Rumors are flying about Google's upcoming mobile-friendly update, and bits of reliable information have come from several sources. My colleague Emily Grossman and I wanted to cut through the noise and bring online marketers a clearer picture of what's in store later this month. In this post, you'll find our answers to nine key questions about the update.
1. What changes is Google making to its algorithm on April 21st?
Answer: Recently, Google has been rolling out lots of changes to apps, Google Play, the presentation of mobile SERPS, and some of the more advanced development guidelines that impact mobile; we believe that many of these are in preparation for the 4/21 update. Google has been downplaying some of these changes, and we have no exclusive advanced knowledge about anything that Google will announce on 4/21, but based on what we have seen and heard recently, here is our best guess of what is coming in the future (on 4/21 or soon thereafter):
We believe Google will launch a new mobile crawler (probably with an Android user-agent) that can do a better job of crawling single-page web apps, Android apps, and maybe even Deep Links in iOS apps. The new Mobile-Friendly guidelines that launched last month focus on exposing JS and CSS because Android apps are built in Java, and single-page web apps rely heavily on JavaScript for their fluid, app-like experience.
Some example sites that use Responsive Design well in a single-page app architecture are:
- Hulu.com,
- Refinery29.com,
- Facebook's news feed,
- Techcrunch.com,
- The Google Play Store,
- Pinterest.com, and of course
- https://scrollsample.appspot.com/items from John Muller of Google.
Also, according to Rob Ousbey of Distilled, Google has been testing this kind of architecture on Blogspot.com (a Google property).
Google has also recently been pushing for more feeds from Trusted Partners, which are a key component of both mobile apps and single-page web apps since Phantom JS and Prerender IO (and similar technologies) together essentially generate crawlable feeds for indexing single-page web apps. We think this increased focus on JS, CSS, and feeds is also the reason why Google needs the additional mobile index that Gary Illyes mentioned in his "Meet the Search Engines" interview at SMX West a couple weeks ago, and why suddenly Google has been talking about apps as "first class citizens," as called out by Mariya Moeva in the title of her SMX West presentation.
A new mobile-only index to go with the new crawler also makes sense because Google wants to index and rank both app content and deep links to screens in apps, but it does not necessarily want to figure them into the desktop algorithm or slow it down with content that should never rank in a desktop search. We also think that the recent increased focus on deep links and the announcement from Google about Google Play's new automated and manual review process are related. This announcement indicates, almost definitively, that Google has built a crawler that is capable of crawling Android apps. We believe that this new crawler will also be able to index more than one content rendering (web page or app screen data-set) to one URL/URI and it will probably will focus more on feeds, schema and sitemaps for its own efficiency. Most of the native apps that would benefit from deep linking are driven by data feeds, and crawling the feeds instead of the apps would give Google the ability to understand the app content, especially for iOS apps, (which they are still not likely able to crawl), without having to crawl the app code. Then, it can crawl the deep-linked web content to validate the app content.
FYI: Garry Illyes mentioned that Google is retiring their old AJAX indexing instructions, but did not say how they would be replaced, except to specify in a Google+ post that Google would not click links to get more content. Instead, they would need an OnLoad event to trigger further crawling. These webmaster instructions for making AJAX crawlable were often relied on as a way to make single-page web apps crawlable, and we think that feeds will play a role here, too, as part of the replacement. Relying more heavily on feeds also makes it easier for Google to scrape data directly into SERPS, which they have been doing more and more. (See the appendix of this slide deck, starting on slide 30, for lots of mobile examples of this change in play already.) This probably will include the ability to scrape forms directly into a SERP, à la the form markup for auto-complete that Google just announced.
We are also inclined to believe that the use of the new "Mobile-Friendly" designation in mobile SERPS may be temporary, as long as SEOs and webmasters feel incentivized to make their CSS and JavaScript crawlable, and get into the new mobile index. "Mobile-Friendly" in the SERP is a bit clunky, and takes up a lot of space, so Google may decide switch to something else, like the "slow" tag shown to the right, originally spotted in testing by Barry Schwartz. In fact, showing the "Slow" tag might make sense later in the game, after most webmasters have made the updates, and Google instead needs to create a more serious and impactful negative incentive for the stragglers. (This is Barry's image; we have not actually seen this one yet).
In terms of the Mobile-Friendly announcement, it is surprising that Google has not focused more on mobile page speed, minimizing redirects and avoiding mobile-only errors—their historical focus for mobile SEO. This could be because page speed does not matter as much in the evaluation of content if Google is getting most of its crawl information from feeds. Our guess is that things like page speed and load time will rebound in focus after 4/21. We also think mobile UX indicators that are currently showing at the bottom of the Google PageSpeed tool (at the bottom of the "mobile" tab) will play into the new mobile algorithm—we have actually witnessed Google testing their inclusion in the Mobile-Friendly tool already, as shown below, and of course, they were recently added to everyone's Webmaster Tools reports. It is possible that the current focus on CSS and JavaScript is to ensure that as many pages are in the new index as possible at launch.
2. If my site is not mobile-friendly, will this impact my desktop rankings as well?
Answer: On a panel at SMX Munich (2 weeks after SMX West) Zineb from Google answered 'no' without hesitation. We took this as another indication that the new index is related to a new crawler and/or a major change to the infrastructure they are using to parse, index, and evaluate mobile search results but not desktop results. That said, you should probably take some time soon to make sure that your site works—at least in a passable way—on mobile devices, just in case there are eventual desktop repercussions (and because this is a user experience best practice that can lead to other improvements that are still desktop ranking factors, such as decreasing your bounce rate).
3. How much will mobile rankings be impacted?
Answer: On the same panel at SMX Munich (mentioned above), Zineb said that this 4/21 change will be bigger than the Panda and Penguin updates. Again, we think this fits well with an infrastructure change. It is unclear if all mobile devices will be impacted in the change or not. The change might be more impactful for Android devices or might impact Android and iOS devices equally—though currently we are seeing significant differences between iOS and Android for some types of search results, with more significant changes happening on Android than on iOS.
Deep linking is a key distinction between mobile SERPs on the Android OS and SERPs on iOS (currently, SERPs only display Android app deep links, and only on Android devices). But there is reason to believe this gap will be closing. For example, in his recent Moz post and in his presentation at SMX West, Justin Briggs mentioned that a few sample iOS deep links were validating in Google's deep link tool. This may indicate that iOS apps with deep links will be easier to surface in the new framework, but it is still possible that won't make it into the 4/21 update. It is also unclear whether or not Google will maintain its stance on tablets being more like desktop experiences than they are like mobile devices, and what exactly Google is considering "mobile." What we can say here, though, is that Android tablets DO appear to be including the App Pack results, so we think they will change their stance here, and start to classify tablets as mobile on 4/21.
Emails are also increasingly impacting SERPs—particularly mobile SERPs), since mobile email opens have grown by 180% in three years, and Google is trying to take advantage of this increased engagement on mobile devices. As of now, schema can be included in emails to drive notifications in the Google Now app, and also to let Google surface marked-up emails in a browser-based search. This all happens by virtue of Google crawling all emails that come into your Gmail account, and indexing them to your user-profile so that they are accessible and able to rank like this across all of your devices (even if you aren't currently logged into your Gmail account on your phone). Optimizing emails for mobile search is also becoming more important, and in the 4/21 update Google could do more to push the use of Schema markup in emails to drive personalized search results like the one shown to the right.
Inclusions like this mean that even if you are able to maintain your keyword rankings in mobile search after April 21, you may not necessarily be able to sustain your mobile traffic.
4. What about sites that redirect to a mobile subdomain? Will they be considered mobile-friendly?
Answer: This is an interesting question, because immediately after the roll-out of the Mobile-Friendly tagging, we actually saw significantly more mDot ('m.') websites ranking well in the mobile SERPS. It's almost like they counted the mobile subdomain as a Mobile-Friendly signal, but started the algorithm fresh, with no historical data to indicate which other sites had fewer obvious signals of mobility, like a responsive design, or an adaptive or dynamically served mobile site. It is also interesting to note that many of the Google representatives seem to have recently backed off of their strong insistence on responsive design. They still say that it is the least error-prone, and easiest to crawl and index, but they also now seem to be more willing to acknowledge the other viable mobile site architectures.
5. How do I know if my site meets Google's requirements for mobile friendliness?
Answer: Google has created a Mobile-Friendliness tool that will give you a 'yes' or 'no' answer on a per-url basis. Pages are evaluated individually, so another quick way to get a sense for how your top pages perform is to do a "site:" query for the domain in question on your phone. That will allow you to see all the pages indexed to the domain, and evaluate which ones are considered Mobile-Friendly and which are not, without having to submit them to the tool one at a time.
Google has been clear that Mobile-Friendly test results are binary, meaning that your page is either Mobile-Friendly or it is not. There is no 50% or 70% Mobile-Friendly result possible—no middle ground. They have also taken care to specify that Google's Mobile-Friendly evaluations are somewhat instant, implying that there is no proving-time or "sandbox" associated with the tag, but this could be somewhat misleading. There may be no intentional time-delay before a page is awarded the Mobile-Friendly notation, but it will only change after a crawl of the site indicates that the page is now Mobile-Friendly, so it is close to instantaneous if the pages are getting crawled on a very regular basis.
We have found that the tool result does not necessarily match up with what we are seeing on our phones. We have occasionally also noticed that sometimes two pages in the same page template will perform differently, even though the content that changes between the template is primarily text. Both of these variations could simply be an indication of real-time delay between the tool and the crawler—the tool does an ad-hoc check on the URL to assess mobile-friendliness, but if the bot has not been by the site to evaluate its mobile friendliness recently, then the page in question would not yet have the Mobile-Friendly designation in the SERP. With this in mind, remember that when you are updating a page, and pushing it live for testing, you must use the tool to see if the update has been successful, until the site is re-crawled. This also means that once you see success in the tool, the best way to get the Mobile-Friendly designation to show up in the results faster might just be to push a sitemap in Webmaster tools, and try to trigger a fresh crawl.
6. How does having a mobile app impact my mobile rankings?
Answer: There are two things to consider here. First, if a mobile search query is highly correlated with mobile app listings (the app "download pages" in the Google Play and iOS App Stores), your app could see significantly more visibility within mobile search results pages. This is because Google has started treating apps as a new kind of universal search result, returning an "App Pack" of Google Play results for certain searches on Android devices (shown at the right), and adding an Apps drop-down to the main nav-bar on iOS devices (not shown).
An "App Pack" is a group of related apps that rank together for a given query, shown together in a box separate from the inline organic search results. It has different formatting and an "Apps" header. These often float to the top of a mobile search result, pushing the second or sometimes even the first organic result below the fold. This is also discussed in Justin Briggs' article about apps. Currently, there is a high correlation between Google Play "App Pack" rankings and exact-match keywords in the app title. Google also seems to be evaluating app quality here and tries to serve only higher-than-average rated apps in the App Pack (this generally tends to be around a 3.5 – 4 star minimum for common keyword phrases).
If Google starts to serve these App Packs on iOS device searches as well, all apps that have keyword-optimized titles and have high-quality ratings and reviews could jump up to the top of the mobile web SERPs, increasing their visability and likely downloads. Conversely, mobile websites that currently enjoy an above-the-fold #1 or #2 organic ranking may get pushed below the fold in mobile SERPs, especially for queries that are highly correlated with mobile app results. This could cause a negative impact on mobile website visibility (without necessarily changing standard numeric rankings), in cases where a query returns a mobile App Pack—regardless of whether or not an app within that pack is yours.
Second, Mariya Moeva (Google Webmaster Trends Analyst) recently announced at SMX West that Google will be considering "high quality" apps to be a positive ranking factor in mobile search. We took this to mean that Deep Links between your website and your app will improve your website rankings in mobile search. Deep Links are different from app store listings in the App Store or Google Play, because they link directly to a specific screen within your app experience. They look just like regular links in the mobile search result, but when you click them, you are given the option of opening the link in on the web or in the app.
Currently, if you add Deep Links to your Android mobile app and associate your app URIs with corresponding (content-matching) webpages, Google will recognize the connection between your app content and your web content (and allow users who have your app installed to access your content directly in the mobile app). As it is now, the only way for Deep Links to your app contents to appear in search results is:
- For app screens to have a 1-1 content parity with webpages
- For those screens to have proper Deep Link coding that associates them with the corresponding pages on the website, AND
- For your app to be installed on the searcher's device. If the app is not installed or there is no corresponding web content, the links in the SERP will just behave as normal, web links.
Mariya didn't state exactly how Google will be evaluating the quality of apps, but we can guess that Google will be considering signals like star ratings, reviews, and +1s. And if what we assume about the 4/21 update proves to be true, it is possible that app URIs without corresponding Deep Linked web content may rank independently in a mobile SERP from information that Google aquired via app feeds. In this case, "app quality" could be a positive mobile ranking signal for its own URIs/ screens, and not just the website it is associated with. This would be a great boon for app descovery.
7. Do I need an app, and if so, should it be Android, iOS or both? What if I have a limited budget?
Answer: If you have the budget to develop both a mobile app and a mobile website, there can be significant value to maintaining both, particularly if you leverage the mobile app as a "value add" for your customers and not just a website duplicate (though enabling some functionality duplication is necessary for deep linking). If you have a limited budget, you will have to make a choice, but it is important to consider this a business choice and not primarily an SEO choice. Your business might be well served by a mobile website or might be better served by a mobile app with only a promotional mobile web landing page meant to send web traffic to app stores (ex. Tinder). In general, most businesses can be extremely well served by a mobile website and should focus their budget on making that experience great across many devices. We only recommend going "app-first" if you are trying to offer an experience that cannot be delivered well on a mobile website. Experiences that offer a valuable offline utilities (think photo-editing apps), or take advantage of heavy computing (like gaming apps) or rely on non-web input elements such as device accelerometers or GPS, are often better suited for an app.
Apps are generally riskier because they require more up-front investment, and have to be tightly in sync with app store guidelines and approval processes that you have no control over. There are a lot of barriers to entry; just building and maintaining an experience can cost an average of $100k per platform, so it's important that you know this is the right experience for your customers before you choose this path.
If you decide that an app experience is the best choice for your business (or you have budgeted an app in addition to your mobile web experience), you can use the operating system data in Google Analytics to help you determine which Operating System is more popular among your users. If you don't have this data because you don't have a website yet or you have too limited a mobile audience to determine a trend, you should choose the platform that best matches with your monetization strategies. iOS users tend to spend more money than their Android counterparts, but there are more total Android users around the world than iOS users. The implication is that if you plan to monetize your app with user transactions like In App Purchases (IAPs) or Subscriptions, iOS may be the way to start, but if you plan to monetize your app with advertisements, Android could be just as lucrative, if not more so. If Android app discovery is made easier with the 4/21 update but iOS app discovery is not, that could also factor into the decision process.
8. How is mobile traffic impacted by the user search query? Is there a way I can find out if my top keywords are mostly desktop or mobile keywords?
Answer: Search queries actually matter more and more for mobile, because Google is trying to do a much better job of anticipating and embracing a user's intent from the query. This means that often, Google is presenting the information a searcher requests directly in the search result above the organic rankings. SEOs are used to this for local-mobile searches, but it is now happening for all kinds of searches, so it can steal traffic that would otherwise go to the site and can skew success metrics.
Google has expanded the types of information that they scrape and pull from a site directly into an answer box, especially in mobile. They have also increased and diversified the number of aggregator-style "Sponsored" results that show up in mobile—especially on Android. The top mobile search result for most flight, hotel, music, and TV show queries are now specially designed, sponsored, aggregated results that push the old organic results below the fold. Whenever you see a little grey 'i' in the upper right hand corner of a mobile search result – especially a specially formatted list of results that Google has aggregated for you, that means that Google is probably getting a small portion of any related transaction, even if it is just the website paying for the click. Simple blue-link search results may soon be a thing of the past—especially above the fold.
Even regular, non-aggregator-style PPC results are taking up more room and looking more compelling with click-to-call, star ratings, app icons, links for directions and ad extensions, so these may be more of a threat for SEO moving forward (shown on the right). There is a long list of examples that we shared in the Appendix of Cindy's SMX Munich deck about the Future of Mobile SEO. With all the scraping, PPC may be the only way to out-rank Google and get above the fold for some queries in the mobile SERP.
If you have not seen Dr. Pete's presentation from SMX West this year about the Changing of Google SERPS, you really must! It addresses this question in the desktop format, but I think the crux of what he is saying is even truer in mobile. This Dr. Pete quote from a related interview is very telling:
"Google is essentially competing against us with our own information, and I think that's a turning point in the relationship between Google and webmasters." -Dr. Pete
In terms of which keywords are more mobile-oriented than desktop-oriented, this can be a difficult question. You can get some basic information from Webmaster Tools by filtering the keyword information to show mobile only queries, and you can do something similar in Google Analytics. Beyond that, there are some more sophisticated solutions, like those from Search Metrics and Brightedge, but those are often out of reach for smaller operations.
9. What is Google's goal with all of these mobile-friendly changes?
There are obviously a lot of goals in the mix here, but we do believe that Google is making these changes primarily to provide a better mobile experience for searchers, and give people exactly what they want. That said though, they are also in it to make money. Being able to easily surface apps in a search result will help them drive more and better app development for Google Play and monetize their other content like TV shows, books, magazines, movies, and music—all of which have been threatened recently by competitors like Hulu, Amazon, and of course iOS App Store and iTunes.
Google has been encouraging publishers to include transcripts with videos and song lyrics with songs. In the long run, those will help Google scrape and show those things in answer boxes, as shown at the right, but eventually they will probably also surface their own version of the content from Google Play, with links just below the answer box, so that you can watch the video or download the song directly to your phone on Google Play. When you think about Google's intentions on this front, and try to envision the future, it is important to note that Google is actually already offering Google Play for iOS, which currently just provides the Google Music cloud-storage and a music subscription model. We expect this to expand as well, so that Google can expand their level of competitiveness here too.
I'll have to read this on a desktop as the Moz blog isn't mobile friendly ;)
Hey Andy, I'm also amazed to explore today "Moz is not yet mobile-friendly". Almost two weeks to go for 21st April. Wondering when Moz will consider it or will they?
Oh yes, our dev team is currently working on it. :)
i've shocked .. !!!!! moz is not mobile friendly.... hope your team will overcome soon on that issue...
I've been kinda hoping we can be a case study for how much the big April update affects a site. We can see if we get pushed down much in the update for not being mobile-friendly, then make changes and see how long it takes and whether Google changes our rankings again on mobile to reflect them.
(Y) i hope this friday whiteboard will for case study of big April update.....
This has some precedence. Moz de-indexed Followerwonk for science, and I disavowed every link to my site just to see what happened.
We take Google's algorithmic wrath, so you don't have to!
(mobile site coming soon!)
How hard was the conquest to hit the disavow button?
I still can't beleive that you've done that... All the work, away with one submit - arrrgh.
but we need guys wich do stuff like that :)
That is very gracious of you guys ;)
Real life examples of the impact of 4/21 (or 21/4 in the UK) are going to be really really interesting - to me it appears that the focus is potentially more on indexing apps and making sure that they appear for search results, than websites being mobile friendly. Maybe it will be both!
Sure Rand and you will need to develop also a tool for tracking rankings in mobile.
Which tool are you going to use to track rankings in mobile? SEMRUsh is having a lot of bugs.
Seriously, I hope your Team can develop a tool for tracking rankings in mobile under MOz Analytics -> Keyowrd Rankings section.
THanks
I think you are right Eran Vanounu, Mobile ranking tracker can be nice.
for Mobile rankings the best tool I have found is Rankwatch - awesome for mobile rankings - also tracks the changes daily if you need that much info
We track rankings in mobile and desktop so we expect to report on the impact across keywords representing companies, brands, and individuals.
Good Thinking, with real R&D. I don't know why few people disliked.
I am hoping for the same. But one of your dev team already said you are working on a mobile friendly blog.
Do you know if it's going to happen after 04/21 and use it as a case study; or your developers team is going to be faster than that?
That would show realy valuable data. Please keep informing about this.
Google Webmaster Tools is not even totally mobile friendly. So I wonder how Google will treat their own properties which are more mobile friendly. Also how will Google treat large brands which are not mobile friendly I can not see them been dropped on brand terms.
I wonder the same about Google Finance, which is both a competitor of ours, and comparing to Google Webmaster Tools which we’re all using behind a login, actually has millions of pages open for everyone's eyes.
By the way, it terms of mobile rankings, we've been using zefo.com to track rankings for about 3 years now, and for a long time it was mainly because I found that they are the only ones who support all local search engines. Including those you probably never heard of.
After repeated requests throughout 2014, they have finally added Mobile rankings for all of their supported search engines.
What I never understood, is how could it be that out of 100s of clients, their founder told me that we were the only company who asked for Mobile rankings.
Companies are still ignoring this. But this is about to change once they'll see that the decision to ignore is a costly one.
Cindy, great overview, thanks!
Didn't knew about this before that MOZ is not mobile friendly.
Thanks for the information. I see a similarity between online marketers optimizing for Google updates and teachers/schools teaching to standardized tests. I'm not sure I'm (personally) convinced updates improve the buying experience, the relationship between vendor and purchaser, or 'the Web.' Of course, it keeps things interesting and topical for those who love discussing and theorizing online optimization. I'm sure Google gets a kick out of hearing "how high?" from marketers and a fainter version of the question coming from business owners who know less about technical needs. No doubt, it's good to be prepared, but I also wonder, since it is Google's search engine, if a modification there and a tweak here to the algorithm after the 21st could make some preparation be in vain. Again, I see nothing wrong with preparation and informing the public regarding what's known (to date), just some thoughts, and I'd like to hear those of others. Thanks for reading.
Nice insight to the update questions.
I've been breaking down all my client's websites that are not 'mobile-friendly' with them in Google Analytics to see what % of their traffic is actually mobile. Some actually won't be affected much at all when you break it down. Check out what % of your traffic is mobile (Under Audience => Mobile), then filter how much of your mobile traffic comes from PPC. We've found most of our B2B clients' mobile traffic is PPC...which from my understanding should not be impacted by this update.
We'll still be working to update all clients to mobile responsiveness...but this little check will help you prioritize which ones are more urgent.
It is also unclear whether or not Google will maintain its stance on tablets being more like desktop experiences than they are like mobile devices, and what exactly Google is considering "mobile."
They did offer some clarification on this last week (likely after this post was submitted), stating that "the upcoming mobile-friendly change is for mobile users, not tablet users."
Hi Adam -- that's true, however we're still seeing some instances in which Google is treating tablet searches similarly to smartphone searches. App Packs, for example, are showing on Android tablets but not on desktop. While the "mobile-friendly" designation is currently only looking for performance and UX on a smartphone, the tablet SERPs still have some elements in common with "mobile" SERPs.
Thanks for this in-depth article that really breaks through the surface-level announcements about Mobilegeddon and gives some insightful predictions into what the mobile update will really look like. I was interested to hear about the updates with Gmail indexing showing up in mobile searches more - it'd be great to see an article on that topic alone.
Great job cindy,
I am working as an SEO expert, the information you shared is highly informative and useful for me. Currently I am working on babygames.pk its not mobile friendly. I know more than 60% people play games on the smartphones its means i am loosing a big percentage of users. Now i will try my best to change my site algorithm to mobile friendly keeping in view this post.
Thank You cindy..
Very interesting your thoughts but I think there will still be many changes until the new algorithm appears. The solution is to always work with responsive web.
Google Webmaster Tools allows you to test your website for mobile friendly compliance. Go to Search Traffic - Mobile Usability and it will provide a list of any pages which don't pass the test including reasons why. There are more factors than screen appearance. A site can be responsive and still fail the test - a biggie was having touch elements or buttons too close together. Ok on a desktop, but problematic on a cell phone.
This is great, insightful information Cindy! I agree with you that "mobile friendly" is more likely than not going to be temporary, and I'm interested to see how these changes tie into how Google handles their Trusted Partner program going forward. On one hand, these updates seem aimed at improving mobile searches, but just how much do you think all of this will boost Google Play?
Cindy,
Great post, I love that I am able to send pieces out to the teams that are responsible, like email, to show the impacts we have on each other and how we can help.
Thanks! This is the first indepth article I've read about the coming update. Thankfully I checked my site as you recommended and it seems all my pages are "mobile friendly". Glad I started off with a responsive design :) I'm still a bit nervous though.
Awesome info! it seems it took a lot of work! thank you!!!
Cindy,
I am collecting data about the Mobile update from too many sources and this article is outstanding. Super like it.
Excellent analysis, Cindy! I think you're spot on. One thought that has occurred to me... when doing search query analysis, do you think Google will ever give us the option to select which index we want to look for terms in?
That would be nice, but I doubt it; unless the new stuff happens on a new domain or there is an obvious parameter that we can change in the url string on Google.com when submitting the query. That will be something I will be looking for on 4/21! :)
Very interesting your thoughts but I think there will still be many changes until the new algorithm appears. The solution is to always work with responsive web
Hi Cindy Krum,
this is the really useful info for the SEO world. I had never saw much information like this on the web about 4/21 update. I received a mail regarding this, but i thought i was fake. After studying this, i cam to a conclusion that, 4/ 21 update is happened. Thanks for the useful info.
Well many people are talking about Mobilegeddon update but i didn't seen any effect on my website. google also said that ranking results will be different from mobile friendly websites and non mobile friendly websites But effects are not clear. May be there is slight impact but its not very much harmful for non mobile friendly websites.
Here is googles tool for checking mobile friendliness of website - https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/mobile-friendly/
Hey Cindy,
Thanks for the detailed explanation on this very important topic. Lots of speculations are going on about 4/21 and as you highlighted people are claiming that, it will impact the desktop rankings too which will be really interesting if it does.
Cindy, these days GWT are showing these errors related to mobile,
I'd like to know if a site is getting these errors on "some" pages, what kind of threat they can possess? Also, if someone solved these issues and Mobile-Friendliness tool is rating the page "awesome" but still WMT showing those URLs as problematic. What to do in this case?
Lastly, I'd love to have your thoughts on this post by Daniel Bianchini "Are UKs biggest brands ready for the mobile update?" Will all these UK brands gonna embrace the mobile penalty?
Looking forward for your response. :)
Thanks,
I've been told it's also going to replace the Easter Bunny and leave candied eggs around your Christmas tree...
1. You need to fix the viewport issue. The mobile page speed tool will also tell you you have an issue with viewport if you do.
2. Touch elements are almost always too close. They're wanting between 12px and 20px of space between minor touch elements and 32px-ish of spacing between major touch elements.
3. Flash shouldn't be used ever... Just don't. That's been a ranking factor for a few years now (lack of flash).
Being a page-by-page evaluation, the pages you have those issues on will not perform as well on mobile as pages you don't have those issues on.
As to your question about the UK Brands, I don't have time to read the article this morning, but I will say that if your competition isn't spending any money going mobile friendly -- I'd take that as a clear sign I should. BUT, if no one bothers with it in your vertical, you're left with the tree falling in the forest analogy. If Google penalizes non-mobile friendly sites, but there aren't any mobile friendly sites for that keyword term, did Google penalize anyone?
Hey Scott,
Thanks for adding your thoughts, I appreciate that you touched all the points.
I'll be waiting to see a snap of your christmas tree after this update :p
Happy to help. Been dealing with G+ Page Categories fighting with me today... I think I'd rather be configuring the viewport.
https://screencast.com/t/hPBdzkHO
Great technical coverage of the SERP changes happening the 21st of april.
I am very excited about the changes and look forward to see the blog SEO industry going crazy about the actual changes.
I recently read that someone asked about the inbound links from a non mobile friendly website, and if a link would be devaluated if it originate from a non mobile friendly website.
Does anybody know if this is true? My first guess would be no, because the link value should have nothing to do if a site is mobile friendly or not. But again, I am not sure.
Hey Rene,
All I have ever seen has tended to indicate that 'mobile links' are not treated that differently than regular links. If you think about it from an algorithmic perspective, it would be pretty complex to count a link from a 'mobile site' to a 'non-mobile site' or from a 'non-mobile site' to a 'mobile site' differently - and what about sites that are partially mobile (so a mobile page vs a mobile site), or that are Responsive Design or Selective Serving/Adaptive. My guess is that Google is counting links as links, at this point, regardless of mobile-friendliness of the link origin or the link destination.
Thank you Cindy for the great effort. I got mobile friendly site but not running on different URL ( for instance "m.mobile.com") or sub-domain does it will make any difference or i must have to have different url for the mobile site.
Many Thanks
Hi Ikkie,
We expect the 4/21 change to have the same impact, regardless of if your mobile content is on a mobile-specific subdomain or not. Google has said using the same urls (like you would in Responsive Design) or using a mobile-specific subdomain are both fin solutions.
Thanks for sharing this great knowledge. As the mobile users are increasing day by day the trend of marketing and SEO is also changing continuously.
Thanks for this great information and it will be helpful in future,
Thank you so much Cindy for sharing, i will wait your update next article, and my website best towel warmer reviews will be better about mobile friendly.
It was not too terrible..the mobile-friendly update is run on a page-by-page basis, so even if you are not able to make your entire site mobile friendly, any page that you do make mobile-friendly will still benefit from the improvements you can make.
Thanks for sharing this info. Lots of ideas are rolling out for 4/21 update. The best fit solution is to make a responsive design and wait for the changes.
Thanks for the article Cindy Krum,
Geat things !
I still always try to improve our website so friendly mobile.
There is a problem of SimiCart.com page loading speed has not been so good.
What suggestions do you have that can help me.
I always appreciate your suggestions!
I wish you a good day!
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I'd be super interested in how mobile carriers work with this update, especially in metropolitan areas. The apps I use crash a lot because of the service I get. I wonder if that will negatively impact the relationship with Google? It's something that's out of the webmaster's hands and could negatively impact a users experience.
In my experience, the carriers are not super hip to SEO or even mobile-friendly design lots of the time. I agree - I would love to see carriers more engaged. I think Google has to walk a fine line, so that it does not look like agreements with carriers are impacting the paid or organic listings that a searcher gets. It would be pretty wild (but not totally impossible) if some day Google used 'carrier' as some kind of signal - maybe for personalization. EX: "We know T-mobile's demographic cares about 'this' type of content, so it will be given a slight algorithmic preference for T-mobile searchers."
Hi Cindy,
Thanks for this very interesting update. It would be really good to measure the effects on rankings for those sites which are not mobile-friendly. With this update, it is high time for sites to provide a superior on the go experience for visitors. Having a single URL that works across the viewing environments will surely help Googlebots. In fact, we have made an entire infographic on mobile friendly algorithm, if you might like to review and share your feedback - https://www.webbymonks.com/google/mobile-friendly-a...
These points are really didactic and helps understanding the algorithm in-depth.
Great article Cindy ! if any one like to check their site is mobile friendly or not they can go for this link which is given below:
https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/mobile-friendly/
I think I'm going to wait till April 21st. Most of my customers use desktops simply because they feel safer browing from home or work. Mine is not the type of site you would search for on a mobile anyway.
Hi this post is driving best information about latest Google updates.. great work.. if website is mobile friendly, this is positive for every webmaster because these day approx more then 70% visitors use Mobile or smartphone fro access website it website is not mobile friendly then webmaster can loss these big % of website visitors.. Regards Mohd Arif
Thank for the post, Google announced it is making two significant changes to its search algorithm for ranking the mobile search results and you explained very good.....Enormous disadvantages in the future for mobile-unfriendly sites!!! See amazing Future Of SmartPhones: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eCkaJgMt21M
Can anyone answer me this? I have a website which has been mobile optimised since I created it. I rank well on page 1 for most keywords and top of page 2 for others. However for mobile I'm ranking around page 5, 7. Yet when you see the search results on mobile before the description of my site it says "Mobile Friendly" just like most of the others which are mobile optimised..
Is there anything I can do to improve the mobile search results?
My site contains a lot of INFORMATION and would not be easily read on a small phone, even if it was responsive. Folks can easily read it via new larger phones, tablets, laptops or desktops... just not on the older 480x320 size phones. My site currently places very well in search engines... in the top 5 on the first page of listings. Because my site is content driven and not meant for the short attention span of the average phone internet user, I'm going to wait and see how it affects my search engine placement (if at all) before considering converting to a responsive web design. Especially since the trend is toward using larger phones, not smaller ones.
I believe the update started to run last week. We have been optimized for a while and last week mobile searches were a record high on GA. Maybe it's a coincidence but I really don't think so.
Great write-up, thanks for sharing, Cindy.
Have you heard anything about how long the roll-out of this update will take? Or any indications on where/which parts of the world they will start with?
Here in Denmark we're usually one of the last places that get hit by updates (a couple of weeks), but with what seems to be a new crawler, do you think it will roll out simultaneously worldwide?
Thanks for sharing this great post, i've checked my website and it looks like is mobile friendly, now the updates comes but i see no change in google mobile serp, that's weird, right no?
1. Only smartphones impacted. Google's search results on desktop and tablets will be unaffected by the new algorithm.
2. Mobile websites with unplayable videos, slow mobile pages and blocked image files will get knocked down a peg.
3. Websites can upgrade their "mobile-friendliness" at any time to appear higher in Google's search results -- it doesn't have to be done by April 21. Google also said that the algorithm tweaks will be rolled out over the course of a few weeks, so the changes might not immediately be noticeable anyway.
4. Some mobile-UNfriendly sites could still get favorable search placement. Google's algorithm judges sites based on numerous criteria, of which mobile-friendlness is just one. The company's aim is to provide the most relevant results, even if it's to a site that isn't optimized for mobile.
Thanks for the article!
It seems like an Android app of mine has been penalized in the last week.
Do you know anything about this or have you heard of app penalties?
Obviously Cindy sounds like a plan of resurrection for non-mobile responsive website affected by mobilegeddon. Due to the increase in mobile traffic, where more than half of the searches are performed through mobile devices, companies realized that they have to seriously consider the mobile friendly agenda for their website properties as said so in https://goo.gl/Tn6Jy7
Hi Cindy,
Thank you for explaining the subject thoroughly. Most of the post I found before only touched the issue slightly. ;)
What I'd like to add is that it's very important to know how much of your web traffic comes from mobile devices.
Here is a small free tool for Google Analytics users: https://mobileratio.com/ - very easy to use, good for non-tech-savvy people.
Cheers!
i'm loving it
Has anyone else noticed that Webmaster Tools is falsely reporting non mobile friendly pages that are in fact mobile friendly? The page count keeps getting higher as the days pass, just wondering if this has anything to do with the update.
That is an interesting note. It may be because the WMT interface generally has a built-in delay. Are you still seeing this? I wonder if the page count keeps getting higher because it is a new crawler, and it might be de-duping stuff that the old crawler already understood as canonical - do you think that is a possibility?
A month after the update, we still haven't seen much mobile-only movement. We've experienced some gains but it was for both mobile and desktop. I wonder if mobile was just another https. But hey, we use that too!
for the Point No 4
4. What about sites that redirect to a mobile sub domain? Will they be considered mobile-friendly?
Google Mention this,
Responsive design is Google’s recommended design pattern.
https://developers.google.com/webmasters/mobile-si...
i would like to add the screenshot, which i had found on Google Support
https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-OMCcX7dtn-8/VTC...
I think google completely remove non-mobile site and also they will update panda and penguin for both desktop and mobile.It may be major update.I think this time grey hat seo also will be affected Regards Mohd Arif
Just now coming across this but appreciate the insight and thoughtfully commentary. I work for a mobile development company and we've seen an inundation of people wanting to mobilize quickly in whatever format gets them the mobile-friendly tag with not much consideration to user experience. What's the point of driving users to your site if they have trouble using it once they get there? Glad to see some of that addressed here - design for the user above all; let the SEO follow.
I always find the push for Responsive interesting, however; we've done some recent analysis on the top sites in the US and world and find that the majority are actually JS-adaptive: https://www.wompmobile.com/responsivevsadaptive
Hey everyone!
Thanks for all the positive feedback on the write-up. Sorry that I have been so quite in the comments. I actually got incredibly sick the day the article went live, and am still recovering. My plan is to try and respond to as many comments as I can tomorrow, and then wait in anticipation for the actual update on 4/21. Emily Grossman and I are pretty eager to see what will happen!
Thanks!
CK
I sometimes wonder if google can influence the application on mobile phones , and now you are to answer through this post . all the things I have been questioned during terjawb all . even information that I did not know there was also all in this post . thank a lot.
I am so looking forward to seeing what this update does. If it is supposed to be bigger than Panda and Penguin this is going to have some very interesting impacts. I hope to get into app development and be able to offer this as service. I am curious to see if this works as Google would like it to. If it will be all they hope it will to help them make money?
Great technical content ,thank you very much.
I am looking forward to this update as my website already uses a responsive design template, and I want to see if my website will be in a better position in the results without me needing to tweak anything.
Great article offers deep insights. Google's mobile friendly check tool shows different result for the same app. I mean at times it shows that your website is not mobile friendly and sometimes it shows it is. I guess it has something to do with crawler. Can anybody share why this anamoly..
Hey Abhishek,
Are you saying that the tool shows different results for the same page if you run it periodically throughout the day? Or are you saying that different pages on your site are getting different results? The evaluation is on a page-by-page basis. Since different pages could be calling on different resources (which may or may not be blocked) then it makes sense that different pages could have different results. Be sure to pay attention to the list of blocked resources that the mobile-friendly tool gives you for each of the page templates that you are reviewing.
This tool "Mobile-Friendliness tool" from google saved my day . Thank you for sharing this article !!!
That's a great post about getting ready for Mobile Algorithm, I have observed quite a chatter about people talking about complications in setting up a mobile site. I don't think that it is that difficult to switch to a responsive design, if you are a big firm then you should not bother pondering over switching or redesigning mobile site. Its 2015 if you are not mobile friendly you are loosing traffic big time regardless of this update.
Great post! Thanks for sharing!
lets see how it impacts overall rankings, but i still feel website which are highly optimized , irrespective of being mobile optimized will still rank on top, thou there might be few keywords going up and down.
It won't make much impact when it comes to authority websites tats my prediction..
Lets wait and watch.
Regards
Thanks for the tweet worthy material!
iOS users tend to spend more money than their Android counterparts. From what I see iOS users spend almost twice as much and require less customer service than Android users. should it be Android, iOS or both?I would do iOS first. Go figure I have an Android.
Hi Cindy,
It's a great post, especially when people are facing troubles in moving to mibile site
How ever people are worring about selecting one thing from responsive site, dynamic serving and sperate site whereas it is not a one size fits all thing, it greatly depends on business objectives, budget and available resources. What do you think about that?
Thanks for sharing this infos..
Thank you so much Cindy for sharing.
I'm a webmaster and I know It's very Informative. I will work on it.
Thanks again Cindy!
Please keep posting.
Thanks for the article Cindy!
We will have to wait and see how this new update of Google works.
As well you comment on your post, this update theoretically improve the positions of the websites that are ready for mobile. This will only affect the search results that are made from mobile, will not affect the search performed from a pc. But if that can affect our traffic.
This change must be seen as a good change and improvement in our online strategy, since the search from a mobile or tablet is present and is to this day, as important as the search from a PC. Many of us in this we use the mobile for information and it is important to appear in these search engines too.
Thank you for sharing this information.
Thanks for the information Cindy.
I am working as an SEO from a company in Australia and I just knew about this update.
Honestly, I am confused if I should just go with flow and recommend to update our company website or just ignore it. By the way, our website is "mobile friendly" according to Google's mobile friendliness tester.
I think time is too short to update our site and this is a major algorithm update, I am worried that our traffic will plummet.
A very long post, but full of information.
Again, thanks.
Hi, I have yet to see the use of the new "Mobile-Friendly" designation on google.ca. Could this be another example of a SERP change that will not affect Canadians for a while?
Hi Marc,
"Mobile-Friendly" has already been showing up for some time on Google.ca. Try "auto insurance" and several insurance sites have the mobile designation.
Cheers,
Marco
Indeed I saw some websites with the label "Site mobile" which is a very poor translation of "Mobile-friendly".
Thank you Marco,
"We have found that the tool result does not necessarily match up with what we are seeing on our phones. We have occasionally also noticed that sometimes two pages in the same page template will perform differently, even though the content that changes between the template is primarily text."
It is worth noting that part of the evaluation of "mobile friendliness" has to do with layout, font size, space between objects, etc... Many of these factors are impacted by your CSS, and if you have blocked your style sheets from being crawled with a robots.txt file the mobile friendly tester will not crawl it, and will not use that information to evaluate your site. Therefore a responsive, mobile friendly site could easily fail the mobile friendly test tool.
As we all know that the usaze of internet on smart phone has been increasing and people prefer to switch to mobile from desktop and that is the reason why google is implementing this feature and I am pretty much sure that mobile friendly website will get benefit from 21st April in Mobile search only.
Thanks for this analytical text, I think that is spot on since we are all waiting to see what actual changes are going to happen and how much will they influence page positions. To tell you the truth we have responsive website, but also monitor some that are not to see exact changes and effects. Thanks once again on a great article.
This can't happen soon enough IMO. Love the fact that websites that put in the hard yards and optimise for mobile experience will be in a better position than those that don't/won't. Look forward to seeing the results in the SERPs later this month!
Cindy you did good job to share this information
Nice article Cindy!
However, where you mention
"There is no 50% or 70% Mobile-Friendly result possible—no middle ground"
This is not strictly correct. We have built 2 tools to help prepare for the upcoming update to mobile (please feel free to check these out, as they are both freely available):
1. A Chrome Extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/mobile-f...
2. A Bulk Mobile-Friendly Checker: https://www.urlitor.com/mobile
Both of these tools use data from Google, which provides you with a mobile-friendly 'score' (or percentage) out of 100. It would appear that any page that gets a score over 90, passes the mobile-friendly test. However, we can clearly see a range of scores for various different pages - a middle ground of sorts. For example, this page currently achieves a score of 62.
Just to update on this - it would actually appear that any page scoring above 80 passes the mobile-friendly test.
Analysis to follow in another post ;-)
My website, Techboomers.com, is using Addthis for social sharing. When I use the "Fetch as Google" tool in Webmaster Tools, the status returned is "Partial" because Googlebot couldn't access "https://s7.addthis.com/js/300/addthis_widget.js" ... I've read that a website/page can be penalized if all CSS/javascript aren't accessible.
Is this something I should be concerned about? There are a few posts by Addthis support saying we should just ignore the error,
Hey Steve,
Google has said that they want you to make all of the CSS and JS 'that you control' crawlable. This may indicate that they are anticipating situations like yours with Addthis, and that those are ok. My guess, is that they have a white-list of urls where plugins, ad networks and other 3rd party web partners may be storing blocked content that you can't control. They will probably try not to penalize webmasters for those, but surely some will get through the cracks. If your pages with the Addthis plugin are passing the mobile-friendly test, then you can assume that the 'Addthis' stuff is already accounted for, and won't hurt you. If those pages are not passing the mobile-friendly test, then I would be more concerned.
This is probably big news (not sure how big) for sites that have B&M locations or E-Com sites, but for everyone else (especially the B2B niche) I will be interested in seeing what happens.
Some thoughts to consider.
How many organic non-brand searches do you get from mobile now? How are you tracking that?
What if none of their competitors have a mobile-friendly site? Will their SERP really change?
What if the majority of their mobile organic traffic is brand name? They wouldn't lose that, would they?
I am pro-mobile, but for the user not for SEO gains and definitely not because Google said so.
Last thing, I am kind of shocked that MOZ still believes in keyword tracking and is considering it for mobile. I have never found this data very helpful or accurate. It also seems to go hand-in-hand with the, "We will get you ranked #1 for your Keyword mindset."
Very Interesting Your Thoughts But I Think There Still many Changes when new google algorithm appears.
mine website not mobile friendly but today i read this and made my site friendly it looks amazing..
Thanks For Sharing..
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I have 2 small questions. Everyone is talking about m. mobile redirect to a mobile friendly site.
1. What if I use another like wap.mydomain.com ? It would be help full for me, I wish to provide something extra. Like HD videos for Dextop users and mp4/3gp for mobile users. As same as if i blog about apps, then pc apps in the pc page, and android/IOS on mobile site. It gonna help me or responsive design is better ?
2. If I have both, responsive (as I,m currently using a larger display but many user use small as lower screen laptops ) and a mobile site, it gonna hurt my SEO ?
Do we know if this is a global roll out on the 21st? Sorry if I have missed this I am sure it has been covered somewhere.
I think I have heard that it will not be a global roll out on 4/21 - just US and then other countries will be added in after.
I love this update and the direction google is heading to. Everything that has been discussed lately (including this update) isn't about search engines but real people. It seems like user experience is google's number one priority.
just looking forward to see the moz blog in my small devices.
i think the way people are using smart phone it is vital that your site must be mobile friendly. so Google is on right track.
So, regarding responsive websites, I assume there is no need to be too obsessed with mobile page speed? And desktop rankings will not be affected at all? That's great news, although hard to believe!
Google has let slip that desktop rankings won't be affected by this update... and as far as page speed goes, that'll definitely be something to pay at least some attention to -- stay tuned for a post about it on Monday. =)
I think the update on 4/21 will not focus on page speed, but that does not mean it is not a concern. Responsive Design sites can be very slow, which will hurt desktop and mobile rankings both. If you have unblocked all your CSS and JS, you should be ok on 4/21 but I generally try and get my clients to have a 75% score or better for mobile and desktop in the Google PageSpeed tool.
Thank you Cindy for such a detailed insight about the update. A friend of mine runs a small ecommerce store. His website is mobile optimized and judging by the way most giants in India are moving towards an app only approach for Mobile, he is worried if he should get one too.
I have a question that google mobile friendly tools show site as mobile friendly but when we check site in google insight tools so it show very low score on Mobile. So which score will google count mobile friendly tool or google insight tool and what is the difference between both of these tools.
Regards
For this update, you should pay attention to the mobile-friendly tool, but in the long term, Google's PageSpeed Insights tool is still super valuable. Once you have unblocked all the resources you can, then start working on the Google PageSpeed Insights Mobile UX feedback, and after that, work on getting rid of the 'red' responses higher in the PageSpeed tool.
Hello Cindy..!
Pleased to see detailed 4/21 mobile friendly update in advance. Some pretty notable points are like “what about desktop ranking if my site is not mobile friendly”, “change will be bigger than the Panda and Penguin updates, but more inclined to android devices” and “does having a mobile app impact my mobile ranking” Looking forward for future..thanks!
Very helpful!! Good article
Nice and good article. A good reads for a newbie like me. Thanks
Of course, the update will emphasize a greater experience in surfing phenomenon. Many companies have put forward their efforts to minimize the impact of the update. one such witnessing evidence is nothing but the solution by Salzer Technologies(https://salzer1.instapage.com/)which helps the business to convert their non responsive one to mobile friendly layout.
Thanks for this content. I look forward to the next update to benefit me in my responsive web.
Hi cindy krum, Thanks for this mobile updates. Please update it regularly..
Thank you for answering all my questions in one place; I have some work to do on my mobile site. You have clearly done some serious research here.
thanks for share u tip mrs. i will wait ur update next articel. (Y)
but, my sites in keywords pakar seo it's not support mobile :/