The appearance of Google's SERP (search engine results page) periodically shifts as they experiment with new ways to display paid and organic search results to customers.
The latest iteration removes the paid text ads in the right hand column (on desktop results only), but extends the paid results in organic search results. Now, up to four ads are shown above organic results.
As Larry Kim has pointed out, Google is a zero-sum game someone has to win and someone has to lose. According to Kim's data, PPC will be the winner in this case, while organic search will be the loser. He cites these reasons:
So, we adjust. SEO is about problem solving. It's ever evolving, trying to stay in step with Google. You've worked through algorithm changes in the past. This is just one more egg to fry.
Here are four ways you can adjust your site SEO strategy to account for the new face of SERPs.
1) Start aiming for the answer boxStay in the SERP spotlight by getting your website selected to be featured in the answer box. The answer box still falls below paid results (if there are any), but it is prominently called out.
With the proliferation of voice search, including the introduction of Gboard to phone conversations, you should already be shifting your web copy toward more natural language.
As Andy Crestodina notes, voice-based queries tend to be longer phrases and tend to be questions. Therefore, you should be shifting your content into a question and answer format to meet searcher's queries.
As an added benefit, writing for natural search can increase your chances of making it into the coveted answer box.
James Perrott makes his criteria for hitting the answer box a little more specific – check out his tips here: Google Answer Boxes: how and why.
2) Make local optimization a priorityIf you have brick and mortar business locations, getting in that local pack is more important than ever. Otherwise, organic search space on page one of this SERP is virtually non-existent after four paid results and the local pack.
Let's take a look at men's suits.
Follow these recommendations to ensure that your site makes it into the local pack.
Hopefully, you aren't still targeting one specific keyword with your content. Keywords aren't dead by any means, but it's always a better idea now to write pieces that target topics, using a variety of semantically linked keywords.
First of all, search engines are advanced enough at this point to build a bigger picture of your webpage without you ramming a specific keyword down their throats over and over.
Secondly, however, building a strong semantically optimized article around a topic potentially helps the article rank highly in SERPs for multiple different queries. This greatly increases your odds of landing in SERPs that feature one or no paid search results at the top of the page.
As of February 23, MOZ noted that 36.4% of top ad blocks on SERPs contained four ads. The same amount of pages only had one ad. And those are only counting the pages that have any ads at all.
Yes, there are still ad-free SERPs – for example, I just ran a search for "auto repair" and there were no ads in my SERP.
4) Form a closer alignment with paid searchPaid and organic search teams need to coordinate to maximize brand exposure in search. As noted recently by Thomas Stern, a mutually-beneficial relationship between the two will allow paid search to boost visibility while organic search identifies gaps in the competitive landscape.
Your paid search counterparts should be focused on placement in queries that are dominated by four-packs of paid results, where your organic efforts are going to lose significant amounts of clicks.
Meanwhile, you are free to focus more of your organic search efforts optimizing around topics that have more ad-free breathing room in SERPs, and that competitors have neglected to target.
Your paid search team is not your adversary. Coordinate efforts to dominate SERPs and pull in more visits.
The nimble will winA big part of success in SEO is being nimble and adaptable. Rather than worrying about what small changes Google might make next, you will be better served looking at the broader themes that are developing and preparing for them:
While we are losing the organic SERP space, this is a good opportunity to reevaluate your approach to search optimization and be better positioned for whatever big changes are coming next.
Ryan Johnson is the SEO Manager at DigitasLBi and a contibutor for SEW. You connect with Ryan on Twitter.
Related readingBy now we should be used to Google experimenting with its results pages and ad formats, and well, we are, but it doesn't stop a minor change from creating a frisson of excitement even when only about 0.5% of searchers in a single territory get to see them.
What to do when an account has a budget that may only support one or two clicks per day.
In what seems like a stark contrast to Apple's backing away from its longstanding mobile ad marketplace, iAd, the company will instead be getting back to the ad business, allowing app developers to pay for ads to appear on top of search results in the lucrative Apple App Store.
With the share of digital ad spend at 29.9% in 2015 and expected to increase to 39.3% in 2019* the digital advertising marketplace is becoming increasingly competitive for ecommerce retailers.
Source: Four ways to adjust your SEO strategy for four-pack paid search ads
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