2013 Updates

Unnamed Update — November 14, 2013

 


Penguin 2.1 (#5) — October 4, 2013

 


Hummingbird — August 20, 2013

 

Announced on September 26th, Google suggested that the "Hummingbird" update rolled out about a month earlier. Our best guess ties it to a MozCast spike on August 20th and many reports of flux from August 20-22. Hummingbird has been compared to Caffeine, and seems to be a core algorithm update that may power changes to semantic search and the Knowledge Graph for months to come.

FAQ: All About The New Google "Hummingbird" Algorithm (SEL)

Some Reports Of An August 21/22 Google Update (SER)


In-depth Articles — August 6, 2013

 


Unnamed Update — July 26, 2013

 


Knowledge Graph Expansion — July 19, 2013

 

Seemingly overnight, queries with Knowledge Graph (KG) entries expanded by more than half (+50.4%) across the MozCast data set, with more than a quarter of all searches showing some kind of KG entry.

The Day the Knowledge Graph Exploded (Moz)


Panda Recovery — July 18, 2013

 


Multi-Week Update — June 27, 2013

 

Google's Matt Cutts tweeted a reply suggesting a "multi-week" algorithm update between roughly June 12th and "the week after July 4th". The nature of the update was unclear, but there was massive rankings volatility during that time period, peaking on June 27th (according to MozCast data). It appears that Google may have been testing some changes that were later rolled back.

Google's "Multi-Week" Algorithm Update (Moz)

Google's Matt Cutts: Multi-Week Update Rolling Out (SER)


Panda Dance — June 11, 2013

 


"Payday Loan" Update — June 11, 2013

 


Penguin 2.0 (#4) — May 22, 2013

 


Domain Crowding — May 21, 2013

 


"Phantom" — May 9, 2013

 


Panda #25 — March 14, 2013

 


Panda #24 — January 22, 2013

 

2012 Updates

Panda #23 — December 21, 2012

 

Right before the Christmas holiday, Google rolled out another Panda update. They officially called it a "refresh", impacting 1.3% of English queries. This was a slightly higher impact than Pandas #21 and #22.

Confirmed: A Panda Refresh, Version #23 (SER)


Knowledge Graph Expansion — December 4, 2012

 


Panda #22 — November 21, 2012

 


Panda #21 — November 5, 2012

 


Page Layout #2 — October 9, 2012

 


Penguin #3 — October 5, 2012

 


August/September 65-Pack — October 4, 2012

 

Google published their monthly (bi-monthly?) list of search highlights. The 65 updates for August and September included 7-result SERPs, Knowledge Graph expansion, updates to how "page quality" is calculated, and changes to how local results are determined.

Search quality highlights: 65 changes for August and September (Google)


Exact-Match Domain (EMD) Update — September 27, 2012

 


Panda #20 — September 27, 2012

 


Panda 3.9.2 (#19) — September 18, 2012

 


Panda 3.9.1 (#18) — August 20, 2012

 


7-Result SERPs — August 14, 2012

 


DMCA Penalty — August 10, 2012

 


June/July 86-Pack — August 10, 2012

 


Panda 3.9 (#17) — July 24, 2012

 

A month after Panda 3.8, Google rolled out a new Panda update. Rankings fluctuated for 5-6 days, although no single day was high enough to stand out. Google claimed ~1% of queries were impacted.

Official: Google Panda 3.9 Refresh (SER)


Link Warnings — July 19, 2012

 


Panda 3.8 (#16) — June 25, 2012

 


Panda 3.7 (#15) — June 8, 2012

 


May 39-Pack — June 7, 2012

 


Penguin 1.1 (#2) — May 25, 2012

 

Google rolled out its first targeted data update after the "Penguin" algorithm update. This confirmed that Penguin data was being processed outside of the main search index, much like Panda data.

Google Releases Penguin Update 1.1 (SEL)


Knowledge Graph — May 16, 2012

 


April 52-Pack — May 4, 2012

 


Panda 3.6 (#14) — April 27, 2012

 


Penguin — April 24, 2012

 

After weeks of speculation about an "Over-optimization penalty", Google finally rolled out the "Webspam Update", which was soon after dubbed "Penguin." Penguin adjusted a number of spam factors, including keyword stuffing, and impacted an estimated 3.1% of English queries.

Another step to reward high-quality sites (Google)

The Penguin Update: Google’s Webspam Algorithm Gets Official Name (SEL)

Google Penguin Update Recovery Tips & Advice (SEL)

Two Weeks In, Google Talks Penguin Update, Ways To Recover & Negative SEO (SEL)


Panda 3.5 (#13) — April 19, 2012

 

In the middle of a busy week for the algorthim, Google quietly rolled out a Panda data update. A mix of changes made the impact difficult to measure, but this appears to have been a fairly routine update with minimal impact.

Google Mocks Me For Missing Panda 3.5 (SER)


Parked Domain Bug — April 16, 2012

 


March 50-Pack — April 3, 2012

 


Panda 3.4 (#12) — March 23, 2012

 

Google announced another Panda update, this time via Twitter as the update was rolling out. Their public statements estimated that Panda 3.4 impacted about 1.6% of search results.

Google Says Panda 3.4 Is ‘Rolling Out Now’ (SEL)


Search Quality Video — March 12, 2012

 

This wasn't an algorithm update, but Google published a rare peek into a search quality meeting. For anyone interested in the algorithm, the video provides a lot of context to both Google's process and their priorities. It's also a chance to see Amit Singhal in action.

Video! The search quality meeting, uncut (Google)


Panda 3.3 (#11) — February 27, 2012

 


February 40-Pack (2) — February 27, 2012

 

Google published a second set of "search quality highlights" at the end of the month, claiming more than 40 changes in February. Notable changes included multiple image-search updates, multiple freshness updates (including phasing out 2 old bits of the algorithm), and a Panda update.

Search quality highlights: 40 changes for February (Google)


Venice — February 27, 2012

 


February 17-Pack — February 3, 2012

 


Ads Above The Fold — January 19, 2012

 


Panda 3.2 (#10) — January 18, 2012

 


Search + Your World — January 10, 2012

 


January 30-Pack — January 5, 2012

 

2011 Updates

December 10-Pack — December 1, 2011

 


Panda 3.1 (#9) — November 18, 2011

 

After Panda 2.5, Google entered a period of "Panda Flux" where updates started to happen more frequently and were relatively minor. Some industry analysts called the 11/18 update 3.1, even though there was no official 3.0. For the purposes of this history, we will discontinue numbering Panda updates except for very high-impact changes.

Google Panda 3.1 Update: 11/18 (SER)


10-Pack of Updates — November 14, 2011

 


Freshness Update — November 3, 2011

 


Query Encryption — October 18, 2011

 


Panda "Flux" (#8) — October 5, 2011

 


Panda 2.5 (#7) — September 28, 2011

 


516 Algo Updates — September 21, 2011

 

This wasn't an update, but it was an amazing revelation. Google CEO Eric Schmidt told Congress that Google made 516 updates in 2010. The real shocker? They tested over 13,000 updates.

Eric Schmidt's Congressional Testimony (SEL)


Pagination Elements — September 15, 2011

 


Expanded Sitelinks — August 16, 2011

 


Panda 2.4 (#6) — August 12, 2011

 


Panda 2.3 (#5) — July 23, 2011

 


Google+ — June 28, 2011

 


Panda 2.2 (#4) — June 21, 2011

 


Schema.org — June 2, 2011

 


Panda 2.1 (#3) — May 9, 2011

 


Panda 2.0 (#2) — April 11, 2011

 


The +1 Button — March 30, 2011

 


Panda/Farmer — February 23, 2011

 


Attribution Update — January 28, 2011

 

In response to high-profile spam cases, Google rolled out an update to help better sort out content attribution and stop scrapers. According to Matt Cutts, this affected about 2% of queries. It was a clear precursor to the Panda updates.

Algorithm Change Launched (Matt Cutts)

Latest Google Algorithm change (Search News Central)


Overstock.com Penalty — January 2011

 

2010 Updates

Social Signals — December 2010

 


Negative Reviews — December 2010

 


Instant Previews — November 2010

 

A magnifying glass icon appeared on Google search results, allowing search visitors to quickly view a preview of landing pages directly from SERPs. This signaled a renewed focus for Google on landing page quality, design, and usability.

Beyond Instant Results: Instant Previews (Google)


Google Instant — September 2010

 


Brand Update — August 2010

 

Although not a traditional algorithm update, Google started allowing the same domain to appear multiple times on a SERP. Previously, domains were limited to 1-2 listings, or 1 listing with indented results.

Google Search Results Dominated By One Domain (SEL)


Caffeine (Rollout) — June 2010

 


May Day — May 2010

 


Google Places — April 2010

 

Although "Places" pages were rolled out in September of 2009, they were originally only a part of Google Maps. The official launch of Google Places re-branded the Local Business Center, integrated Places pages more closely with local search results, and added a number of features, including new local advertising options.

Google Local Business Center Becomes "Google Places" (SEL)

Introducing Google Places (Google)

2009 Updates

Real-time Search — December 2009

 

This time, real-time search was for real- Twitter feeds, Google News, newly indexed content, and a number of other sources were integrated into a real-time feed on some SERPs. Sources continued to expand over time, including social media.

Google Launches Real Time Search Results (SEL)


Caffeine (Preview) — August 2009

 


Rel-canonical Tag — February 2009

 


Vince — February 2009

 

2008 Updates

Google Suggest — August 2008

 

In a major change to their logo-and-a-box home-page Google introduced Suggest, displaying suggested searches in a dropdown below the search box as visitors typed their queries. Suggest would later go on to power Google Instant.

Google.com Finally Gets Google Suggest Feature (SEL)


Dewey — April 2008

 

A large-scale shuffle seemed to occur at the end of March and into early April, but the specifics were unclear. Some suspected Google was pushing its own internal properties, including Google Books, but the evidence of that was limited.

Google's Cutts Asking for Feedback on March/April '08 Update (SERoundtable)

2007 Updates

Buffy — June 2007

 


Universal Search — May 2007

 

While not your typical algorithm update, Google integrated traditional search results with News, Video, Images, Local, and other verticals, dramatically changing their format. The old 10-listing SERP was officially dead. Long live the old 10-listing SERP.

Google 2.0: Google Universal Search (SEL)

2006 Updates

False Alarm — December 2006

 

There were stirrings about an update in December, along with some reports of major ranking changes in November, but Google reported no major changes.

Google Update Debunked By Matt Cutts (SERoundtable)


Supplemental Update — November 2006

 

Throughout 2006, Google seemed to make changes to the supplemental index and how filtered pages were treated. They claimed in late 2006 that supplemental was not a penalty (even if it sometimes felt that way).

Confusion Over Google's Supplemental Index (SERoundtable)

2005 Updates

Big Daddy — December 2005

 

Technically, Big Daddy was an infrastructure update (like the more recent "Caffeine"), and it rolled out over a few months, wrapping up in March of 2006. Big Daddy changed the way Google handled URL canonicalization, redirects (301/302) and other technical issues.

Indexing timeline (MattCutts.com)

Todd, Greg & Matt Cutts on WebMasterRadio (SEOmoz)


Jagger — October 2005

 


Google Local/Maps — October 2005

 

After launching the Local Business Center in March 2005 and encouraging businesses to update their information, Google merged its Maps data into the LBC, in a move that would eventually drive a number of changes in local SEO.

Google Merges Local and Maps Products (Google)


Gilligan — September 2005

 


Personalized Search — June 2005

 


XML Sitemaps — June 2005

 

Google allowed webmasters to submit XML sitemaps via Webmaster Tools, bypassing traditional HTML sitemaps, and giving SEOs direct (albeit minor) influence over crawling and indexation.

New "Google Sitemaps" Web Page Feed Program (SEW)


Bourbon — May 2005

 

"GoogleGuy" (likely Matt Cutts) announced that Google was rolling out "something like 3.5 changes in search quality." No one was sure what 0.5 of a change was, but Webmaster World members speculated that Bourbon changed how duplicate content and non-canonical (www vs. non-www) URLs were treated.

Google Update "Bourbon" (Batelle Media)

Bourbon Update Survival Kit (SERoundtable)


Allegra — February 2005

 

Webmasters witnessed ranking changes, but the specifics of the update were unclear. Some thought Allegra affected the "sandbox" while others believed that LSI had been tweaked. Additionally, some speculated that Google was beginning to penalize suspicious links.

Google's Feb. 2005 Update (SEW)


Nofollow — January 2005

 

To combat spam and control outbound link quality, Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft collectively introduce the "nofollow" attribute. Nofollow helps clean up unvouched for links, including spammy blog comments. While not a traditional algorithm update, this change gradually has a significant impact on the link graph.

Google, Yahoo, MSN Unite On Support For Nofollow Attribute For Links (SEW)

2004 Updates

Google IPO — August 2004

 

Although obviously not an algorithm update, a major event in Google's history - Google sold 19M shares, raised $1.67B in capital, and set their market value at over $20B. By January 2005, Google share prices more than doubled.

Google IPO priced at $85 a share (CNN)


Brandy — February 2004

 

Google rolled out a variety of changes, including a massive index expansion, Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI), increased attention to anchor text relevance, and the concept of link "neighborhoods." LSI expanded Google's ability to understand synonyms and took keyword analysis to the next level.

Google's Brandy Update Exposed (WebProNews)

How To Beat Google's "Brandy" Update (SitePoint)


Austin — January 2004

 

2003 Updates

Florida — November 2003

 

This was the update that put updates (and probably the SEO industry) on the map. Many sites lost ranking, and business owners were furious. Florida sounded the death knell for low-value late 90s SEO tactics, like keyword stuffing, and made the game a whole lot more interesting.

What Happened To My Site On Google? (SEW)


Supplemental Index — September 2003

 

In order to index more documents without sacrificing performance, Google split off some results into the "supplemental" index. The perils of having results go supplemental became a hotly debated SEO topic, until the index was later reintegrated.

Search Engine Size Wars & Google's Supplemental Results (SEW)


Fritz — July 2003

 


Esmerelda — June 2003

 

This marked the last of the regular monthly Google updates, as a more continuous update process began to emerge. The "Google Dance" was replaced with "Everflux". Esmerelda probably heralded some major infrastructure changes at Google.

Google Update Esmeralda (Kuro5hin)


Dominic — May 2003

 

While many changes were observed in May, the exact nature of Dominic was unclear. Google bots "Freshbot" and "Deepcrawler" scoured the web, and many sites reported bounces. The way Google counted or reported backlinks seemed to change dramatically.

Understanding Dominic - Part 2 (WMW)


Cassandra — April 2003

 

Google cracked down on some basic link-quality issues, such as massive linking from co-owned domains. Cassandra also came down hard on hidden text and hidden links.

Google - Update "Cassandra" is here (Econsultancy)


Boston — February 2003

 

Announced at SES Boston, this was the first named Google update. Originally, Google aimed at a major monthly update, so the first few updates were a combination of algorithm changes and major index refreshes (the so-called "Google Dance"). As updates became more frequent, the monthly idea quickly died.

2002 Updates

1st Documented Update — September 2002

 

2000 Updates

Google Toolbar — December 2000

 

Guaranteeing SEO arguments for years to come, Google launched their browser toolbar, and with it, Toolbar PageRank (TBPR). As soon as webmasters started watching TBPR, the Google Dance began.

 

Google Launches The Google Toolbar (Google)

source by moz.com


Contact

Goutam Kumar

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