In the last year or so, Google has increasingly displayed hyper-fresh content in SERPs, leading many marketers to think about how they can take advantage of that preference. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand explains a few ways to go about that without risking penalties.
For reference, here's a still image of this week's whiteboard:
Video Transcription
Howdy Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I want to talk a little bit about Google's strange and overwhelming in some cases bias to fresh content. I want to give a shout out to Glen Allsopp who had talked about this a little bit and written some blog posts exposing some of Google's priorities around freshness or what feel like priorities for them around freshness.
Google's been biasing to fresh content, trying to show more and more fresh results, recently published results in their SERPs for several years now, but it's gotten particularly strong in the last 12 months in certain sectors. I think Glen had noticed it very strongly in some of the sectors that he was watching for some of his clients. We have seen it in some places very heavily, in other places not as much. But you can definitely feel it.
There are places like Shakespeare plays. This is a search result that a few years ago, even 6 to 12 months ago probably you would not have seen much freshness, and now you're starting to see more and more of these types of things, results that call out when they were published, a feeling that things that are published more recently, even if they don't have as many links or as good of keyword targeting or as authoritative a website, those kinds of things are ranking a little bit higher. You're seeing news results in there, which is a relatively new development, especially on a phrase like this which the intent one might interpret as "well, they're probably looking for a list or maybe they're looking for plays in their area."
So more and more of these cases Google is biasing to show recently published results, and, because of that, there are some opportunities for folks in the SEO field. If you're seeing this kind of thing in the results that you're looking at, seeing a lot of dates, especially a lot of recent dates, in particular recent dates on published content that seems to not have the ranking ability that you would expect of the rest of the pages, you could use something like the keyword difficulty SERPs analysis tool from Moz to kind of try and figure that out. This may be a real opportunity for you, and there are a few ways that you can take advantage.
Number one, I suggest these kind of anyway. This isn't a, "Oh, I want to exploit something in Google's algorithm where they're weak, and I'm black hat, gray hat, and I'm trying to exploit it." This is actually Google saying, "Hey, we think users want fresh content, and so publishers please produce it because we're willing to put it in front of our audience." I think that's just fine. It could be that Google's a little over the line right now. Maybe they'll swing that pendulum back over time.
But number one, find keywords and terms and phrases with fresh results, like we talked about here, and then target them with some new content. Give this a try. Essentially, if you're looking out and you're saying, "Gosh, this is a hyper-competitive keyword. I'm not sure that I can normally rank here. Let me see if I can get there for a day or a couple of days. Do I have the ability to start ranking on fresh stuff?" If you can't hit the front page, the first page of results with that particular phrase, try a little bit longer tail keyword term.
Number two. If you have some old content, I think this is something that many of us experience. We have older content that's targeting valuable keywords, important keywords that are critical to our brand to attracting the visitors that we want, and those have fallen down in the rankings. It may be that you used to be in the top three or four, and now you're in the bottom half of the top ten results or on page two or three. Consider an update. I've done this several times and had a lot of success with it. Just updating an old blog post or an old resource, making it fresh again, adding new things, things that have emerged or come to light over the past few months or few years.
Then a republication or promotion. The critical thing here is to think about: Do you want to produce that at the same URL, or do you want to do a redirect? This is a little bit tough because, generally speaking, what I like to do is keep these at the same URL if they are outside of an RSS feed. So, essentially, not a blog post or not a news item or those kinds of things. I like to do the redirection when it's, "Hey, I'm rewriting this old blog post. I've got a new version of it. You know what? I'm going to 301 redirect that old version to the new version." Or if I really want to keep it available at the old URL, I'll use rel=canonical to say, "Hey, this is the more updated version. This is essentially a duplicate, just a more recent duplicate, and here's the old one if you want to see that."
Number three. If there are some hyper-valuable keywords that are consistently showing fresh results, you're just seeing this over and over and over again, well, maybe it's time for a regularly updated series. Think about columnists who do syndication, or they write a weekly column on a particular topic or around a specific subject or they do something once a month. This might be a big opportunity for you to say, "Hey, you know what?
What's a piece of content that we could refresh every month, that would be on this topic, and we could consistently be in those fresh results and we could always be delivering the most recent, most valuable stuff?"Good example is in the sports world. The sports world changes so fast. There are different scores, different teams, rankings, standings. An old page is nearly useless. Unless you're updating that page every time there's new information, it's not that valuable. So I think those are exactly the kinds of places where you might consider some form of regularly updated either series, new posts, new publications, or a single page that you're regularly updating.
Then number four, in terms of doing some research to try and find these types of phrases, obviously you can check out the SERPs if you're tracking in Moz Analytics and you're looking at your search results. You sort of can see those listed in there. But you might also use, to find some new phrases, things like Google Trends, Ubersuggest, which scrapes Google's suggest results. News sites, a lot of times when things are published that are news oriented, people will be doing searches around them. You can look at aggregators like Reddit or Alltop, social sites, obviously Twitter and Facebook, and these types of things to keep an eye on that.
Double Click Ad Planner, which sort of has similar data too, but seems to be slightly different than Google Trends, and sometimes you can see some more stuff there, and Fresh Web Explorer, which of course is part of the Moz Analytics research tools package to find those trends.
Last thing I'm going to say on this. There are a few rules that I have for fresh content. First off, fresh content doesn't just mean recycling and republishing. I realize that, because of this bias, sometimes, and Glen pointed this out in some of his posts, that you can take advantage of this simply by republishing similar content again and again. I would highly recommend against doing that. I think you're putting yourself at risk for things like Panda if you do it at a large scale or for manual penalties or for having low click-through, low engagement, high pogo sticking back to the search results. That kind of stuff is dangerous.
Make sure you're serving the visitor's intent. Remember that with fresh content there's probably a recency intent on top of whatever other layers. So, if I'm publishing something about Shakespeare's plays, I don't just want to list, "Well, here are all the plays, and they were all written in the 17th century or 16th century, and so they haven't changed. He's not writing any new ones. Yes, but new things are constantly coming out. The news results show different types of stuff. The quotes are showing which ones are popular. There's a movies page that's showing which Shakespearean plays are being made into movies or which new spin offs are being done with Shakespearean concepts in them. So I do recommend that.
I also suggest, if you can, get your site, get your feed included in Google news, and if that's not a possibility, at least have an RSS feed and be doing social shares on top of the content that you're publishing.
Then last, but not least, be cautious about abusing dates. I realize that there's a few folks in the gray hat, black hat world who have been doing this and been having a little bit of success with it on and off, which is just sort of modify the dates on the page of publication to fool Google. I don't know why it seems to work sometimes. Or fooling them by adding new comments, which is sort of weird. We've seen this a few times with Moz blog posts, where an old blog post gets a comment. That comment has the date of the comment's publication, and that actually will make the results show up with that newer, fresher date, which is a little bit awkward and odd. I don't think that's a bad thing if it's just happening naturally and Google happens to be messing up, but if you're specifically abusing it, I think you could get into trouble.
So I look forward to reading some great comments about what you're seeing in fresh results, how you're taking advantage of them. I'm sure you have some great suggestions for our readers as well. Take care. We'll see you again for another edition of Whiteboard Friday.
Can we all just take the time to appreciate the recent image previews on these Whiteboard Fridays?
They're fantastic. It looks like Rand is auditioning for some sort of Psychic Detective Cop Show. Seattle Five 0, Moz and Order etc
Image Gallery
Loving the work, Kojak!
Memes incoming?
What do you think?
https://www.memecreator.org/static/images/memes/1805644.jpg
@Tom, yeah, we really should appreciate these previews. But the recent one reminded me of this classic: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8Kyi0WNg40 ;-)
Take care and cheers from Germany
Sven
Good Grief, Sven! I think you're right!
The Resemblance is Uncanny
Ha, ha, ha -. these pictures proof it. Excellent. ;-) But all fun and joking aside. Once again, a great WBF. Keep up the good work Mozzers. :-)
Hey Tom
You just {pulled|dragged} us to totally different direction of white board by adding those pics ...
I am loving it :)
One of the first people to pronounce my name properly ;). Thanks for the mention!
I think your main first point is key: Look for results which already have freshness in them. You're unlikely going to disturb any rankings where Google aren't already clearly factoring this into search results.
A good example of this is for 'PPC Case Study'. I rank 1st in Google, even though I shouldn't. In fact the first 5 results are all just ranking because of freshness. I was trying to do some research on the topic yesterday actually (I'm not a PPC guy) but the results just didn't help at all.
Definitely an area where they've swung too far, but also a great time for webmasters to be taking advantage of it.
Hi!
Just to add to this week's WBF on fresh content.
Is using schema structure data "itemprop" types a sound way for letting Google know the date status of your content and also using it to let Google know when it that content has been modified and updated?
I have content pages that are regularly updated, I want to keep the same URL's but I want Google to easily understand very quickly the status of the content on these pages.
i.e.
<meta itemprop="dateModified" content="2013-10-04">
Best
David
You are absolutely right! These meta tags are really help to catch the attention of the Google and other search engines. As per the Google's latest update, It is essential to publish great and fresh content over the online places.
Good answer, this seems really useful and I am going to try and use it on some of my blog posts, and product descriptions for a client's website.
Thanks, Rand for ur informative white board Friday... I always follows ur blogs I think this post about Google Humming Bird Updation...What about Penguin 5 or 2.1..............many SEO sides are hitting by this updation....Which keywords are more anchor text that keywords of some of my site only penalized & some sites are penalized fully only the way searchengineland mention to use disavow tool for bad links or I think after saw this white board we have to do content refresh.... & give some information about author verification for my old sites....can I do author verification recently create some Google plus account for my old site.....
Updating an old blogpost and then 301 redirect the old one to the new one seems to me like manipulation.
It is like: hi, Google, I act like this is a new blogpost but in reality it is not really new.
If you update the blogpost the modified date will change in your xml sitemap, so Google will see the change right?
What do you mean with changing the canonical? I mean, in Wordpress you can't just change the rel canonical for a single blogpost right?
Is it also good to put the updated blogpost on top of your blog and promote it through social media again?
Well, I think common sense should prevail. it all depends on how substantial the update is. I worked with a subject matter expert who regularly updated his blog posts because his thinking had changed. The revisions were substantial and he made clear why he had changed his mind. 301 redirects seem very much in order in cases like these.
"I mean, in Wordpress you can't just change the rel canonical for a single blogpost right?" Yep there's a plugin for that .... https://yoast.com/wordpress/seo/
Hi Everyone!
Yes it's true that updating the content is good, the information should be fresh. However, in my case (blog tourism), I wrote blog articles about events last year and this year I planed to update these articles with fresh information about the very same events. I intended to "publish" them again so that they would appear at the top of my published articles.
If I understand correctly, this is something you don't recommend. Should I just then update the content, leave the published date as of last year and stick the article at the top of the other ones? (I cannot stick them all each time I update content, can I?)
Thanks in advance for your insights/ideas
Great video and information. I've used old content on one of my websites that used to dominate Google for competitive keywords. It's slipped over time. So I redid the article, made it more user friendly (easier to read with H2 tags, etc.), the post date changed to a recent time, and now it's climbing back to the top for a lot of different and competitive keywords.
Awesome video.
The idea that really struck me was to have a frequently updated series, but here's my question: If you have a whole series of articles/pages on your site which all focus on the same keywords, isn't that keyword cannibalization? How would you avoid this problem?
Excellent topic. The Google bias for hyper-fresh content is going to be applied to categories where fresh content makes sense. In Glen's example, PPC case study, since there are many changes in PPC tools and programs and case studies will change accordingly, it makes sense that Google would bias towards freshness. For queries where they don't but the intent is for fresh results based on a recent change (Not Provided, External Keyword Retirement, Google Engage -> Partner Program), I often will use the search tools >> anytime > past day to force fresh results. I assume Google uses usages patterns of this search tools feature to categorize queries with freshness hyper bias as this could be done algorithmically.
Yesterday a friend of mine was just telling me that he was getting great results for his car dealership website by edit/adding new content to descriptions on his listing pages. I'm going to experiment with this myself now!
Is that a Moz Analytics watch!? It looks just like the super sexy doughnut charts on the dashboard.
I'm also a bit confused about the proper way to update old blog content. Seems like the 301 would send the wrong signal to Google that we're trying to game the system. Maybe a better way would be to write a new blog post with all of the new information on the topic in question, and link back the old post with something like, "In an earlier article about [something I'm an expert in]..." That way you get fresh content in front of your visitors (and Google), link it back to an old, useful post to pass link juice, and also increase readership and time on your site. Any thoughts?
HI Rand, I love your videos, they are incredibly useful! Question for you, if we update older pieces of content, that have historically performed well but have recently dropped in the rankings, with a new new information like a new paragraph, do we need to update the publish date in our CMS? Or is just adding the new content with a note on the page letting readers know when we updated the page enough to to let Google know there is new information on that page?
Thank you :)
Hey Rand;
I think the best method for updating the content is; Differentiate each version with a parameter; it can be an year...
For example:
* Social media marketing trends 2013
* Social media marketing trends 2014
I am following this creteria on my projects but still its not working the way it has to be.
I also observe the same thing about freshness of the content getting ranked. Last night added a youtube video and just now checked its ranking in first page of Google in some long tail keywords.
I have one question - Some sites which have say one page content and all the keywords targeting to that one page only what should be the strategy (client dont want to add any more pages or blog section etc). Is it to add more and more fresh contents in that one page (Like big sales page) ? Please advice.
I saw this with my new post on my blog. It appeared in top10 by one keyword and then it was slowly dropping day by day (no backlinks to it). Looks like "fresh content bonus".
thanks for this informative post.
Nice WBF
I just want to add 4th point in a process. Use the existing result in a SERP. Check there backlinks of particular page and do the outreach (old stuff as usual). Best part of this you can have hyper relative backlinks to stay even more time on page 1 of Google.
This will cause double effect Freshness + quality backlinks.
Your idea seems workable.... :)
Google claims it favors fresh content, but it seems like every time I need to find something recent and topical I get a result that is several years old.
Great Video! Thank you!
I would like to understand more specifically which is the difference between re-directing and using the same URL in terms of ranking/visibility - if there is some difference at all.
great from this post we get to know we must use fresh as well as the equality content if we use good and fresh content and trying to find more fresh results. Freshness should be there if there is no freshness then it will be penalize by the Google which harms our site. thanks for telling us. We should take the advantage of the good and fresh content.
Hi Rand,
I think Google wants to discourage SEO. I’m not being a pessimist here. I just think that this is really happening. Google’s strange bias to fresh contents contradicts all SEO beliefs and practices. Maybe Google would like to become the only SEO in his realm and gets all the bucks.
great post! rand 1 thing i have to ask that i have blog site which have old content so can i change the content of these pages or redirect ?? which 1 is better
Informative as per the usual WBF's.
My question is: I leave the date off of some of my content, not to be shady, but it really does not matter for myself or the reader. By leaving the date off am I hurting my search rankings by not including it or simply putting myself at a disadvantage to content that does have a date?
i will take my answer off the air Art.
Really Good :D
Ohh I missed this friday. Nice stuff @Rand
I have definitely seen pages jump based on new comments being added.
When searching for photos, news, design trends, I often use the advanced Google search and filter for pages updated in the last month or last year as I am often scouring the web for latest trends. The results are usually NEW blog pages of the type "30 great website back grounds", "16 web design tools". But Google does have a habit of classifying very old pages with recent comments as new.
I was ranking on first page with fresh content, but now there is on 2nd page, now what should i do?
Redirect or Backlink?
Write new content or update old.
Hi Rand !
Very good post ! But I have a strange question about it :
It’s a good pratice to use a hit parade of the most read blogs in month? Or not ?
Hey Rand, thanks for the excellent WBF. In terms of regularly updated content series, does the frequency of updates depend highly on the keywords? Taking your sports reference as an example—most content would be old news within a day. But perhaps other keywords don't require the same kind of frequency..
Great WBF! Freshness of site content is an issue, but Google's unfair bias of this uber-fresh causes issues as it's not always best for the searcher. I agree that keeping content up-to-date is important!!
Hi Rand,
Great post..!! I have observed the same things while working on some of my projects. It is also observed that recently uploaded pictures also getting higher rankings in SERP. In pages containing fresh content along with who follows Google's structured data like publication date, Authorship etc. are getting more preference. I have liked the trick of updating old content and I have implemented it on one of my blog post. Let's see what results will I get for that page.
Thanks..!
Vijay
We're definitely seeing this with our clients in a lot of verticals with lower competition.
Nice whiteboard Friday Thanks,
Nice to see Glen get some recognition I know he's mentioned the point for some time (always a pleasure to read your comments too Glen), I wonder if its an anomaly in Google and if it will swing back too far.
The problem I'm finding is trying to keep track of fresh content other than going direct to Google most software takes a few days to catch up by which point its too late!
The concept behind it is nice that Google wants fresh content on top but I do worry it would get abused too much as well. Have to wait and see I guess.
Thanks again.
Great tutorial Rand. I'm just hoping that everyone gets that this is not a phase. Fresh content will bare fruit for the years to come. What is the right way to publish this content? Well as Rand says go look for yourself, the results that are rewarded by Google are there for everyone to see and study. Start on larger keyword praise and try different techniques find what works, that's what innovation means.
"I realize that there's a few folks in the gray hat, black hat world who have been doing this and been having a little bit of success with it on and off, which is just sort of modify the dates on the page of publication to fool Google. I don't know why it seems to work sometimes."
Agreed, and it's really hard not to give it a try, although the best argument not to is that it would quickly confuse your real users.
As always, great observations and contributions!
I would just add to the rules for fresh content - "it has to be relevant to the website's overall purpose".
Hi Rand,
Really interesting video and i specifically like your point about its relevancy to the sports industry.
One of the things we always used to discuss with clients was re-marketing old content via Linkedin & Twitter to help answer or help others. For example:
"Hey, we've also had this problem in the past and actually produced a feature post about the steps necessary for you to alleviate the problem. Feel free to give it a look through to see if there is anything that can help you."
This was generally recommended to clients who lack the resources to get a fully updated/rewritten piece but have social media profiles. An example of this would be a piece i wrote on avoiding boring content, we used it to help people on Linkedin who weren't getting social shares and now it ranks 1st for the keyword "boring content" (worryingly!)
It's no guarantee but certainly worth keeping in mind.
Great video Rand andI have one question. This period Im giving a try on content marketing so I created a blog on my site in order to boost the main page. Will this help my main page? Also in the main I put an "announcement" section in which I say the "xya article is online" etc etc. Will these things help the freshness?
Thanks again :)
Nice watch and Gr8 WBF!
Second point of republication and promotion keeping in mind rules for fresh content can easy and most effective way.
Hyper fresh content is possibly aided by social media such as Google+. For example, if I post a new page in my clothing directory for "sneaker manufacturers", it may take some time for Google to find this information. However, if I add a link to this page on G+ shortly after I create my new page, won't this help Google find it faster? The fresh content policy may be another signal from search engines suggesting website owners should utilize social media.
Yes, refreshing old content is often valuable and easy to do while watching a football game or something else. As long as it is thoughtful info, it is a good use of time. That said, it might've kept some from getting hit with the new algorithm update this week! [link removed by editor]
I wonder if anyone has ever tried this with products on an eCommerce sites? Technically speaking, each time a product goes offline or comes online (whether it's a new range or sold out), the static category pages have different (or in the case of new products, fresh) content.
It would be really interesting to see if this had an effect on both CTR (depending on the date in the SERPs) and rankings..
Not that I condone that, just a thought :)
Interesting thought... what about writing a new description for the products?
Good shout! Hadn't thought of that, might look at a split test..
thanks for this really useful information and guidance regarding the fresh content . It's really important for the content to be proper and fresh, it is mainly the content that keeps users getting back to your website / blog again and again and its freshness is even more important.
Our 11 year old site have moved up on hundreds of keywords in last two days. From page 100 to page 1. Thank you Google!! We converted to wordpress and I sent a few letters. I pray it holds!! I am not claiming recovery yet! Just a wonderful Friday!
Enjoyed this WBF Rand. Moz is a case in point for quality hyper fresh content!
Great points here! Thank you!
looks nice. thanks for the shared this informative post with us..
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