Google now says that good page experience is a requirement for creating, what Google defines as, helpful content. Google added a new section for providing a great page experience to its guidance around how to create helpful content, Google explained. Google also revised its help page about page experience to add more details about helpful content. Page experience section in helpful content. Google added the following section to the helpful content guidance here, it reads: “Provide a great page experience: Google’s core ranking systems look to reward content that provides a good page experience. Site owners seeking to be successful with our systems should not focus on only one or two aspects of page experience. Instead, check if you’re providing an overall great page experience across many aspects. For more advice, see our page, Understanding page experience in Google Search results.” “In turn, that section links over to our revised Understanding page experience in Google Search results help page, which explains the role of page experience in more detail, along with self-assessment questions and resources,” Danny Sullivan of Google wrote. “That page brings together in one place some key aspects of page experience to consider, aspects that are unchanged from what we’ve talked about in recent years,” he added. Search Console report changes. Google also removed the page experience report from Search Console and while keeping the core web vitals and HTTPS report and also dropped the mobile-friendly testing tool. More on those changes can be found over here. More FAQs. Google also posted these FAQs on this change, which mentions the site-wide versus page-specific evaluations when it comes to measuring page experience: Without the Page Experience report, how do I know if my site provides a great page experience? Is there a single “page experience signal” that Google Search uses for ranking? Page experience signals had been listed as Core Web Vitals, mobile-friendly, HTTPS and no intrusive interstitials. Are these signals still used in search rankings? While not all of these may be directly used to inform ranking, we do find that all of these aspects of page experience align with success in search ranking, and are worth attention Are Core Web Vitals still important? What does this mean for the “page experience update”? Is good page experience required to appear in the “Top stories” carousel on mobile? Is page experience evaluated on a site-wide or page-specific basis? Does page experience factor into the helpful content system? How important is page experience to ranking success? Why we care. Reviewing these changes and understanding where Google wants your content and page experience to meet is important. The more you understand what it means to create helpful content, the better chances you have to rank well in Google Search. Removing some of the tools in Search Console may not be something any of us are looking forward to, but we do learn to adapt. The post Google says helpful content must have a good page experience appeared first on Search Engine Land. via Search Engine Land https://searchengineland.com/google-says-helpful-content-must-have-a-good-page-experience-395790
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April 2023
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