The Hummingbird update was different from the major algorithm updates like Penguin and Panda, revising core aspects of how Google understands what it finds on the pages it crawls. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand explains what effect that has on long-tail searches, and how those continue to evolve.
For reference, here's a still of this week's whiteboard!
Video Transcription
Howdy, Moz fans and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I wanted to talk a little bit about Google Hummingbird slightly, but more broadly how Google has been making many efforts over the years to change how they deal with long-tail search.
Now long tail, if you're not familiar already, is those queries that are usually lengthier in terms of number of words in the phrase and refer to more specific kinds of queries than the sort of head of the demand curve, which would be shorter queries, many more people performing them, and, generally speaking, the ones that in our profession, especially in the SEO world, the ones that we tend to care about. So those are the shorter phrases, the head of the demand curve, or the chunky middle of the demand curve versus the long tail.
Long tail, as Google has often mentioned, is a very big proportion of the Web search traffic. It's anywhere from 20% to maybe 40% or even 50% of all the queries on the Web are in that long tail, sort of fewer than maybe 10 to 50 searches per month, in that bucket. Somewhere around 18% or 20% of all searches Google says are extremely long tail, meaning they've never seen them before, extremely unique kinds of searches.
I think Google struggles with this a little bit. They struggle from an advertising perspective because they'd like to be able to serve up great ads targeting those long-tail phrases, but inside of AdWords, Google's Keyword Tool, for self-service advertising, it's tough to choose those. Google doesn't often show volume around them. Google themselves might have a tough time figuring out, "hey, is this query relevant to these types of results," especially if it's in a long tail.
So we've seen them get more and more sophisticated with content, context, and textual analysis over the years such that today, with the release of, in August according to Google, Hummingbird, which was an infrastructure update more so than an algorithmic update. You can think of Penguin or Panda as being algorithmic style updates, and Google Caffeine, which upgraded their speed, or Hummingbird, which they say upgrades their text processing and their content and context understanding mechanisms is affecting things today.
I'll try and illustrate this with an example. Let's say Google gets two search queries, "best restaurants SEA," Seattle's airport, that's the airport code, the three-letter code, and "where to eat at Sea-Tac Airport in Terminal C." Let's say then that we've got a page here that's been produced by someone who has listed the best restaurants at Sea-Tac, and they've ordered them by terminals.
So if you're in Terminal A, Terminal B, Terminal C, it's actually easy to walk between most of them except for N and S. I hope you never have to go N. It's just a pain. S is even more of a pain. But in Terminal C, which I assume would be Beecher's Cheese, because that place is incredible. It just opened. It's super good. In Terminal C, they've got a Beecher's Cheese, so they've got a listing for this.
A smart Google, an intelligent engineer at Google would go, "Man, you know, I'd really like to be able to serve up this page for this result. But it doesn't target the words 'where to eat' or 'Terminal C' specifically, especially not in the title or the headline, the page title. How am I going to figure that out?" Well, with upgrades like what we've seen with Hummingbird, Google may be able to do more of this. So they essentially say, "I want to understand that this page can satisfy both of these kinds of results."
This has some implications for the SEO world. On top of this, we're also getting kind of biased away from long-tail search, because keyword (not provided) means it's harder for an individual marketer to say: "Oh, are people searching for this? Are people searching for that? Is this bringing me traffic? Maybe I can optimize my page more towards it, optimize my content for it."
So this kind of combination and this direction that we're feeling from Google has a few impacts. Those include more traffic opportunities, opportunities for great content that isn't necessarily doing a fantastic job at specific keyword targeting.
So this is kind of interesting from an SEO perspective, because we're not saying, and I'm definitely not saying, stop doing keyword targeting, stop putting good keywords in your titles and making your pages contextually relevant to search queries. But I am saying if you do a good job of targeting this, best restaurants at SEA or best restaurants Sea-Tac, you might find yourself getting a lot more traffic for things like this. So there's almost an increased benefit to producing that great content around this and serving, satisfying a number of needs that a search query's intent might have.
Unfortunately, for some of us in the SEO world, it could get rougher for sites that are targeting a lot of mid and long-tail queries through keyword targeting that aren't necessarily doing a fantastic job from a content perspective or from other algorithmic inputs. So if it's the case that I just have to be ranking for a lot of long-tail phrases like this, but I don't have a lot of the brand signals, link signals, social signals, user usage signals, I just have strong keyword signals, well, Google might be trying to say, "Hey, strong keyword signals doesn't mean as much to us anymore because now we can take pages that we previously couldn't connect to that query and connect them up."
In general, what we're talking about is Google rewarding better content over more content, and that's kind of the way that things are trending in the SEO world today.
So I'm sure there's going to be some great discussion. I really appreciate the input of people who have done extensive analysis on top of Hummingbird. Those folks include folks like Dr. Pete, of course, from Moz, Bill Slawski from SEO by the Sea, Ammon Johns, who wrote a great post about this. I think there'll be more great discussion in the comments. I look forward to joining you there. Take care.
Soo..the elephant in the room here obviously - where can we buy that shirt?
I got it right around the corner from Moz at https://shop.zebraclub.com/
Try long tail keywords search - Rand's Army shirt from whiteboard friday
And this page is ranking at number 5 or 6 - Rand hummingbird is working ... :)
https://www.google.com/search?q=%22Where+can+I+buy+Rand%27s+Army+shirt+of+whiteboard+Friday%22&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a#q=Rand%27s+Army+shirt+from+whiteboard+friday&rls=org.mozilla:en-US%3Aofficial
I believe this shirt is part of the "Grimace Collection" by Mark Ecko. Next week Rand will be sporting the Hamburgler Sweater Vest. Stay tuned.
Hey Rand,
Hummingbird is good for searchers as Google conceptualize the search, try to understand what the query means and then display results. So now it’s not only keyword matching, but context matching which comes with a good and relevant content.
Nice WBF!
So no more stupid websites pushed to top10 for specified keyphrases. If I search shoes (to buy) I find shoes (to buy), not "how to make", or "celebrities in shoes"? Great.
^^ never saw celebreties in shoes when i searched for shoes to buy them :)
that's only an example;)
I know - thatswhy the :) at the end ... it's friday... 14:40 here - near by weekend x)
Are you saying that 'how to make shoes' is not a relevant result for the search 'shoes'. People may want free images of shoes, or inspiration for a new shoe design. A search for 'shoes' is (a) not long-tail and (b) only indicative that you may want to buy but cannot assume you actually want to buy.
I know that's not longtail but before hummingbird typing "shoes +producer" gives me "how to make" records too. Now is better - I checked various keyphrases.
Actually, Google works heavily on what they call "user intent". A vast majority of people who search for the word "shoes" are looking for shoes to buy and not "how to make shoes". If you did a search string like google.com/search?q=shoes&pws=0 (which has personalization off) most people will be looking to purchase shoes so Google will fill the SERP with shoe buying sites. But if you are signed into Google or chrome and using your search history, Google will understand that when YOU put in shoes you are looking for information on how to make shoes. Google, and the other search engines want to help you find the things you are looking for and new algos like Hummingbird are getting us closer to that. The next evolution of the Search Engines is to give you a SERP that provides info on "what you mean" and not "what you type."
Definatily I am agree to you my friend, that would be much better results for us @Furtak
I think it can be good for searchers and SERP Quality.
But it is bad for SEOs wich really try to make the web and searchresults better with their SEO.
Not that bad.... keep content relevant and then target keywords..... it might help!
Well SEOs do what client want. He want to be in top for "car insurance" and he'll get it. No matter of his real services quality.
Serps order isn't by quality of services/products... it'd be wonderful but the truth is that order is by combination of targeted keywords, content and seo services (better or worser).
Top1 could be bad idea to choose it, because company from 34 place has way better offer and quality...
I disagree that it is bad to SEOs. If anything it's great for SEOs. You can still research keywords to target, but you focus on the topic rather than obsessing about the specific phrase, which makes for more user-oriented content. As ever the SEO's changes, but I would say this update is good for SEO's and good for the search results. (First time I've ever said that about a Google update!)
I agree: it's very good for SEOs and search results. It also show that not everybody is capable to provide SEO services (huge droppings after 05.10.2013 shows poor link building tactics at my country). I see very big amount of unnatural links issues. I'm lucky I can handle that but I see people deleting all and disavow which is very bad idea;)
so than let me say it isn't bad for SEOs - what i ment was - it is much easier to focus the keywords than deliver quality content - special when u are an agency and your clients aren't interested in delivering any content.
This Update is good for SEOs with Content friendly Clients or SEOs wich have the oppotunity to change and write content by themselfe.
With most clients we can do that - but some clients are special. So they dont want content to change - it is low quality, it is older than the domain - no chance for that website - what isn't a bad thing - why deliver low value content... I prefer high quality in SERPs
I know that kind of clients: why I must/should, that's not my problem but yours, I don't want it's good, I don't care... and even: I'll find someone who don't want to change content who run seo services instead of You;)
That are the kind of clients, who - if you can allow yourself doing it - you should fire.
Because it is clear that a client, who doesn't pay an heck of attention to SEO, and who doesn't want to get involved in it, considers Search Marketing everything but marketing.
The problem is that they will understand how wrong is their attitude when - with a "I-don't-know-why-that-happened" - they contact another SEO because they tanked in the SERPs.
and say how bad you are;)
allright - we all - we should fire these guys, they will say how bad we are - we actually need all clients - these to :(
It seems like we are being steered toward using the keywords to guide content rather than focusing on keyword density and proper placement of the keyword. Sure we will still follow SEO best practices, but now our content is free to add real value. I'm kinda stoked, actually.
KEYWORD DENSITY??!!
Snapping faces
Now that comment made me smile.
And we still have clients and prospects occasionally ask about density... snapping faces. Love it.
https://moz.com/blog/hummingbird-unleashed :) SNAP, you must SNAP his face !! :) LOL
Client's should always be their own biggest cheerleaders! It amazes me when some want to be at the top of the SERPs but don't want to do any of the work to get there. (Social media, self promotion, sharing with family/friends, offering specials to grab attention, etc...) It's *their* business! I can optimize the pages till their perfect, but if that's all there is.... I never understand why they wouldn't want to be their own biggest proponent.
One of my client has now 80% "not provided" data. Obviously I will be relaying on 3rd party tools. I always wonder how accurate 3rd party tools will be on keywords research?
I have an idea how to work with not provided and how to check the number of entries by phrase from google. It takes time and that work is with gwt, keyword planner and ga...
Better content wins the fight over long content. Seo is the thing where every time we need to come up with different approaches and methods. But quality always brings you higher.
Google is doing it best to give its users best of best as it ensures top search results are relevant, have good user experience and is not because of keywords only.
I would not put it in long vs better content, but I would simply talk about content that fine targets the correct audience.
Content can be short or can long. If it targets the audience and how the audience refers to your products/services, then you are fine from the specific "keyword/query" point of view.
Hummingbird and semantic/contextual search will have an impact on all search queries, but I actually feel it will have a greater impact on Head terms vs Long Tail queries. With Long Tail searches, people provide Google with a lot of information to determine their search intent, as in the example of "best restaurants SEA". Now with Hummingbird, Google won't necessarily return sites that contain those exact keywords, but it understands what the user wants. Compare that to a Head search for just "restaurants". There, the user intent is more ambiguous so Google will have to use more semantic understanding and context to attempt to deliver the user with relevant results for a broad query.
Interesting input on the new Google updates, but I'll have to admit I spent about half the video trying to figure out whether Rand had a camo vest on top of his collared shirt, or if it was how the shirt was designed.
About halfway through the video the answer to my question became quite clear when his back was turned to the camera, it's all in one shirt!
Anyway, interesting look at hummingbird though!
As I told privately to Rand, we could take that shirt as metaphor of "SEOs in the trenches of Google" :D
I'm waiting for green lantern, flash, batman, superman, etc tshirt just like in tbbt;) It fits on this forum;)
Rand, this is another wonderful example of great semantics going forward and Google really becoming more 'humanized' if that is the best way to phrase it. As a small business owner & all the focus on SEO over the last years this is such a radical change for many to adopt to...but shouldn't great content have been the thrust all along...now all that keyword stuffing Joost had us do on our web pages needs to come out! oh brother it is tough out there for some of us! thank you
I watched this video three times before I got used to your wicked shirt and could properly concentrate on what you were saying! ;-) It was worth it, great summary, and fantastic examples.
Hummingbird has been bugging me from a 'searcher' perspective, because when I'm looking for something, I tend to reverse engineer - i.e. I think about what words website owners would use when answering my question. So the search results have been less useful for me recently.
It's definitely good news for small companies and bloggers who don't use SEOs. Although, there's still an advantage to having a decent SEO, and a lot of work they need to do, but I think it's more about finding the gaps in the general marketing campaign - and looking at the bigger picture.
Does Google hide keywords (not provide) to prevent us of "guessing" how algorithm works and what we have to do to put our websites in top10 (imho yes)? What's the reason of this? Really "privacy" or to use more of adwords? I don't know...
Content is king (still, but now it's even more important).
Sincerely, even if "Not Provided" is hiding us important information about Organic Search and the privacy excuse is very childish, we should not obsess overly too much about it.
The fact that Hummingbird and 100% Not Provided have been deployed almost at the same time must have a correlation. If Hummingbird is more about search entities and better information retrieval, where keywords by itself have lost part of the omnipresent value they had, then just relying on keyword data is not sufficient anymore.
I'll talk about this more in detail in a post that hopefully will be published next week on Moz, but - as a preview - I suggest you to rediscover one feature that us SEOs tend to skip in GWT: "Content Keywords" (under "Google Index"). There Google is telling us what are the keywords it "assigns" to a page of our site; the data is useful, because it tells us if Google is assigning the same keywords (and the related ones) to one page or more. If they are more, than - especially now in a Hummingbird era - we are in a problematic situation, figuratively similar to a missing or wrong canonicalization.
We should correct that, and try to create a more consistent and better page that will be considered optimum for those keywords (or, better, search queries) and avoid creating as many optimized per long tail pages, which was a classic in SEO.
Finally, it is not content the king in pure SEO terms: it's context.
I know that listing but I have one question: sites order is important? 1st is better targeted to that specific word or just has most repetitions?
I'm looking forward for Your post.
I suspect that the "ranking" is based on both repetitions and semantics contextuality.
If it is the correct page the one Google shows you first, that's something that you must decide.
So now we are more in dark, because every time we publish the content we need to check how Google reacts to it ... and for the new website this will take more or less 2 - 3 months or may be more.
Eagerly waiting for your post ... I am sure your post will crack some nice and handy ideas.
Hi Gianluca,
How's your post coming along?
Very interested in your views on this "Content Keywords" section.
My experience is that repetition is by far the most influential aspect in this list.
It will always be the king.
Rand, any chance you can provide specific examples of sites that are benefiting from "Better Content >More Content"?
Very informative post, For instance if I am targeting cheap flights to accra. It is already long tail, do you want me to target using more terms around cheap flights to accra? What link building methods do you suggest me to do in order to cope with Google hummingbird except great content.
supporting websites - always work (if done good)
I love that - Google is rewarding "good" content vs "more" content!
Please any data or relevant sources of it ?
Good video Rand, I really enjoyed it. It is very clear that Google is trying to start talking our language instead of the SEO one. In your 2 examples the first one is a typical seo keyphrase someone would type but on the second one it is what a person would ask his mate.
In my opinion Google show their intentions back in May or June (not sure when thevideo was releases) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h64_H6TOz4k when they released the new NEXUS 7 commercial. If you carefully watch the video, all the queries the young man is asking is exactly what Hummingbird is about.
Moving to today, the truth is that people would still type "buy shoes london" if they are on their desktop or laptopas they want quick results with a minimum timing effort but if the voice search becomes a trend and mobiles overtake desktops by 2016 as most researches claim then i can see how results will be affected and how ahead Google will be comparing to their competitors. Funny how Facebook tried to do the same with its social search with the difference that the queries are predefined and limited to your social network (which is understandable as Facebook is a social network and not a search engine).
I think for the time being SEOs should carry on doing what they do but start extracting data from the previous years with a couple of advanced segments that will dig out queries with 5Ws in em (why, who, which, where, when), queries with keyphrases such as "best, online, how to" etc and learn from them, blog articles that converted into more than 3 page/searches, examine those patterns, see what your visitors were looking for and ammend accordingly.
Dont get tricked by reading "carry on doing what they do" what I already mentioned is a lot of work.
have a good weekend.
Good research Rand
Thanks Rand for another great video, and just more affirmation that we should always be thinking about our users and what they want. You mention in your video that it is becoming more important about quality of content versus amount of content, how does this relate to frequency of adding content to your website? For some smaller companies who may not have the staff or time to create unique and quality content multiple times a month, what should they do? Or I guess do you have any recommendations on how often they should add content?
Hi Rand Fishkin
Happy to hear others notice the hidden benefit in the Hummingbird update, as well. I was looking Hummingbird update. I have read lot of blog about this update. really nice information. Keep it up ; )
Interesting video, I am excited to see further analysis of how semantic search changes the quality and quantity of content being written.
It was good to have this video in simple terms. I try not to over think Hummingbird. It seems pretty simple to me. Consistent, useful quality content... Of course there are industry tactics that will help with search results, but looking too deep into the SEO aspects of content takes away from the big picture. In my experience, the rankings always come with useful content. It wont be over night, but once the rankings come, they stay. Just my two cents...
Thanks for the clarification sir Rand, even though it's short however well said. :)
Rand your such a little fashionista haha. Thanks for the video though, on point per ush.
Hey Rand,
Thanks for sharing this Google update. The hummingbird update is different than many of their updates in the past. The main goal of this update is to show results for longer tail search inquiries. It is meant to return better results and it changes the way sites are going to receive traffic.
Hey Rand, Great video. Would you (or anyone on this discussion thread) know whether the "Hummingbird" update only pertains to to English language sites? Reason I ask, we have many non-English sites, just wondering whether we need to rethink my keyword strategy.
Can't take my eyes off the shirt. Rand, are you going hummingbird hunting?!
Great post. +1
What an awesome post on Hummingbird. I love the way you write dude, not all boring and stuff lol. Keep up the great work!
Morale of this update -
Quality win again ...
It was a great co-incident that prior to humming bird update, I was searching for a query, I was working for a portal & I wanted to get a list of portals just for competitive analysis...I was trying to input "List of ....portals" but apparently no answer for me....I got really frustrated that how can I get my answer "The list I wanted to know" & next day I read the humming bird update....Google is really smart in reading consumer behavior & implement updates accordingly...lets see how humming bird act & react for SEO...:)
Informative!!
But i have few queries in regarding to Keyword optimization. How to optimize Long tail Keywords in a Web page? either it should be exactly Narrated in the content?
Is this a new way to promote Wikipedia? I think Google seems to buy it soon and promote themselves..
If it keeps going like that, we will all end on adwords ;)
This was an exceptionally articulate explanation of why "better content" is now rewarded more heavily than "more content," all in a short video. Well done!
Great explanation. This new algorithm is basically catching up to the new way most of us search now and days. Our Smartphones and its ability to "speak" your search sheds a whole new light on longtail search and how content is found and optimized. F.A.Q. pages, conerstone pages, information pages, blog posts, articles and videos will gain MUCH more attention and become authoritative content more than it ever has. This is a HUGE advantage for Small Businesses and how they optimize their Online content and presence.
Hi Rand, some are saying that Hummingbird hasn't really created any losers, is this still so, despite it being potentially harder to rank for mid to long-tail keywords?
After hummingbird Google shows perfect local searches which is also good.
After hummingbird Google shows perfect local searches which is also good.
Thanks for sharing this information about humming bird, there is a good concept about long tail keywords.
Hi Rand, I totally agree with you. The Hummingbird update was different from the major algorithm updates like Penguin and Panda. If we really want to be at the top of the SERPs then we need to do something. I still believe that better content is much better that long content.
This was an amazing white board Friday. Thanks
Nice work Rand, I have tried to translate the meaning of Hummingbird into swedish in order to make sense and explain it... I used a screenshot of your video, Thanks
So what about directories and phone books?
Their content is "thin and wide" - names, addresses and phone numbers for 10's of 1000's of businesses in the area.
They often dominate search results for small and mid-size towns
Theoretically , shouldn't my "plumbing contractors" website with rich content about plumbing in the town now rank higher? The content is much richer. Yet, the big phone books still dominate in Google for local searches.
I can only assume that the hummingbird only applies to long-tail searches. But the rich and hyper-local content of a local website still has no chance of beating out the phone book for the general searches "plumbers in Appleton WI".
I've been hoping (since 2006) that someday Google would start re-thinking their placement of phone books. But it seems that they will continue to dominate the SERP for local businesses
thoughts?
All I know is that I have 3 clients that have fallen off the map entirely and they have good content and not a lot. This latest update is very upsetting.
Great overview. definitely this will change the search and keywords patterns over the tips. But I still think not everyone will be changing their way of searching on Google and will continue to use the keywords. I will be researching more on what are the implications for SEO? What do we do about this? we need to carefully consider what users are actually looking for.
I think my own not completely serious video (G:[Dave Keys Hummingbird] should fetch it for you) may have it right when I said that Google decides it knows what you mean better than you do. Sometimes Hummingbird may over generalize in its attempt to push back against so called over optimization. The result for a lot of small business owners is that they are often drowned out by brands. Some argue that people prefer brands so this is a logical conclusion for search to prefer them too but in my area of real estate, many known brands simply aggregate content created by agents, then "steal" leads via organic search dominance from agents and sell them back after a good dose of existential listing data and created expectations that have to be managed by the agent. This is harmful to local agents who get saddled with all the work and none of the benefit created by search algorithms.
We very rarely, if ever, worry about keyword density. Our main focus is getting our clients websites optimized (completing title tags, meta descriptions, image alt tags, etc.) and making sure they focus on quality content. We find all too often that web designers leave those fields completely blank.
Google has said in the past "The perfect search engine would understand exactly what you mean". I see the hummingbird update as an attempt to further target results based on predicting relevance, like Rand demonstrated. Google already uses physical signals to optimise results, such as location, but i see them expanding on this much more. Google may pull a personalised result based on your past interactions with what you are searching for; so as for "best restaurants SEA" if you have checked into a burger joint there previously, or if you ordered pizza online recently, you will see results representing that burger place, or a place nearby that sells pizzas.
It seems like Google more seriously consider on how well content, title and heading tags are related each other.
Suffering with the changes of Google !!!
Thank you Rand! for Great video (Y)
I been using long tile, and I got amazing result in organic traffic from 12,000 to 28,000 en 6 months, so very agree, is a bit chunk of the traffic, very good point
A wee bit complicated but I get what you're saying. There is a possibility that one can over egg the pudding on this but like you said good relevant content for your niche is the name of the game.
I am really happy with this update, Thank you Google , and Rand you already said better content > more content.Thanks again
Google will now be able to set much more relevancy for the search queries and corresponding relevant pages but Who will prevail the SERPs? --
Only 10 results on 1 page :) higher the rank more the traffic and rivalries will go on...
Loving the shirt. I'm pleased Google is going in this direction. Glad to have yourself shed light on this. I've seen so many people rush to talk about Google Hummingbird and I bet they're all wishing they could turn back time now.
Thanks for a nice recap of how Hummingbird is changing things, Rand. As some have said in the comments above, Google is getting better at ranking the most relevant pages for search terms not just the pages that have the right keywords in the right places.
If some SEOs weren't doing it already, this should change the way content is created and think from a user-value perspective not just meeting the needs of search trends or keyword volumes. I've too often seen websites try to create umpteen million pages in order to have a landing page for each and every product they may or may not sell.
As Rand said, that "more content" style isn't going to be rewarded as often with Hummingbird. Time to consolidate, improve the quality of content on the remaining pages, and then work to create your brand via social media, acquiring quality links, producing fresh content, etc. Great information - as always - on Whiteboard Friday.
Thanks You Rand!! To explaining Hummingbird algorithms very deeply. Hummingbirds algorithms aim is to return better results for search queries by sense of understanding the real meaning of raised queries.
Thanks for sharing valuable post.
Rand, you say "Hummingbird, which was an infrastructure update more so than an algorithmic update." According to moz Google Algorithm Change History it's stated "Hummingbird has been compared to Caffeine, and seems to be a core algorithm update".
Further more Danny Sullivan has been told by Amit Singhal "Caffeine Update” was a huge change. But that was also a change mostly meant to help Google better gather information (indexing) rather than sorting through the information. Google search chief Amit Singhal told me that perhaps 2001, when he first joined the company, was the last time the algorithm was so dramatically rewritten."
So we have to talk about a (core) algorithm update - right? :-)
I think the issue is - ironically - semantic.
Caffeine was an infrastructure update, and it was easy to understand like that because it was physically implying a better use of the database stored in the mega data centers Google has.
But infrastructure changes implies obviously an algorithmic change too, in order to have all the system "updated" to the new infrastructure.
Using a metaphore, Hummingbird sets a new and - to the eyes of Google - more optimized framework in how the algorithm(s) of Google works. This is the meaning of the infrastructure nature of Hummingbird.
And Hummingbird is not only an evolution due to how people now do searches, IMHO, but a needed new step of the evolution of Google after Caffeine.
Caffeine allowed Google crawling more pages faster, that resulted in huge amount of poop appearing in the SERPs. Google tried to correct that with "patches" like Panda and Penguin, but still the SERPs, especially in those that Amit Singhal has defined as "verbose queries", the quality was poop based, mostly because the only way (or "factors") for retrieving information for those queries was based only on keyword matching. Hummingbird helps Google getting rid of those SERPs, reconducting "verbose queries" that means all one thing to a shorter and better focused (to Google eyes) results pages.
Thanks Rand , for making us understand The Hummingbird update. Well, I feel The Conceptualization of the Search Query is been done since Some Months.. it is just The way of making it publicly announced By Google. Being A constant Searcher I feel it as a Good Rewarding update for me ( At last I won't see those sites in the SERP , created only on some Money Making Keywords :-) ) .... Very important thing which I liked a Lot is the Last Statement i.e. Better Content > More Content . The Only thing for which Now I am worried is Calculation and Estimation of the ROI Metrics Value would be much different (might be difficult too) for The Marketers!
It's the User Intent as a Primary Key factor for the Search engines ..Now.
The secret sauce for the algorithm should be (and could already be) the prior recent searches by the particular user of the engine. Long tail or short tale is controlled by SEO community and web designers on the actual web page. The search history is user defined and can help identify location, wants, needs, etc. The users search history can not be manipulated at the same percentage as keywords on a page. Long tail is effected when a person from Dallas searches for best restaurants in Dallas. The system may be able to drop the Dallas from keyword retrieval because it is already calculated as local from prior search history.
Long tail and short tail is still very important. Just because Google made a temporary adjustment is does not mean using several words in a link is wrong.
What you are talking about is personalization and, from a wider point of view, Knowledge Base. But, as Bill Slawski finely pointed out analysis the patents that could be behind Hummingbird, Knowledge Base is not taken into consideration by this new infrastructure change. Obviously, some relations exist, as Hummingbird sits above all the factors shaping the Google SERPs, and Knowledge Base plays a role in it.
TL;DR: Knowledge Base doesn't command Hummingbird, but Hummingbird takes into consideration facets of Knowledge Base, as the personalization factors.
Great video Rand! So let me ask you a question. You say that Google is able to serve the results based on either query with better content. Makes sense. Superb content has been pushed for quite some time, and I think we all strive to make Google happy on this front. However, would then making your content title and H1 "where to eat..." give you an advantage in the SERPs with the new Hummingbird? Ahh...
https://zadroweb.com/hummingbird-affect-seo/
"Google might be trying to say, "Hey, strong keyword signals doesn't mean as much to us anymore because now we can take pages that we previously couldn't connect to that query and connect them up.""
I think that's a fair guess. After all, people don't search in just keyword phrases anymore. Especially with the huge jump in mobile usage (and voice to text searching), people search the way they think and the way they talk. Ideas and topics don't have to fit the narrow range of a keyword anymore to be considered viable. There are a lot of other things to take into consideration.
I'm glad Google is also focusing on making their search work better for them compared to trying to remove all of the bad results (panda etc.). Hopefully bringing more relevant terms will work better for if you've created a good bit of content that may not be ranking as well as one that has been keyword stuffed.
Thanks for the WBF, I hope this will also help some of the people who keep saying "I've dropped in rankings is this hummingbirds fault?"
Hey Rand
Thank you for providing this excellent information.
I have came across a problem with Google keyword Planner, before in Google ad-words we use to get the search results randomly but now the new key word planner has made my work toughest. How can i get key word search easily. can you please explain this.
After this update, still I see in the Google results low quality sites or results are coming..........then how to improve the rankings for quality sites.
Nice shirt Rand! :)
Thanks for explaining the Hummingbird's effects to longtails, Rand. Also, you're looking good as usual.
Thanks Rand!
This is the final piece of information for todays SEO training in Salzburg. ;-)
Regards,
Daniel
Great one Rand. But the results seems to be pretty same till now (it's been over 2 months since it was live). Even we are seeing same domain multiple times in SERPs. If it's about improvement, then why it's not visible. And if there was no such improvement in search results, what's the purpose of calling it one of the biggest changes in recent times.
Is there anyone who have noticed any big changes in SERP after Hummingbird got live? Please share.
Thanks
This post had some good before vs. after examples: https://www.e2msolutions.com/blog/google-hummingbird-a-comprehensive-guide/.
thx 4 that
Thanks, I'll translate this and post on my blog.
me to - i guess we dont speak the same language :)
Hi Rand,
Thanks for mentioning about our post :) - Really appreciate it.
Sincerely, Pratik
Big changes: 6x same domain... but give them more time:)
Hi Praveen,
I think this can help you, i learned it from one of the reference link of this post-
Google is applying the semantics and conceptualization to the search itself, the actual query, not to the pages.
That’s why despite this already being live for some time, and despite Google saying it impacts 90% of searches, there’s not been any huge shouting about changes to the SERPs, or massive loss of 90% of traffic, etc. In fact, with Google’s [not provided] shift away from even showing you the exact phrases, you can’t really detect the changes at all from the receiving end.
"not provided" in last month: 99,5% searches...
75% - but we have some really normal and not that many long tail keywords on the side I looked at - 75% are mostly the Blog i guess :)
99.5% is amazing
I have to say you look really cool in that jacket :)
I can't tell if Chandral is joking or not. No offense, Rand.
Great WBF Rand! Thanks for brief explanation. More valuable content with more details will win. Keywords should disintegrated in the entire piece of content, when it is in terms of long tail search. I believe in this way, there are more chances of not getting penalized and ooze out a useful content for users or searchers.
If customers understand it too (more valuable content)...
I hear "why so long, why not, they don't have it and they're top1, that's not my problem";)
Hi Rand,
Here is something no-one else mentioned until now .... After the hummingbird update - Long Tail Google queries start generating different local results based on the user location .... not only different organics ( in some cases ), but also Local Carousel results... "where do i find a hotel in dallas?" this longtail search was generating same rankings ( organic ) on all US , but now things has changed. It seems that now Google understand much better the meaning of the search and is delivering Local Carousel results also on the top of organics.
Reviews and feedback while have more value now
Great overview of some of the long-tail issues, thanks Rand.
Regardless of how this looks to the SEO world, if Google is trying to do exactly what you have described, then it is finally doing its job properly - ranking relevant, worthwhile sites and content. Hopefully this focus will help to reduce the impact of keyword stuffers as low as possible (so long as it doesn't breed a whole new realm of stuffing as many keyword varieties into the content as possible). So this might actually start to bring more worthwhile content to the top of the results.
However, it is really a pig that we can't get long-tail information out of Analytics, because (keyword targeting aside) if you know what your users are hoping to find and maybe you aren't giving that content, then you can fill that user expectation gap by serving up what they wanted.
I'm rambling now so I'll stop :) thanks again.
Thank You Rand,
some keywords dropping in serp but not much more still i have content that containing very few keywords. After updating hummingbird need content updation.
Thanks for great inside about "hummingbird update" Rand. Overall as per my understanding, we are tending gradually (as per SEO aspect) to a era where we cant target keyword as such but we need to focus on the value proposition aspect. I guess we need to think what real value users are getting from our site (about that particular subject that we are expressing in the site). If, we able to produce nice content then user will read and refer. I guess this is the root reason what Google want us to focus on.
Also keeping account this approach, i launched a new site (few weeks back ) and want to use simple strategy not to use any seo off page strategy but just to focus on quality content and to share value with user. I will update with my findings.
Thanks again Rand for great guidance.
Thank you, Rand. Getting the brain-juices flowing on this Friday morning!
I can absolutely agree that quality content will win over long content, but now, when I put together (what I believe is) high-quality content - keywords with high search volume, low competition, some geotargeting if necessary, secondaries, images, videos, etc., my traffic spikes aren't as significant as they used to be. So I guess my question is - Has the definition of "quality content" changed in Google's eyes? And if so, how has it changed? If it's straying away from keywords and where keywords are located throughout the pages of a website, what is it straying towards?
Thanks, Rand.
I would have liked to hear you talk more about "actionable results." It appears as if Google is moving in that direction, especially with the Knowledge Graph Carousel. It's almost Google's way of saying, you want restaurants, here are actual, physical restaurant, rather than articles about restaurants. That's a huge part of Hummingbird and the recent intent-based push.
Well that is so nice for searchers, they will get what they seeking in few clicks :)
What a good video. Very succinct explanation of what to expect from hummingbird. Good job!
#CamoVests
Hey Rand,
I'm curious what actually defines content as being better? I realize that content can be more keyword specific and useful but it seems somewhat subjective to a degree. Is "better" solely defined by the user experience i.e metrics like visits, time spent on a page, bounce rate and those kinds of things?
Metrics which u mentioned is 1 way to say it 'better', other important thing is relevancy and context.
I don't see any difference yet after Penguin update. The Search results are as same as early in Sep 2013..
Google is applying the semantics and conceptualization to the search itself, the actual query, not to the pages.
For more details you can read one of my previous comment.
The camouflage didn't do it's job. Against a whiteboard winter/snow camouflage would work better. :)
Anybody may tell me what about SEO and back link , like off page activities. ?
In each & every update Google focuses on Better Content and gives priority (I am using this word "Priority", because it really does) to those sites who offer relevant & useful content rather then sites who just put their effort in stuffing keywords in their content. Think like a customer rather than SEO.
Great WBF, Rand.
I like to hear (and see) that Google is rewarding good content. At the end, good content is about resolving an user's demand (looking for information, searching for products, recommendations, readings, etc.). As Arturo Marimon says, 'you know it's good content when you feel the need to tell everyone'. Nothing to add.
Thanks for this WBF.
Something I've said forever is that great content will always beat rubbish content, but great content also (today at least) seems to beat quantity of content. So one great blog post a month which google can see is expert and that is awesome, it knows what you are talking about subjectively etc is today (in my view) going to rank higher generally (for generic terms) and for long tail tangentially.
I have meetings with clients where I talk about tagential gains for SEO. I have always been a fan of working the content and getting wins in mid-long tail whilst not killing the content with spammyness. Those long tails with humming bird and also have great content have shown google what a page is about and so we are starting to see some rises in generic terms in rankings - for keywords which have a high moz kw difficulty (70%+) ... loving the bird
Great WBF Rand! There has been a lot of talk of what Hummingbird means for marketers and this confirms my own thoughts. Better overall content instead of keyword focused content is what we need to be focusing on.
This will effect the smaller new websites that don't have that URL authority. They may have great content, however it will take an enormous amount of effort to get the content ranking. Targeting long tail keywords is still the viable option in my eyes and maybe humming bird will eventually reward for the bigger version of the keyword. Anyways nice vid and dig the camo vest :)!
Happy to hear others notice the hidden benefit in the Hummingbird update, as well. As someone who works with lots of clients who can tend to get very specific keyword focused (rankings, traffic, etc., etc.) they often forget about - and we have to pull them back to - the content on page.
We've been voicing much the same argument, in that we need to match keyword "themes" to certain pages, which allow us to actually diversify our long tail on one page, rather than saturate a website targeting specific long tail terms across several pages.
Great whiteboard this week!
although it took little longer to you to talk on this update but yea its pretty good elaboration of Hummingbird Update I do agree with you but for the time being I think shorter keywords still have much greater impact as compare to the longer keywords because at the end of the day people know that shorter keywords have good results as compare to the longer keywords .. and its not an easy task for Google to give result of all longer queries and in the result the user would search the shorter keyword .. for my personal experience I still believe there are more than 50%people who search on google without using their Gmail account and hummingbird is much more effective if someone searches with the personal account .. hope I am wrong ;)
You are wrong :).
Hummingbird is not necessarily depending on personalization.
You are right :(.
All searches on Google have a natural tendency to be personalized based on many factors, even if the user is not logged in.
Thank you! Wonderful post.
So what's with that vest? ;)
Based on Hummingbird and KW (not found), I have a client who looks at a competitor and sees their site having 25 pages dedicated to nearby cities. Think Springfield Widget Seller, with sub pages dedicated to TownA Widget Seller, TownB Widget Seller, A-Z, with little to no valuable content different form the main page targeting the city the business is actually located in. Would it be wise to do something similar at this point?
No... but it wasn't so since a long time.
I think this will not do any good to him
I dont even think that the competitor has much visits with this. He just didn't killed that. I think it's not killing u really - depends on content - but it would not bring any positive effect to your client... saw a Video of M.Cutts for that topic - didn't know the URL - I think it was on his YouTube Channel
good info for me
Nice One ....
Great one Rand.. Nice to read about how we can focus on Long tail keywords and get best results after Hummingbird updates.
Thanks :)
Great Info,Tahnks