In search of your most memorable moments; Monday’s daily brief

Plus, only YouTube and Reddit have seen much usage growth since 2019.

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Search Engine Land’s daily brief features daily insights, news, tips, and essential bits of wisdom for today’s search marketer. If you would like to read this before the rest of the internet does, sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox daily.

Good morning, Marketers, Google’s Panda algorithm update rolled out globally, in English, a decade ago.

Businesses and search professionals here in the U.S. got a taste of it about two months prior to the worldwide release as it went live domestically in February 2011. For those of you who, like myself, weren’t in the industry back then, the Panda update was a milestone in search history because it was one of Google’s most significant spam-targeting updates.

The Panda update, named after Google engineer Navneet Panda, made it harder for pages with thin content to rank well. This was bad news for sites that targeted long-tail queries by generating large volumes of similar content which were often only distinguishable from their other content due to subtle, and sometimes arbitrary, differences.

I like to think of Panda as a precursor to our modern core algorithm updates, and like those updates, it made a huge impact for many businesses: “I think we went from like a billion-dollar market cap to a six hundred million-dollar market cap overnight,” said Eric Wu, VP of product growth at Honey Science, who was working at Demand Media at the time.

I do enjoy a trip down memory lane because what’s past is prologue. Share your most memorable search industry-related moments with me, whether it was a particular campaign, client, update, or perhaps you met your spouse at SMX (a few have!!) — my email is [email protected]; use the subject line: In search of your most memorable moments.

George Nguyen,
Editor

Google Search Console performance report image impression change

On April 6, 2021, Google made an “improvement” to its algorithm for reporting on image search impressions within the Google Search Console performance report. This update is just a reporting change and is not a result of any ranking algorithm update or ranking issues with your website.

This update is also specific to “image impressions when type=image is specified in the Search Performance report,” Google said. If you see a drop in your image search impressions starting April 6th, you can likely attribute that drop to a reporting change and not any ranking change. Of course, you will want to track those impressions going forward to ensure your actual traffic from Google has not changed.

Read more here.

Editor @ Martech Today (remote)

  • Create a range of journalistic content that includes well-reported features, guides, profiles, and more
  • Cover this tech-enabled approach to marketing that we call MarTech

Digital Media Buyer @ ROI Revolution (Raleigh, NC)

  • Implement conversion tracking tags to align measurement and optimization with client KPIs
  • Create regular performance for internal and external stakeholders 

Sr. SEO Manager @ LendingTree (remote)

  • Conduct extensive research on industry trends
  • Drive the strategy and execution of the growth of Investments and Deposits verticals

Director of Marketing, Demand Generation @ Resiliency LLC

  • Owns all aspects of marketing strategy and leadership
  • Drive funnel process in partnership with sales leadership and define the buyer journey and target market segmentation

Enter a job opening for an opportunity to be featured in this section.

Programmatic SEO, Facebook’s POV, and Snapchat e-commerce

Leverage your programmatic SEO (and scale your approach). Programmatic SEO involves automatically generating pages at a very large scale and is best leveraged for industries like travel, e-commerce, educational content, real estate, etc.

Facebook’s POV on their 500+ million-user data leak. On April 3, Business Insider published a story saying that information from more than 530 million Facebook users had been made publicly available in an unsecured database. “It is important to understand that malicious actors obtained this data not through hacking our systems but by scraping it from our platform prior to September 2019,” said Facebook’s Product Management Director, Mike Clark.

Snapchat advances e-commerce efforts. Snapchat has taken another step in its shift towards integrated e-commerce with the acquisition of Screenshop, an app that scans your photos to identify your desired style choices, then provides clothing recommendations based on those findings.

Social media use still plateaued in 2021

social media platform growth chart from Pew research center

Most Americans use Facebook and YouTube, but TikTok, Snapchat, and Instagram are most popular with those under 30, according to new social media usage data from Pew. Even though the last few years has caused a change in sentiment around social media, 70% of adults still participate (which hasn’t changed much in the last 5 years).

Here are the most interesting points from the data:

  • YouTube and Reddit were the only two platforms measured that saw statistically significant growth since 2019
  • Adults living in urban (17%) or suburban (14%) areas are more likely to say they use Nextdoor. Just 2% of rural Americans report using the site.
  • 71% of Snapchat users ages 18 to 29 say they use the app daily, including six in ten who say they do this multiple times a day.

Why we care. This information can give advertisers an idea of the audiences behind the channels they’re using and ways to leverage those channels to better meet their consumers’ needs. It may also confirm a lot that we already know about social (like youths’ love of TikTok) and open new advertising opportunities for platforms you may not have considered (such as Reddit or Nextdoor).


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

George Nguyen
Contributor
George Nguyen is the Director of SEO Editorial at Wix, where he manages the Wix SEO Learning Hub. His career is focused on disseminating best practices and reducing misinformation in search. George formerly served as an editor for Search Engine Land, covering organic and paid search.

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