "community of communities" and have an invite system that keeps signal:noise ratio high.
My prediction is that one or more of these will rise to the level of some of the second-tier social networks in popularity, referral traffic, and active users. That's probably Pocket, but it wouldn't surprise me to see Feedly or even a brand new player like Refind make a big splash. Social networks make content delivery and signal:noise secondary priorities behind engagement and conversation. I believe some of the players focused on this space will have an outstanding 2016 — content consumers need them.
33K followers only a month after the beta launch?? That's a powerful platform...
Of course, as these platforms take off, they also become of deep interest and importance to marketers, especially content marketers, as social amplifiers, influencers, and probably, as a result, some level of search rankings will get a boost if content does well on them.
#5: Yext will IPO, prompting even more interest in the world of local listings
In 2014, there were numerous articles predicting Yext's IPO. It didn't happen in 2015, but I think this is the year. They've executed well, built a moat with their contracts and their powerful sales team, and they play in a space where businesses desperately need help — local listings.
I think Yext's rise will create a great deal more interest in the local listings world from tech, financial, and business folks who've previously mostly ignored it. I'm also bullish on Moz Local's growth (a semi-direct competitor to Yext), and I actually think Yext's making of this market will help with that, just as Hubspot's IPO helped so many companies in the inbound and content marketing worlds.
#6: The death of normal distributions will hit both publishing and search results hard
I found Alex Danco's recent post about the death of normal distributions to be prescient (despite some criticism of the lack of data underlying the graphs). I agree that we're moving away from a world of normal distributions in demand curves and towards a winner-take-all model. The "long tail" theory of digitization has been mostly proven false (with a few notable exception areas like keyword search demand and social network connections).
In 2016, I think we're going to see more of what happened to GigaOm and what was described in The Sad Economics of Internet Fame. That is, content becoming so ubiquitous and so hard to monetize that only the big winners will be able to keep up the game. Adblocking's growth may play a part in that, as will Google's algorithms that reward faster-loading, higher-engagement pages that don't drive away visitors with interruptions and annoyances.
Likewise, I think we're going to see more consolidation overall in search results, with fewer unique domains in the top 10 rankings of search results (we should be able to measure this via MozCast). I'm not happy about this prediction — my hope is that it's wrong. I believe in and love the diversity of content that the web and its organic marketing channels have enabled.
#7: The rise of adblocking is going to trigger attempts at legislation and incite more sites to restrict adblocking users
Adblocking was part of a huge conversation in 2015, and my guess is that the reaction to this growing technology is going to mimic how entrenched players have reacted to technology leaps in the past — by trying to legislate it away. I anticipate that in either the US or the EU, some form of government action will arise (in the US, most likely due to lobbying AKA our legalized system of bribery) to "protect the interests of publishers and journalists who serve the public good."
If that exact quote appears from a source, I think I should get double the points, don't you? :-)
#8: DuckDuckGo will be the fastest-growing search engine of 2016
Google had a good 2015. So did Bing, actually (given they now power AOL and had relative success with Windows 10 and the Edge browser). But in 2016, I think our fastest-growing broad, web search engine will be DuckDuckGo, whose growth in 2015 was pretty remarkable, too:
Part of this is the continuing storylines of privacy, part of it is the early adopters in the tech world moving to DDG, and part of it is DDG's accomplishments as an engine — for a lot of queries, they're now truly as good as Google (although they miss some, too). If I weren't in SEO, with a professional need to see as many Google results as possible, I'd honestly consider switching.
Given DDG has many fewer queries to being with, I'll make a slightly bolder claim — their growth rate in 2016 will exceed their 2015 growth rate, and no currently-existing other major web search engine will grow as quickly. If Apple or Facebook decide to get directly into search, well... A) they should buy DuckDuckGo and B) all bets are off.
#9: Content marketing software for the non-enterprise will finally emerge
For a long while now, large enterprises and big content shops have been the sole beneficiaries of content marketing software that tracks performance, suggests improvements, helps with publishing, ideas, outreach, etc. But I think 2016 will be the year that some of the SMB and mid-market players emerge. There are numerous players poised to take this market, including:
- Buzzsumo – To date, they've been the strongest performer of the bunch, but I'd categorize them primarily as a research tool (albeit an amazing one). They've broken into content alerts, but I think they might do more with ongoing campaigns, suggestions, and analytics in 2016.
- Kapost – Built for content creators to pitch and share ideas, manage the content publication process, and distribute effectively across channels, Kapost has been around for a few years, but continues to improve and gain market traction among their target B2B customers.
- Priceonomics – I think these folks will make a big splash with this product once it's public. They've almost exactly followed Moz's model, first building an impressive blog and a passionate following, and now launching what looks like very interesting software that they themselves have been using internally.
- Quicksprout – Like Priceonomics, Quicksprout was first a popular blog in the marketing space and according to a blog post from cofounder Hiten Shah, they'll be launching a SaaS product to help people produce better content in the near future.
- Moz Content – One of the quietest launches we've done at Moz was in November of last year when we announced Moz Content, which provides audits, ongoing tracking, analytics, and competitive research tools for content marketers. It's hard for me to be objective, but I think Moz Content has a good chance of growing substantially this year.
My prediction is that one or more of these will gain significant market share of 2,000 or more new, paying users in 2016.
#10: The "big" trends for 2016: Wearables, VR, smart home, and Internet of Things will have almost no impact on the world of web marketing (yet)
I've been known to be a skeptic about a lot of supposed "game-changers" in tech and marketing, and this year, I'm sticking to that archetype. I know that all the tech publications are basically saying the same thing — it's the year of wearables, virtual reality, smart home, Internet of Things, and personal transport.
I won't argue against any of those (though I'm not sure VR will be as mainstream by next Christmas as the tech blogosphere is prognosticating), but I will argue that none of them will have a big impact on how we do web marketing. There may be a few niche opportunities, but my prediction is that none of these new trends will create marketing/advertising platforms or potential in the $50mm+ range. If ads on refrigerators or in VR helmets or if new social media platforms on wearables attract that kind of business, I'll lose my 2 points.
BTW — I'm obsessed with my Fitbit; I just really hope no one can market to me through it.
There we have it! My ten predictions for 2016 are set in stone (errr... an easily editable blog post, but I'd never abuse your trust or Google's cached snapshot like that). I look forward to your comments, critiques, and any predictions you'd like to share here. We'll see how it plays out next January.
Hi Rand,
#1
I totally agree on the Curation platforms side. The noise has become so gigantic that platforms like Pocket or Nuzzel are not just useful, but tremendously needed.
That is why we started seeing social media platforms working on somehow similar features (Moments by Twitter should be meant for solving that issue. Note I use "should").
The problem of the curation platforms has always been the lack of persistence. I saw many starting like a bomb and then slowly fading in the no-land of oblivion.
Pocket, Nuzzel and the ones you cite may have a bright future, but only if they clearly target a wider and not only "industry related" audience. Moreover, I fear the "Startup syndrome": good products that their founders finally just see as something to finally sell to some big player, which ultimately ruins it.
#2
Regarding Duck Duck Go... I don't know. Maybe because I live in Europe and I know what's the search engine landscape here, but still I do not see it as something to pay too much attention to from a marketing point of view.
Instead, on the contrary of what you say, I believe that we will see arising the importance of marketers figures strongly specialized in vertical search engines, like Amazon, Ebay, Yoox, Mercado Libre and others, because the number of shops (especially small business ones) selling online using only or almost only those platform is exploding.
#3
I'm biased by my own specialization, but International SEO will definitely one of the most demanded service.
It is quite natural to preview it: national markets proved to be not enough, especially during the economical crisis, to maintain revenues, and it is becoming a necessity to internationalize your market, also for small to medium companies.
Moreover, I preview that new facets of International SEO will start earning more relevance, like (sorry for the oxymore) "International Local SEO", or how to target non-national audience when moving in your local market. Again, this is something I am biased about, because I live in a country (Spain), which received more than 65 million foreign tourist in 2014, and even more in 2015... a too big market to be ignored by local businesses.
#4
Related to internationalization, I think that we will finally start seeing a stronger weight given to local markets content campaigns: the what I defined as "glocalization" of Web Marketing.
#5
Non-entrerprise content marketing platforms... I partly agree with you (and I wish all the best to Moz Content, which is a great product), but I am quite skeptic about the use people will do of those tools.
#6
IoT, Wearables, Augmented and Virtual Reality... I still don't see them as mainstream new marketing channels, even though those brands who will experiment with it will surely see a lot of media buzz, because of the hype existing around those topics.
Personally I consider that it's Augmented reality, because of its so strict relation with smartphones, that has the biggest opportunities for becoming an interesting marketing channel, or... better... an interesting channel for content marketing action, hence brand recognition/visibility et al. But more in 2017 than this year.
Right now, I would only use it for creating a campaign expressly thought for targeting the Media.
#7
I think we will see the definitive rise of platforms, which can assist small to medium companies in dealing and optimizing Facebook Advertising.
There are some good companies offering already this kind of products (eg.: AdEspresso), but I still see room for big improvements in this essential field.
#8
Since many years we hear talking about "omnichannel" marketing in its different variants (crossmedia, transmedia...), but I think that big part of the marketing campaigns budget will be moved to these sort of campaigns. We will probably see nice big surprise on this front, with also not so big brands finally embracing this strategy in not only a simplistic way.
Hopefully that would also mean the slow death of the usually useless "company blog" tactic.
#9
RankBrain may have started the "Hummibingbird-based" algorithm updates era, as it was the first algo clearly thought for correcting/improving how Hummingbird works.
I won't exclude new updates of that kind... even if I also suspect that - following the recent tradition of Google - the most important updates will be the unnamed ones (Phantom anybody?).
#10
Google, Facebook and Apple will start having to pay what they didn't pay for years to European countries...
This is something highly possible, especially now that Apple, for instance, agreed to pay 250+ million Euros fee to the Italian gov for what it didn't paid in the past years thanks to its creative fiscal architecture.
Upvoted for the irony of deriding company blogs on a company blog. I'm sure Moz is one of the company blogs to be the exception?
I'm sure MOZ-Blog is not a "usually useless" company blog :)
Thanks Andreas for the answer, which I do mine :-).
Obviously Moz's blog is not one of usually useless company blog... and it would be quite absurd for me writing post for an useless blog, wouldn't be?
I am talking of the many blogs that are built around 400 words long posts about nothing and which such an extraordinary quality that they earn a medium of 1 likes/tweets/+1s (the bot ones) and 0 comments.
I talk of those ones that usually are thought only for trying to target very long long tail keyword (usually with no success) and to feed a badly understood use of the inbound marketing automation.
Hi Gianluca,
Could you explain exactly what you mean by "...to feed a badly understood use of the inbound marketing automation"?
Thank you! :)
I am talking of the many blogs that are built around 400 words long posts about nothing and which such an extraordinary quality that they earn a medium of 1 likes/tweets/+1s (the bot ones) and 0 comments.
There is certainly a lot of wasted effort and wasted content here. Regrettably it would take a big shift or some kind of seo penalty to eliminate this. PS: I am not endorsing a penalty, i am just highlighting that it would take a monstrous force to cause the slow death of these 400 word posts with no engagement.
Love this. A nice concise summary of all things webby with some interesting sites to checkout.
My prediction? Rand will shave off his moustache in 2016.
Not gonna happen. :D
No shaving of the stache it's classic
Kate , its Impossible :-)
Haha, No way!!! :D
Maybe in 2020 !!! :D
No way haha
-2 points Kate
I can virtually guarantee that is correct, given that Moz is finally getting back to profitability :-)
About DuckDuckGo – I definitely agree and look forward to see how it turns out. I like to use it as it gives some kind of an alternative serp.
Do you think twitter will bring back the counter? So many websites still have it hanging there, showing nothing, looks sad.
Although I also like to work with DuckDuck I think the further grow of DuckDuck is a more a wish than a prediction. The mass market is not really aware of another search engine. I think Bing will gain more traffic due to the tight integration into Windows 10. But Bing finally has to bring the U.S. experience to the global market.
Definitely a wish, but I still think it will be the fastest growing engine (no the one to get most new users), mainly because it's small compared to other engines, and while Bing might get more users, growth rate still can be higher for DuckDuckGo.
@fluxxis I wrote a post about how to make cortana use google and it is one of the most visited posts @my blog. So Bing is not satisfying users here in germany, so they search for that topic. If bing would deliver good results, they wont search it. But in that post I have also explained in a few examples why we want google instead of bing - we talk to cortana in german and she can't speek that language.
So DuckDuckGo will clearly grow - fastest growing searchengine? Why not? Should Google raise faster? I think Rand is right - duckduckgo could be the fastet growing SE 2016 - raising from not important to not important (pretty european point of view). But raising faster as the rest.
Addition: In germany the Google Suggest for duckduckgo:
duckduckgo app
duckduckgo remove
:)
I have some thoughts:
#1 More answers in SERP is less clicking in ads. So this can canibalize their revenue. And this is bad news. Good news is that user statisfaction is getting higher. Example - last days i was watching movie in TV. But with Bulgarian translation of title i coudln't find actual name. Only i know is that movie is with Kirsten Bell and was Judd Apatow movie. Within seconds i found "Forgetting Sarah Marshall". Bulgarian translation was something as "Seduced and abandoned".
Most fantastic is that i make this only with SERP and without clicking in organic links w/o touching IMDB.
So it's thin ice for them balancing between satisfaction and revenue.
#2 That's partial true. For us mobile is when we're outside - in bar, car, subway, hiking, biking. Or inside - kitchen (we're cooking with iPad where recipe is full screen), watching TV with iPads (second screen), repairing cars with iPhone instructions, fixing Mac issues with iFixit steps, etc. So for us this mobile is completing desktop.
But in Asia and Africa (and few more geo regions) there is whole new generation where internet IS mobile for them. There are many study for this phenomenon because they simple skip desktop step and jump to mobile directly.
Fun story - Facebook sent team in Africa https://code.facebook.com/posts/485459238254631/im... for update their apps with reality in region.
Fun story #2 - for some of new internet users internet IS Facebook. I have heard from ISP that users call them for support that sites or services stop working. Of course usual suspects - Facebook and Skype.
#3 Twitter is OK. The real problem is revenue for them. They still bleeding money each month struggling to find optimal way for incomes. Now they trying sell data sets for large companies with Gnip.
Don't misunderstood me - i LOVE Twitter, but their stocks are falling.
#4 Yup! But there is also thin ice. Soon with growth of their AI they will make curation very specific and tailored for user needs and interests.
#5 No idea
#6 No idea
#7 And this is already happening. Forbes hide content from adblocker users, German Bild also stop them and soon other will join.
But i think that this is lost battle for them. Over years we was visiting sites with slow and bloatware ads, trackers, analytics, beacons, etc. Today with blocking tools you make web even faster and less power consumable (little bit eco).
PS: I'm few years Ghostery user and it's installed on all mine devices.
#8 DDG grows fast and that's remarkable. Of course we can't blame only Apple and Firefox for their success. There are two major factors also - Snowden revelations about internet and ads remarketing.
PS: I'm not using DDG because i'm Bulgarian. And since Bulgarian and Russian languages are similar when i searching something almost 100% of SERP there is flooded with Russian results irrelevant to me. Same happening with Google almost 10 years ago but they was fix it.
#9 True - i think that can be all of them can broke 2K limit.
Priceonomics starts with blog but they following "Freakonomics" strategy. If you didn't read yet this book i can recommend it. It's amazing!
Hiten and Neil was looking for devs before few months in article.
Moz Content - looking great!
BuzzSumo - have Twitter counter. Horray!
#10 VR - will hit marketing soon.
And some of mine.
1. New types of Ads will hit social networks and SERP.
2. New types of actionable buttons will be available in SERP. Can be "book now", "buy now", "make insurance now".
3. Sites will keep growing and bloating in size. AMP is step in right direction make pages smaller and thinner.
4. VR will be groundbreaking in 2016.
5. Flash finally will die.
6. Creating more lightweight JS scripts. Creating more lightweight CSS libraries.
7. IE-X where X is number between 6 and 9 will disappear. Finally!
8. Hard times for Mozilla. Long story just see their market share. It's sad because Firefox was internet as we know it.
9. Yahoo will keep declining and finally need to make hard decisions.
10. Some social networks will be phased out. Not only 4SQ/Swarm but also Ello, Tsu, Meerkat and few more are faced of extintion. Today you not only need many users, but you also need to be profitable.
11. Some unicorns will disappear. Unicorns are companies with over 1B valuation with tiny incomes.
12. Some new kind of algorithmic filters (i.e. penalties) with turbulence in SERP. Some of them will be unnamed and unannounced freaking out webmasters and site owners.
13. New kind of threats. If someone was victim of DDoS will know what i mean.
14. Year of HTTP/2 and TLS. Even Apache have plugin, i'm still waiting nginx support.
I can't edit prev post so here is:
15. Declining of traditional media as far we know it - TV, Newspapers, Radio and Phones. Just from last minute:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-york-city-to-repla...
this mean new opportunity for marketers.
Hi Peter. Nginx has already support for HTTP/2 since September of 2015 with the 1.9.5 release. You can check it out the link here: https://www.nginx.com/blog/nginx-1-9-5/
If you are looking for a more detailed guide how to enable HTTP/2 and TLS with Nginx, you can use this one from Zack Tollman: https://www.tollmanz.com/http2-nghttp2-nginx-tls/
[Links removed by editor.]
+2 is a great score for 2015. And seriously I'm also surprised that Foursquare still exists, especially after launching Swarm for check-ins (which for me was the time check-ins died).
I'm excited to see how DuckDuckGo will do this year. I'd predict that especially after #1 has enough prove, it could be their way up.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts and predictions.
Hey Nice Information shared.
For Your #1 "We'll see the first major not-for-profit University in the US offer a degree in Internet Marketing, including classes on SEO."
In India I have completed my "Bachelore Degree in Ecommerce" (including seo, internet bakcend works, topoligies ,Desinging (Graphics/web, ) in 2006. My batech was 2006-09. And many more subjects was covered at the time of 2006.
Hey Rand enjoyed your predictions. Especially surprised seeing how mobile is not making even a dent in desktop usage.
1. This makes me think that more and more new markets will emerge, following this distribution- desktop usage remains the same, while wearables, VR, and the internet of things will go on to create a market on their own, similar to what happened with mobile. Only there is so much free time in the day so I wonder which part of the pie chart will shrink.
My prediction is this- if desktop usage goes down, new markets like these would be the ones to blame. And while I agree that marketing remains the same, the market in these verticals will grow mainly in the direction of creating new content and new products and apps.
2. Another thing I believe will happen is more and more platforms that allow various types of crowd-funding. Just as Patreon emerged a year or so after Kickstarter appeared, and had a lot of success, I'm thinking that other innovative platforms with the same goal will start to pop up. The reason I believe this is because content creators are raising exponentially and many of them don't posses the skills to monetize, or simply want to take a less obvious and tiresome approach with how they do it.
3. Another trend that is currently under way, and is probably going to explode in 2016, is more and more products that follow the recursive revenue model. I've seen this a lot in the fitness industry where giants like Beachbody are trying to switch their audience to a monthly payment system, offering a streaming video product. Daily Burn and Crunch Live also took a share of the market using this strategy exclusively. Personally speaking, most the products I consumed in 2015 were with the option of monthly payment and a user sign-up. Headspace, the meditation app, for example.. And many others that even go to combine physical goods with a strong online marketing presence. This trend is only going to grow. 2016 is the year of subscription services.
Here is to a super productive and fulfilling year to all of you guys at Moz!
Few hours ago I heard an interesting "prediction" from John Mueller:
"With regards to mobile, from China, India, Brazil, more revolution then evolution is happening. So many people are coming online that will essentially double the size of the internet, and in some point the English speaking internet will almost be in minority. Suddenly, instead of Facebook we may have something coming from China which Chinese people love and have Chinese philosophy behind it, and we may need to adapt to foreign culture rather than forcing foreign culture to adapt to our culture."
As usual great post..Few of my prediction are -
Thanks for this great post Rand, I was waiting for your predictions..
Thank you and keep sharing with us...Wish you and your team a very happy new year..
I was hoping to hear 100% automated SEO , dream :)
Thanks Rand for valuable post
My prediction
1. Matt Cutt will come with New update. ;)
Wondering what would be the new updates.
I've really enojyed reading it! You can learn a lot just by comparing the different opinions of the readers, plus your knowledge. Totally agree about the mobile trend you've been talking about, but about Twitter I kinda think it needs to be reinvented because its growth has stopped a lot. It's been slowing down due to its need of publicity (investors and companies are not interested in some platform that doesn't generate money to them), so they're going to copy a little bit Facebook or Instagram advertisment improvements. About #10, we should remember that some of the marketing stuff that we've all been sceptic about in the past, have now turned to be some of the most used ways to do marketing we've nowadays, so why won't you think the same thing would happen in the short term? Again, thank you for your thoughts!
I can agree about #10 with you! I'd also like to know his opinion!
Agree with #2. Not so sure about #3, but just in case, let's go get some Twitter stock!
I always look forward to your new predictions, Rand.
#3 Twitter: I really hope you're right here because I miss the people and conversations on Twitter. Let's hope the growth won't just be through advertising.
#8 Duck Duck Go: Every time I read a positive story about DDG I plan to start using it now and then, but the reality is, I never do. I wonder if they'll ever manage to gobble up a real piece of the search engine pie. Your prediction is likely to come true though, as it isn't that hard to grow fast if you're still small.
#9 Moz Content: Thanks for the reminder - I need to make time to check our your new service pretty soon. :)
Ha ha, I just agree with you about only one prediction. That is about "social content engines will become a force." I think that it does happen because its potential in the previous can prove that!
Really good post about SEO with including more valuable things that may be happens in coming days. Nice to read about all topics and it good that DuckDuckGo will be a higher Search Engine.
I have one prediction about WordPress SEO
Its a plugin which is becoming very popular and I think many more people will be using it in 2016
The SEO Framework ~ https://wordpress.org/plugins/autodescription/
Its written with massive and busy (multi-)sites in mind and therefore 197% to 867% faster compared to other older, more popular SEO plugins. It also consumes 177% to 260% fewer server resources and makes 15% fewer database interactions (numbers may vary on this one depending on plugin compatibility).
Plus it has 100% fewer advertisements.
And the author makes it simple to migrate ~ https://theseoframework.com/docs/seo-data-migratio... so I think you'd mad, not to at least try it.
Its simply a better WordPress SEO plugin. and I think the old-guard better watch out.
That's my prediction for 2016.
What an engaging read - thank you Rand!
I've lately forced myself to ask, before taking out my phone, "what task do you want to accomplish?"
Usually there is none and I'm squandering free time.
This is why prediction 2 resonates with me - as popular as mobile is in terms of usage, it's not contributing to task completion in the way that my desktop does. Especially when I use Stayfocusd (https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/stayfocu...) to keep myself OFF of facebook :D
This is also why, when I hear people talk mobile app creation, I ask if people will genuinely use their phones for that specific task.
Hello Rand,
Once again thanks for the great stuff. And I really agree with your all most all the predictions. And I'm quite surprised with DDG.DDG Ends 2015 On A High Note, Gets to 12M Searches In A Single Day.The personal privacy search engine balanced more than 10 million searches daily by the end of the year.
But apart from that there are few more predictions are trading for 2016.
Here are the list of that predictions.
Voice SEO has shifted the entire mobile search user interface to a different stage. When a voice apply for is made, the results appear on map user interface. Users can listen to even more information about a certain listing by touching the map symbol.
Call-only advertisements are upgrades of existing call extensions. In call-only ads, contact number is the initial visible point typically produced utilizing bigger font size as well as various text color. The second noticeable thing takes place to be the phone call button that makes it possible for an instant call to action.
App store optimization or ASO is most effective approaches to carry out mobile app marketing. Implementation of ASO ensures showing up of the mobile application for proper search queries and thus getting organic installs and perceptions. Locating the appropriate keyword phrases or subjects is the most essential and also considerable part of app establishment optimization as that would certainly describe the specific search things of your target audience.
Anyways, It's just a prediction. SEO is a Deep Sea, Not Just wave, nobody could sure about their prediction. So, Keep calm and wait.
About DuckDuckGo: let see in this year but my way opinion on the indexing process of DuckDuckGo is not more suitable than Google. let see yout pridiction will go through or not.
Great Insights Rand, I predict this year you will be more right than wrong. I truly hope your prediction on DuckDuckGo happens, it might give Google some humility and who knows even put a hold on their greed :) Happy 2016 everybody!
I enjoyed the read and I will re-read again tonight because that was a lot of info.
Yext will be interesting to me as a local SEO. If they continue to acquire exclusive rights to certain listing sites I will be forced to utilize them more which is a little disappointing but it is what it is.
Also will be watching the push for content platforms for SMB users. Thank you for the insights and educated guesses.
One of my favorite blog posts ever! Super informative but also really funny- and I don't think you should dismiss this artisanal contact lense idea either.
Alluring post! But what I care at that time is about the weather in this year. I am afraid of global warming, rather than such the SEO information! We need a solid transformation! What for? To survive and save the humans' life!
Very good information Rand!
I'm very exciting because we have a lot of changes...
Yes, Silvia. I think the same!
Me encanta tu perfi, quizá podríamos colaborar juntos!
Nice prediction Rand. Somehow I think content marketing and Native advertising has gained popularity in past few months and hope to dominate in 2016 too.
Very cool post about SEO 2016 predictions. I will definately follow and keep in mind while doing SEO.
Thanks alot.
Great post. Thanks for your share post.
Lots of changes have affected the searches in 2015 and now, as 2016 has already approached, all eyes are on the newly emerging trends and the updates that Google has in stock for us. Here are a few changes that Google will initiate in 2016. I think readers would like these topics and perform the research on these topics to know the future trends in search engine optimization and digital marketing! SEO Services India will work on these techniques and stay updated with all new aspects of digital marketing. And, the techniques which are new in 2016, it’s not necessary that these topics will be informed by us firstly. Some of the readers have already acquainted about these topics perfectly and that's pretty good!
Here, I am going to state some of the SEO topics that will rule in 2016!
1. Mobile Will Continue to Dominate
2. Voice Search and Structured Data
3. Local SEO Will be More Important Than Ever
4. SEO Will ‘Merge’ With Other Forms of Digital Marketing
5. Bing Will Offer Rising Competition
6. Higher Google ranks no longer mean more organic clicks
7. The rise of rich answers: a threat or an opportunity?
8. Page speed and why you need to improve it right now
9. Tracking organic traffic in Google Analytics gets even harder
10. Keywords are not dead; but how Google looks at them changed
11. Link penalties are no joke, but all penalties are removable
12. How user behavior will be affecting your rankings soon
Interesting predictions.
We will be attentive to what happens.
It is an excellent article and very insightful. I think that these strategies will help to improve website search appearance.
Will 2016 be the year Yelp finally gets sued and penalized over reviews?
Yext needs to drop their prices.
Yext needs to start being ethical and stop extorting people. Same with Yelp.
These groups PREY on ignorance when calling business owners. The less you know, the easier it is for them to drop their "Acceptable Truths" on you.
Shady, shady, shady.
Interesting predictions Rand. I'm very curious about the future growth of mobile and I totally agree with you that mobile devices aren't really suitable for things like gaming, programming or ling form writing.
Good Job and so close with foursquare
Hi Rand,
Things are changed from 2013-14 and 15 but now in 2016 many SEO strategies are dead and only good CTR and Conversion Rate took your business in heights of Top Google SERP. According to my experience these 2 factors will remain on Top factors/200 algorthm (2016) to maintain your position in Search Engine Organic ranking.
This is such a great source of information. The world of SEO keeps evolving, so you’d expect people with expertise to make predictions . Thank you for sharing this piece of content definitely worth reading. Looking forward to more informative articles.
Is this some type of DuckDuckGo marketing technique here at MOZ??? So far 24 mentions and I'll be the 25th... Its useless search engine that uses 3rd party API's for results and absolutely nothing unique about that site, whats the fuss about? Ohh, wait, its WE DON'T TRACK YOU B.S like I care.
So, I perception about social media is great still. Still confusion inside where i count afford paid marketing is better. Just like i am trying on Google ads; but here less chance to convert in lead. But in case of social media sites and e-commerce sites also providing online paid marketing. where we can get good traffic with more conversion leads. Let see the END of 2016.!!
According to sources I think twitter is growing again.
Excellent, thanks for giving us this kind of topics, I'm learning every day more, I improve and learn more interesting things about Seo, thank you very much and continue to do this type of analysis and predictions
Good Article Rand, 10 Predictions for 2016 is a #2 Point is absolutely valuable. Thank u so much Rand
My favorite predictions here: #9 and # 10, specially the last one. I strongly believe that future CMO has to think deeply how to take advantage of VR technology for Marketing. From my perspective, that´s the real reason why Facebook acquired Oculus VR.
Some solid predictions here Rand.
#7 it has definitely begun. Forbes won't let you access their site at all if you have ad blocking enabled. I'm not really sure yet how I feel on the matter as I've worked for publishers, advertisers and distribution networks so there are a lot of conflicting priorities. I agree this trend will rise but only among publishers large enough to afford the potential loss in traffic.
#8 Have seen DuckDuckGo rise in many analytics accounts. I've never seen DDG advertise. Is this mostly word of mouth or do we think apps are starting to use DDG as search engines? I understand the appeal of DDG but it still feels like a very small subset of the american public and therefore I wonder how it's value proposition is being explained.
Thanks for the overview!!
#1: Data will reveal Google organic results to have <70% CTR
For many years, Google gave public numbers about the ratio of ads to organic click-through rate. Historically, these were between 80–85% for organic results and 15–20% for ads.
Where can I find this last public google data? Does that mean that from 100 people using google search, it's likely that 20 persons will click a paid result, and the rest organic?
This is great - Thank you! As a start up we are just getting to grips with Web Marketing and SEO and this has got lots of interesting sites to help us. Thumbs up!
Grate information!
Most of the predication make sense but i am not quite sure about DuckDuckGo to be growing search engine.
Mobility is the key.
This information is very useful, SEO is a very tricky process there are so many things that you should analyze before making your SEO approach, SEO and web marketing are interrelate to each other both have effect on another, like for a successful SEO you must have a good web design strategy like friendly URL approaches check more https://www.pixelcrayons.com/blog/cms/4-reasons-to-choose-seo-website-design/
Gread post.
Hi Rand Fishkin, I was waiting for a post related to complete SEM in 2016 starting and finally its done by this post...! wooohhaa!!! Great..!
Great list. I can't wait to see which of these are going to be true and which might not.
As far as your #1 point, I have taken advantage of universities offering Internet marketing degree's and have a Master's of Science in Internet Marketing. I believe this will definitely start to expand into a lot of the nation's top universities.
Great post Rand! Looking forward to MozCon this year!
Some interesting predictions, I personally feel mobile will not overtake the desktop market in any dramatic fashion either. People still use desktop computers at home and at work as much as they use to, I believe it will stay pretty even as time goes on.
Hi Rand,
Its Really Nice Blog on SEO prediction. Many people worry about what will the new changes from google side and what we do for better Search engine visibility.How to increase conversion rate in 2016? So here all the prediction according to you .Its true
And this prediction will really wok in 2016
Yext the world of local listings
Twitter will figure out how to grow again
Mobile SERP Increase
DuckDuckGo will be the fastest
Seeing Qwant.com growing faster than DuckDuckGo.com
Almost completely agreed with point #10 in particular, mostly because of market size and ad/content development costs, but I think there might be some hope for beacons in 2016. Facebook has offered them for about six months now, but they haven't exactly pushed them hard and I think SMB awareness of them is still fairly low. If Facebook is going to make a more concerted push into the local business market this year, which I think they've been setting the stage for, beacons could play a pretty big role. They could help collect business usage data from less engaged consumers, improve their review filter algo (which has been an embarrassment so far), collect better data on advertising ROI, and convert more SMBs into paying advertisers, among other things. If they play their cards right, beacons could be the missing link for businesses, consumers, and Facebook alike.
I don't think beacons would have much of a year with anyone else behind them, and I still don't think it's a sure thing, but I wouldn't be so quick to rule them out, either.
Awesome Article!
Always helpful Rand! Thank You!
One thing that irritated me this year was Google's partnership with Wix. I mean, is this not a direct contradiction to what they are looking for on the web in terms of information on companies? Doesn't this relationship go against much of what we've heard over the years?
Wix is garbage. Why would they connect with them? What are your thoughts?
Always interested in what the Moz thinks...I predict he will grow more hair...thanks for catching us up.
Thanks for 10 great predictions. Some great new things to consider alongside traditional digital predictions (social...tick, mobile...tick, local...tick)
Finally! I was waiting for your predictions for 2016. :) I am 100% sure with point 1, 2, 3, 7, 8 and 10 that they will definitely happen not sure about others 4 predictions.
re: the Amazon market share prediction for 2015.
While Amazon did not take a large portion on generic search traffic from Google, they continued their significant advances in market share for the shopping vertical. Their market share for shopping is at 44% (bloomreach.com/2015/10/survey-amazon-is-burying-the-competition-in-search) Other major search engines combines have 34% share. Other studies showed Amazon at 39% market share in 2014 (wsj.com/articles/google-preps-shopping-site-to-challenge-amazon-1418673413).
So, I won't argue against your scoring since Amazon is only competing in one search vertical but they did steal market share from Google in the US in 2015
Great article! I always learn something new you
I hope bing will be the second most search engine used by end user. 'DuckDuckgo' will be the third most. Need to wait and watch what happens on 2016. Really a good article about prediction 2016. Helpfull!!!
The amount of information and data is impressive, it's my first reading of Moz Blog and my head will blow! Thanks for everything, rather than an article that is a reference for me. Thanks again!
Totally agree on topics #7 (rise of adblocking) and #10 (impact of "big" trends on web marketing). Adblocking might set up a totally new scenario, as many companies (included Google) relies their incomes on them.
I don't see the other predictions as predictions per se, but more like the confirmation of a long-running tendency. Just a matter of semantics ;)
Thanks Rand for the information you provided. It is very helpful to know about the upcoming stats in 2016.
I agree with your #8: DuckDuckGo will be the fastest-growing search engine of 2016
Actually, if I don't belong to this SEO profession, then surely I will switch to DDG. For my personal searches, many times I use DDG as the results there are very much specific & related to the topic I am searching for.
This list is fantastic and one that really shows what did and did not happen in 2015. I am really pumped on seeing what Yext does in terms of an IPO they have a great product but more so as you stated the world will see the importance of local citations and how keeping them consistant can make or break a local company.
Seems like Amazon is going to beat them in shopping section in the coming years. I am also not sure if Google will able to keep up with their local search thing. Local search on mobile devices and the industry specific apps are stealing the local market too. How do you se the future?
Totally agreed with the mobile usage and their growth rate in 2016, Indeed it has reached its apex in most of the countries. And the organic result's CTR would likely go down too, as I am already seeing first page of serps with a lot of inorganic results covering the first fold in mobiles and laptop screens.
I can't believe you too are using Fitbit! I simply love it!
Hope your predictions are going to be true.
Best,
PopArt Studio
Hello Rand Fishkin, Thanks for sharing such a valuable information about 10 Predictions for 2016 in SEO & Web Marketing.
I always love reading these prediction posts, amazing how creative people can come some close to foreseeing trends in the market. It get's my own creative juices flowing on where certain niches that I work in are heading as well. Maybe I will take a crack at some predictions this year as well. Good stuff...
Really those are the good predictions in SEO to go forward in 2016.
I got an Echo for Xmas and of course the first thing I had to do was ask it for my type of business. I was happy to find that once I added my address, we came up as number one (we are only a mile away). At a talk I went recently, the speaker asked, "How do we optimize for this" showing a photo of Alexa. I think it uses Bing but haven't really researched it. If Echo takes off, there may be more reason to optimize for that system.
Good Article, thanks for all the information
I have seen DuckDuckGo pages on Google SERPS. They are taking traffic from Google looks like..Seems that Google is can't be beaten..
But working on the site i have seen that i am getting more search traffic from duckduckgo in 2016 and that is definitely the same thing which i read here.. But yeah that's true that google can't beaten. But what we expected can't be true all the time.
This post shows how deep your knowledge is about SEO and Web Marketing. I appreciate you for sharing such a valuable piece of information.
It´s really good to read some very interesting information through this blog and learn something new all the time.
This is great! Maybe next year I'll be able to get those Rand Fishkin contact lenses.
Hello Rand,
Your advices really help to see the things in more complicated way to achieve unbelieveable results later but what i think that the years passing making my mind more sharp regarding to Seo services..
Useful resources in 2016...
Excellent article thank you for posting.
Thanks for this valuable and informative blog about SEO Services.