Aupdate to guidelines
Posted: Tue Feb 11, 2025 9:53 am
This document was written for their human ranking team, who are out all day conducting important searches and reviewing the websites that rank high in Google results for those searches. Apparently, Google employs around 10,000 people to perform these spot checks, a process designed to test the effectiveness of ranking algorithms in identifying web page quality.
The information from the quality rating team cameroon number data Google engineers on how to improve the ranking algorithm. As Googlers often remind us, their ranking algorithm is a continuous improvement process, with updates made very regularly.
Check out Marie Haynes' talk at Brighton SEO 2018, where she breaks down the 'search quality testing guidelines' for us in plain English, along with some of her insights.
A week after the July 2018 guidelines update, Google made some additions that had some significant implications: Quality reviewers will now be asked to review not only the EAT of a website, but also the EAT of content creators. This is big news.
So, from now on Google wants to see who the author of the main content of the page is and what their credentials are regarding the topic, especially if it is a YMYL topic.
The information from the quality rating team cameroon number data Google engineers on how to improve the ranking algorithm. As Googlers often remind us, their ranking algorithm is a continuous improvement process, with updates made very regularly.
Check out Marie Haynes' talk at Brighton SEO 2018, where she breaks down the 'search quality testing guidelines' for us in plain English, along with some of her insights.
A week after the July 2018 guidelines update, Google made some additions that had some significant implications: Quality reviewers will now be asked to review not only the EAT of a website, but also the EAT of content creators. This is big news.
So, from now on Google wants to see who the author of the main content of the page is and what their credentials are regarding the topic, especially if it is a YMYL topic.