Understanding how search engines work, Google in particular, is important when working in SEO. The basics of crawling and indexing are amazingly useful to understand if you want to rank your own content.
Additionally, Google updates its algorithm several times a year. Understanding the more significant updates, and how they work, can help you to craft content and SEO strategies that are up-to-date.
We've written extensively about how search engines work, and included some of the top resources here. You can also browse the latest posts on search engines from the Moz blog below.
How Search Engines Work
: New to SEO? Start with the basics of how search engines operate with our free beginner's guide.
Google Algorithm Update History
: A complete history of Google algorithm updates since 2000. This includes important links and references for understanding how Google works.
How Search Engines Value Links
: Search engines work off a number of signals, but two of the most important are content and links. In this video, Rand Fishkin explains the basics of link evaluation.
MozCast
: Is Google updating it's algorithm as we speak? MozCast is the Google algorithm weather report, so you can see how much Google results are changing each day.
Creating custom, campaign-specific landing pages is resource-intensive, and not every team has the necessary tools, expertise, or personnel to build the content. So, how do you know if you need a custom page, or if you can safely send paid traffic to an organic page and still achieve your KPIs? This three-step, data-driven evaluation helps answer this question.
By expanding the ways you talk about your product, you attract more users, which in turn scales your SEO strategy by giving you more relevant keywords to rank for. Let’s find out how using synonyms in your product-led SEO strategy can slingshot your growth forward.
If your website is like most others, there is likely a mismatch between the content you provide, and what your prospective customers search for on Google. This article is about understanding those potential customers and their conversation with Google by using the customer journey mapping method to provide them with the best content.
Google recently made updates to the way they rewrite title tags, so Dr. Pete takes you through some of the new data we’ve collected In addition, he shares three titling patterns to avoid if you don’t want them rewritten.
How do we start conversations and support initiatives that get developers and SEOs all working towards the same goal? Is Core Web Vitals the common ground we need? In this conversation with Moz Developer, Lucas Rasmussen, we explore his recent project aimed at improving our A/B testing experience and how it overlapped with Core Web Vitals.
The first quarter of 2022 brought us some new local search opportunities (and a few problems) that you may have missed. Today, Miriam goes through a quick roundup of interesting happenings that merit your awareness for the sake of the local businesses you market.
Back in August, we analyzed 10,000 SERPs and found that Google was rewriting 58% of the title tags we were able to track. In September, after some serious objections from the SEO community, Google made changes so that “title elements are now used around 87% of the time”. This immediately raises two questions. First, has the situation improved? Second, why the huge mismatch between our numbers? Let’s take a look.
Given how cryptic Google typically is about core updates, it can often seem like we’re at the mercy of the algorithm, with no legitimate measures of our own to employ. However, there are in fact ample tactics at our disposal to address, analyze, and affect the outcomes of core algorithm updates.
For local brands, reputation is everything. It’s an always-on sales force, quality control, and a business intelligence methodology when creatively managed, and it’s also a key component in how Google views entities. Today, we’ll take a swift trek through top takeaways from Google’s Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines.
The promised page experience updates from Google that caused such a stir last year are far from being done, so Tom takes a look at where we are now and what happens next for the algorithm’s infamous Core Web Vitals.
When there is a search query on Google, Google Ads runs a quick auction to determine which ads will show for that query, and what the ad positions should be. This ad auction is repeated every time an ad is eligible to appear for a search term, and is an integral part of the SERP landscape. To help understand it, Tanuja covers the what, how, and why behind the Google Ads auction.
Google's recent Top Stories redesign introduced a new 7-pack of news results, marking a big jump in SERP real estate. We dig into the MozCast 10,000-keyword daily tracking set to get you the full story.