SEO From The Front Lines

Glenn Gabe
SEO From The Front Lines

Glenn Gabe covers the latest Google algorithm updates, the latest changes in Search, and other disturbances in the SEO force. And he'll do this in less than 15 minutes per episode.

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    The importance of finding all subdomains with search visibility on your site. SEO tools and tricks.

    Learn why it’s important to fully understand all of the subdomains for your site. I have come across this situation a number of times over the years and I’ve seen some ugly situations. There are times companies don’t realize there are subdomains running either with legacy content, hacked content, spammy content, or even subdomains with malware or other security issues. And those issues can impact the site SEO-wise and ad-wise. I cover how sites can be suspended in Google Ads based on malware running on those rogue subdomains. I cover several ways to find subdomains running that have search visibility, including GSC crawl stats, Bing Webmaster Tools Site explorer, third-party visibility tools like Semrush, ahrefs, and Sistrix, and I also cover some creative site queries. So don’t get blindsided by your subdomains. Run some quick checks and surface them. You never know what you’re going to find. Read my blog post: https://www.gsqi.com/marketing-blog/find-subdomains-with-search-visibility/ 00:00 How to find subdomains for your site. 00:36 Why it’s important to find your subdomains. 01:28 Quality at the hostname level. 02:46 Security problems causing AD problems. 03:32 GSC Crawl Stats reporting. 04:58 Bing Webmaster Tools Site Explorer 05:45 Third-party visibility tools like Semrush, ahrefs, and Sistrix. 07:00 Creative site queries. 08:05 Bonus: Hosting providers can help. Follow me on X: https://x.com/glenngabe Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glenngabe/

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    Documenting Google’s site-level evaluation and impact on search rankings using the ‘Gabeback Machine’

    Episode 18 of 'SEO From The Front Lines", I cover my blog post regarding site-level impact on rankings versus page-level. It's an incredibly important topic that site owners and SEOs need to understand. Based on Pandu Nayak’s comments at a recent creator summit where he said Google only using page-level ranking signals, and NOT site-wide signals, I decided to use the ‘Gabeback Machine’ to prove that statement wrong. Over the years, I have documented many, many examples of Googlers explaining that there are site-wide signals that can have a big impact on rankings across a site. The examples include tweets, videos, patents, and even Google’s own documentation about major algorithm updates. That includes videos, tweets, patents, and even Google's own documentation explaining more about site-wide signals. My blog post also contains information about major algorithm updates like Panda, Penguin, the helpful content update (HCU), and Pirate which all had a site-level classifier (or employed site-wide impact). Then I cover many statements from Google about broad core updates, site-level evaluation, impact to Google surfaces like Discover and News, and more. So join me as I use the ‘Gabeback Machine’ to document Google’s site-level impact to rankings. Yes, it’s real. Chapters: 00:00 Pandu Nayak's comments about page-level versus site-level ranking signals. 01:42 An introduction to the 'Gabeback Machine'. 02:30 Google's history of crafting major algorithm updates outside of broad core updates. 04:09 Exhibit 1: HCU 05:13 Exhibit 2: Penguin 05:45 Exhibit 3: Medieval Panda 06:45 Exhibit 4: Pirate 07:40 Site-level is at the hostname level (subdomain) 08:28 Exhibit X: Links, Tweets, Videos, and Patents 08:56 Quality is a site-level signal. 09:31 Paul Haahr about site-wide signals. 11:21 FAQ from the March 2024 core update about site-wide signals. 12:10 Lower-quality content can pull down the higher-quality content. 13:30 Rich snippets impacted by overall quality. 13:52 Panda scores impacting rich snippets. 14:14 Google researchers about authority and trust. 15:05 Discover impacted by site-level quality signals. 15:40 Pages can rank higher from the start on sites that Googler trusts. 16:06 Revisiting Pandu's comments about page-level versus site-level signals. My blog post covering Google's site-wide signals: https://www.gsqi.com/marketing-blog/google-site-level-impact-gabeback-machine/ Follow me on Twitter: https://x.com/glenngabe Connect with me on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glenngabe/

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    Catching tricky mobile SEO problems in Google's mobile-first indexing world [Case Studies and Tools]

    I cover two case studies underscoring the importance of catching sneaky mobile SEO problems in Google's mobile-first indexing world. The first case study involves canonical tags that weren't being published on mobile versions of the pages across a site with 100K+ urls. The second case involves thin content becoming even *thinner* since less content was being published on mobile versions of the pages. That was on a stie with 40M urls. I also covers several tools and tips for surfacing those problems. I also cover tools and tips for surfacing mobile SEO problems, including the URL inspection tool in GSC, crawling tools like Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, and Lumar, Chrome extensions, and then even site queries using quoted text. With Google switching to mobile-first indexing, it's using Googlebot-Smartphone for indexing purposes. That's why it's important to make sure all of your content, structured data, directives, canonicals, and more are located on the mobile versions of your pages. If not, Google will not pick that up. 00:00 The importance of catching tricky mobile SEO problems. 00:40 Google's switch to mobile-first indexing. 01:38 Case Study 1: Playing hide and seek with canonicals. 03:10 Case Study 2: Thin pages becoming *thinner* on mobile. 05:35 Tools and tips for checking for mobile-first indexing problems. 9:37 Summary: Make sure you don't miss the mobile view. Blog post: https://www.gsqi.com/marketing-blog/mobile-first-indexing-seo-problems-case-study/ Follow me on X: https://x.com/glenngabe Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glenngabe/

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    Crazy Google Volatility and Ranking Swings AFTER The August 2024 Core Update Completed

    In this episode of “SEO From The Front Lines”, I cover the ranking swings and volatility in Google Search post-August core update. There has been a lot of chatter about ranking changes AFTER the Google August 2024 core update rolled out. After digging in, I noticed a ton of volatility across several dates post-core update. And beyond that, I noticed that a number of sites heavily impacted by the August 24th tremor have started to reverse course on some of those dates. For example, sites that surged on August 24th started dropping on September 6th, 2024, September 10th, and now September 14th. And on the flip side, some sites that dropped with the August 24th tremor are now surging. Beyond that, there are some sites that were unaffected by the August core update that are surging or dropping. And for sites heavily impacted by the September helpful content update (HCUX), a number that started surging back with the August 2024 core update are now dropping a bit. It’s not like a full reversal, but definitely reversing course somewhat. In this video, I cover what I’m seeing and why I think this might be happening. 00:00 Crazy ranking swings and volatility AFTER the August 2024 core update completed.00:49 My initial tweet about the volatility and reversals I was picking up across sites.01:56 Examples of sites reversing course and dropping on 9/6, 9/10, and 9/14.02:59 Examples of sites reversing course and surging back post-August core update.04:38 Barry Schwartz picked up a lot of chatter and volatility on 9/6/24.05:08 Important dates to review for site owners and SEOs.05:31 Helpful content sites impacted and dropping after surging with the August core update.06:36 Examples of visibility trending for HCU(X) sites impacted and dropping.08:01 PSA about rank tracking your most important queries. 09:22 What’s happening, and the possible decoupling of algorithms from broad core updates. 11:17 Quick summary about the recent volatility post-August core update. Follow me on X: https://x.com/glenngabe Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glenngabe/

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    Hijacking the back button and SEO: Gaming Navboost, Exploring Google’s Spam Policies, and Aggressive Advertising

    In Episode 14 of ‘SEO From The Front Lines”, I cover how some publishers are hijacking the browser back button and providing a feed of articles that drives users to more publisher content, including sponsored content and ads. That’s versus allowing them to return to the sites they visited from… Disabling, or hijacking the back button, is a tricky and deceptive tactic, since users might not know they actually stayed on the same site. And that’s especially the case when visitors arrive on the site from Google Discover since the publisher feed looks very similar to the Discover feed. I also cover some reasons that some publishers are choosing to hijack the back button. For example, driving users to a publisher’s feed after hitting the back button can yield more pageviews, more ad impressions, and more ad revenue. But there’s another possible benefit of doing this… It can lead to more engagement for users that remain on the site, even if that’s not what the user intended to do. And with Google’s Navboost system at play, which tracks 13 months of user interaction signals (and can impact rankings), publishers could be gaming Navboost. And that led me to Google’s spam policies, if Google should issue manual actions for hijacking the back button, or if they should just tackle it algorithmically. I also cover how hijacking the back button was often the tip of the iceberg from an aggressive and deceptive advertising situation (and how some sites employing that tactic have seen big drops during major algorithm updates, including broad core updates). And I end the video with some advice for publishers that might be currently hijacking the back button. My recommendation is to run a user study to better understand how real, objective users feel about having their back button hijacked, not being able to easily leave a site, etc. By running a user study, publishers can listen to, and watch, frustrated users on their own sites. It might just lead to publishers reevaluating their decision to hijack the back button. 00:00 Hijacking the browser back button and its impact on SEO. 01:32 Reasons publishers are hijacking the back button. 02:59 What the feed of content and ads looks like when the back button is hijacked. 03:57 Google’s stance on publishers hijacking or disabling the back button. 05:42 An introduction to Navboost and Google tracking 13 months of user interaction signals. 07:53 Google’s spam policies. 09:40 A Navboost twist and negative user interactions signals. 11:21 Aggressive advertising and broad core update impact for sites hijacking the back button. 12:47 My case study about The SEO Engagement Trap. 14:11 Publishers have serious decisions to make about ‘back button hijacking’. 14:36 Running a user study to understand user frustration from hijacking. 16:02 Quick recap and read my latest blog post covering hijacking the back button. Read my blog post covering 'back button hijacking' and its impact on SEO: https://www.gsqi.com/marketing-blog/hijacking-the-back-button-gaming-navboost/ Google’s Core Algorithm Updates and The Power of User Studies: https://www.gsqi.com/marketing-blog/google-core-ranking-updates-user-studies/ Visualizing The SEO Engagement Trap: https://www.gsqi.com/marketing-blog/user-frustration-behavior-flow-google-analytics/ Follow me on X: https://x.com/glenngabe Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/glenngabe/

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حول

Glenn Gabe covers the latest Google algorithm updates, the latest changes in Search, and other disturbances in the SEO force. And he'll do this in less than 15 minutes per episode.

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