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Here’s your weekly overview of the biggest news from the search engine world, keeping your SEO strategy ahead of the competition. Welcome to week 38.
This week brought renewed crawler documentation, discussions on ranking factors, and updates on the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine. Here is an overview.
Google has revamped its crawler documentation, restructuring it into three sections: general crawlers, special-case crawlers, and user-triggered fetchers.
The update also introduces new details about supported content encodings, such as gzip, deflate, and Brotli, along with the protocols crawlers use, like HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2.
This reorganization aims to provide clearer, more comprehensive guidance for website owners without changing the actual behavior of Google’s crawlers.
The goal is to improve clarity and offer more detailed information on how crawlers operate.
Google’s John Mueller explained why simple factors, like valid HTML and spelling mistakes, are not considered ranking signals.
While valid HTML is a technical best practice, he emphasized that it’s too easy for spammers to implement, making it a poor ranking signal.
Spelling mistakes also don’t directly impact rankings, though frequent errors can hurt user experience, which may indirectly affect performance.
Mueller underscored that ranking signals are more complex, and factors that are easy to achieve, like valid HTML, aren’t necessarily indicators of quality content.
Lastly, Google has recently integrated links to the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine into its search results.
This feature is available in the “About this page” option, allowing users to easily view archived versions of websites.
The integration helps researchers and regular users access older content that may no longer be available on active domains.
However, this feature won’t be available for sites that have opted out of archiving or if the page violates content policies.
Week 38 introduced new crawler documentation, making it easier to understand with its division into general crawlers, special-case crawlers, and user-triggered fetchers.
Another key takeaway was Google’s clarification that simple factors shouldn’t always be interpreted as ranking signals, even though they’re commonly assumed to be.
Want to learn more about how to understand and work with ranking factors? Reach out to Bonzer. As a specialized SEO agency, we help ambitious businesses secure top rankings in search engines every day.
CPO & Partner
Thomas is the CPO (Chief Product Officer) and Partner at Bonzer, which means his day-to-day focus lies in constantly analyzing Google's algorithm and developing SEO as a product. Thomas has worked with SEO for several years with a strong passion for sharing his knowledge on how businesses can best implement SEO into their operations. In addition to Bonzer, Thomas contributes his expertise to readers at publications like Search Engine Journal, DanDomain, and Detailfolk. He also teaches Digital Media Strategy at Copenhagen Business School and SEO at DMJX in Copenhagen. If you have any questions or requests regarding the SEO universe, feel free to contact him at [email protected].
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A brief meeting, where we review your position in the market and present the opportunities.