Tuesday 31 May 2022

Everything You Need to Know about Google PageRank (& Why it Still Matters in 2020)

Step back in time ten years, and PageRank was the SEO metric that everyone talked about.

If you have been working in the industry for more than a few years, you will undoubtedly remember the excitement that came when you heard that there had been an update to the PageRank toolbar.

With any luck, your recent efforts would have delivered an increase in your PageRank score, knowing that this meant that Google was now viewing your site as more authoritative than it previously was.

An increase in your PageRank score was a great demonstrator that your SEO strategy (and, in particular, your link building strategy) was working. 

Fast forward to 2020, and PageRank is rarely mentioned. 

But that is not because it is no longer important, just that it is no longer a public-facing metric. And when SEOs can no longer measure something, they eventually stop talking about it.

In this guide, we will dive deep into everything you need to know about Google PageRank, and it’s importance in 2020, looking at:

[Table of contents goes here]

What is PageRank?

If you remember PageRank, this is what probably best comes to mind when you think about it:

PageRank ToolbarImage Credit: Softpedia

That is Google’s infamous PageRank toolbar. 

This is what we all came to associate with PageRank and the metric that SEOs became universally obsessed with.

But there is far more to PageRank than the toolbar. 

PageRank — a System for Ranking Web Pages

PageRank is a system for ranking web pages that Google’s founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin developed at Stanford University. And what it is important to understand is that PageRank is all about links. 

The higher the PageRank of a link, the more authoritative it is. 

We can simplify the PageRank algorithm to describe it as a way for the importance of a webpage to be measured by analyzing the quantity and quality of the links that point to it.

The PageRank Score

Perhaps unsurprisingly, PageRank is a complex algorithm that assigns a score of importance to a page on the web. 

But as far as the everyday SEO was concerned, PageRank was a linear representation of a logarithmic scale of between 0 and 10 that was displayed on the PageRank toolbar. 

A PageRank score of 0 is typically a low-quality website, whereas, on the other hand, a score of 10 would represent only the most authoritative sites on the web. 

The key to understanding PageRank scores is that it uses a logarithmic scale. Not sure what that means in layman’s terms?

A logarithmic scale is a way of displaying numerical data over a very wide range of values in a compact way—typically the largest numbers in the data are hundreds or even thousands of times larger than the smallest numbers.

— Wikipedia

As reported by Search Engine Watch, “It has an estimated base of 4-5. In other words, assuming a base of 5, PR2 links are comparable to 5 PR1 links; a PR6 link is comparable to 5 PR5 links, and so on.”

Very quickly, we can see that a PR10 link is comparable to thousands of PR1 links. 

The reason why SEOs became so fixated on this metric is that PageRank passes from one page to another, meaning that a website can gain authority by being linked to from another that has a higher PageRank score.

Quite simply, PageRank (that is passed between websites by links) helps a website to rank higher, and the algorithm is based around the concept that a page is deemed to be important if other important pages link to it.

Google still uses PageRank as part of its algorithm today, but the original patent has expired and, in this original form, hasn’t actually been used since 2006, and the one that we now see is ultimately far more complex.

A Brief History of Google PageRank

The first PageRank patent was filed on September 1, 1998, and became the original algorithm that Google used to calculate the importance of a web page and rank these. 

In short, Google was literally formed based upon Sergey Brin’s idea that information on the web could be ranked based upon a page’s link popularity, that the more links point to a page, the higher it ranks. 

And if we take a look at the paper that introduced Google, we can clearly see PageRank referenced when explaining the search engine’s features:

The Google search engine has two important features that help it produce high precision results. First, it makes use of the link structure of the Web to calculate a quality ranking for each web page. This ranking is called PageRank and is described in detail in [Page 98]. Second, Google utilizes link to improve search results.

— The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine – Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page

PageRank is literally what made Google so unique.

The paper goes on to explain that, “The citation (link) graph of the web is an important resource that has largely gone unused in existing web search engines.”

The Introduction of the Google Toolbar

In 2000, Google introduced the toolbar that we all now come to remember as the way in which we could see our site’s (and our competitors’) PageRank score.

As a result of this, SEOs began to become fixated solely on increasing PageRank as a metric for improving rankings, driven largely by a simplified understanding of the algorithm that suggested that a web page with the highest number of links should rank the highest. 

A simple explanation of the approach by many in the early 2000s was that their goal was to get as many links as possible from web pages with as high PageRank as possible.

This, of course, began to see PageRank manipulated, with money changing hands for links as well as what many of us will remember as link farms

Fast track almost 15 years, and Google would stop updating this public-facing toolbar in 2014 (with the last confirmed update being December 2013) and retire it completely in 2016. 

Of course, this doesn’t mean that Google stopped using PageRank as part of the algorithm, just that it stopped being a public-facing metric.

An Updated PageRank Patent

The original PageRank patent from 1998 expired in 2018 and, to the surprise of many, wasn’t renewed. Around this time, a former Google employee confirmed that the original algorithm hadn’t been used since 2006.

But that doesn’t mean PageRank is dead, far from it.

The original patent was replaced by this new one. To fully understand the differences with the original, we recommend you read Bill Slawski’s analysis here.

This new patent references “seed sites in the trusted seed sets” and defines these as “…specially selected high-quality pages which provide good web connectivity to other non-seed pages,” with two given examples being The Google Directory (this was still live when the patent was filed) and the New York Times.

“[Seed sites] need to be reliable, diverse enough to cover a wide range of fields of public interests & well connected to other sites. They should have large numbers of useful outgoing links to facilitate identifying other useful & high-quality pages, acting as “hubs” on the web.”

The new patent looked to give a ranking score to a web page based upon how far away it is from a seed set. That said, this patent doesn’t actually reference PageRank (or claim to be an updated version of the algorithm).

Rather, it has been understood by the SEO community that it acts as a PageRank modifier based upon the proximity to the seed set of sites. 

PageRank Updated graphicImage Credit: US9165040B1

Understanding How PageRank Works

Quite simply, PageRank is fascinating. 

It is something that every SEO (and link builder) should understand in-depth if only to provide context around the reason why links remain one of Google’s top 3 ranking factors.

But just how does PageRank work?

When the patent was first filed and Google’s early algorithm developed, it was based around the theory that a link from one website to another acted as a vote of trust and authority. And, therefore, the more links (votes) that point to a page, the more it should be trusted and, therefore, rank higher.

But, as defined in the original paper, “PageRank extends this idea by not counting links from all pages equally, and by normalizing by the number of links on a page.”

A link isn’t simply a straight vote. The authority of a page is taken into account. A link from a PageRank 6 page is ultimately a more authoritative vote than one from a PageRank 2 page.

And this flow of PageRank between pages is sometimes referred to by SEOs as ‘link juice.’

But let’s look at the calculations behind PageRank:

“We assume page A has pages T1…Tn which point to it (i.e., are citations). The parameter d is a damping factor which can be set between 0 and 1. We usually set d to 0.85. There are more details about d in the next section. Also, C(A) is defined as the number of links going out of page A. The PageRank of a page A is given as follows:

PR(A) = (1-d) + d (PR(T1)/C(T1) + … + PR(Tn)/C(Tn))

Note that the PageRanks form a probability distribution over web pages, so the sum of all web pages’ PageRanks will be one.”

What this means, in simpler terms, is that the PageRank of Page B is calculated by multiplying the PageRank of Page A by 0.85. This is known as the dampening factor.

If Page B then links to Page C, this receives 85% of B’s PageRank (72.25% of Page A’s).

If a web page has no links pointing to it, that page doesn’t begin with 0 PageRank, rather 0.15.

But things get even more complicated when there is more than one external link on a page.

As referenced in this 2004 post on Search Engine Roundtable:

If you put a link from page A to page B, page A will distribute PageRank to page B. Page A’s PageRank does not get diluted by linking out, but the links are worth less, in terms of the value of the PageRank, when there are more links on the page A.

— Barry Schwartz

PageRank is complex, and to understand how it works in more detail; you can check out this detailed guide that gives an introduction to PageRank for SEO.

Factors That Influence(d) PageRank and That Still Matter

Of course, there are, and were, factors that influence PageRank. 

We have already covered the fact that not all links are equal in terms of the PageRank that they pass. But just what are some of the factors that can (and have previously done so) influence PageRank?

We will look specifically at:

  • Anchor text
  • The likelihood of being clicked
  • Internal links
  • Nofollow links

You need to understand not only what these influencing factors are but also how they apply to SEO in 2020, which you need to be using and which to avoid as part of your tactics of choice.

Anchor Text

Google’s original paper referred to link anchor text by stating that, “The text of links is treated in a special way in our search engine” and that, “anchors often provide more accurate descriptions of web pages than the pages themselves.”

In the early days of Google, anchor text had a key influence on the rankings of a page.

If you wanted to rank for the term “red shoes,” the more links you had that used that term as an anchor text, the higher you could rank.

Link building became a race between SEOs to see who could gain as many exact match anchor text links as possible from high PageRank pages. 

It worked (for some time) but was sheer manipulation of Google’s Webmaster Guidelines and, specifically, this is considered as a link scheme.

Fast forward to 2020, and the overuse of anchor text manipulation will result in toxic links and potentially a manual penalty or algorithmic adjustment. 

The Likelihood of a Link Being Clicked

The likelihood of a link being clicked is a key influencer of PageRank and is referenced by Google’s reasonable surfer patent.

The original PageRank algorithm assigned an equal weight to links on a page. Whereas, 2004’s Reasonable Surfer patent indicates that not all links are as likely as one another to be clicked; therefore, giving a different value to different links, depending upon their potential to be clicked. 

A given example of links that are less likely to be clicked include ‘terms of service’ links and banner advertisements, but could also include links in a footer or a similar location.

Internal Links

Internal linking is a powerful SEO tactic, and there is a good reason why.

You can help PageRank to flow through your site with a solid internal linking structure, and once you understood how this works, it is easy to see why this tactic can have such a noticeable impact, especially when linking to pages that are not linked to from anywhere else. 

You can learn more about how to effectively use this tactic in our guide to internal linking.

NoFollow Links

NoFollow links prevent(ed) the flow of PageRank until recently when this became a hint. 

Historically, SEOs sometimes used the NoFollow attribute to sculpt the flow of PageRank – on the basis that if a page had 5 external links, PageRank would all pass through the one followed link if 4 of the 5 were nofollowed. 

In 2009, however, Google’s Matt Cutts confirmed that this would no longer work and that PageRank would be distributed across links even if a NoFollow attribute was present (but only pass through the followed link).

Learn about Nofollow, Sponsored, and UGC Links

Why Did Google Retire the PageRank Toolbar?

SEOs became obsessed with PageRank, and it quickly became the most focused on SEO tactic, even above creating great content and a solid user experience.

The problem was that by publicly sharing a PageRank Score, this became easier for SEOs to manipulate, alongside influencing factors such as anchor text, nofollow, and the reasonable surfer model.

SEOs knew how they could use PageRank to rank their websites higher, and they took advantage of this.

If we look at this from Google’s perspective, the public-facing PageRank toolbar was the problem. Without this, there was no accurate measure of a web page’s authority (at least officially).

Ultimately, SEOs abused PageRank and used it to manipulate rankings, leaving Google with no real choice other than to retire the toolbar, which happened in 2016. 

Why PageRank Still Matters in 2020

PageRank still matters in 2020. 

Just because there is no longer a toolbar that gives us a web page’s PageRank score doesn’t mean it is not still used.

In fact, in 2017, Google’s Gary Illyes confirmed on Twitter that they were still using PageRank.

PageRank has never gone away, and understanding how it works can only help you to be a better SEO. If you have still not read Google’s original paper, you should do so.

Does a Replacement PageRank Metric Exist?

Google has never officially released a new version of the PageRank toolbar, but, of course, PageRank is still very much used by Google.

We just can’t measure it with a tool anymore.

A number of SEO software tools and platforms have rolled out their own authority metrics, and SEMrush has our own ‘Authority Score.’

authority score

Authority Score is a compound domain score that grades the overall quality of a website and tells you how impactful a backlink from a site can be for your SEO, and is based upon:

  • Backlink data, including referring domains, follow & nofollow links, and more.
  • Organic search data, including organic search traffic and keyword positions.
  • Website traffic data (monthly visits).

Of course, this metric uses backlink data as part of the scoring algorithm but is not intended to directly replace PageRank.

And this is something you need to understand.

Third-party metrics are not used in Google’s algorithm. They never have been and never will be, yet are intended to help you to measure a site’s relative authority against competitors and other sites on the web.


Remember, PageRank isn’t dead.

We might not have a toolbar anymore, but that doesn’t mean we don’t need to understand how it works and the factors that influence it.

In many ways, it is a good thing that SEOs stopped obsessing over this single metric, given that it contributed towards a shift that means, largely, the industry isn’t relying on manipulative tactics. 

SEOs abused PageRank, and we lost the toolbar because of this, but that is not necessarily bad in the eyes of many.

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Google Core Updates Uses Data Before Launch But May Update Data Between Launches

Google’s John Mueller was asked what are the timeframes for the data used when calculating quality metrics for the Google broad core updates. John said that there is a lot of “work that’s done well in advance” and “usually with data collected until then,” then being just before it rolls out.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Rumor: Apple To Announce New Search Engine Next Week

Robert Scoble posted a bunch of items around what to expect from the Apple World Wide Developer Conference (WWDC) that is happening Monday, June 6th. Robert said a bunch of things but specific to search he said “and a new search engine is coming too.”

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Google SEO Question: How Much Plagiarism Percentage-wise Is Allowed?

I spotted a weird question that was asked of Google’s John Mueller around plagiarism. The question was, what percentage level of plagiarism does Google allow so a site can rank in Google. Is it 5%, 10%, etc? The question is weird but I guess there are some myths out there around it being okay to plagiarize content for SEO purposes?

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Google AdWords API Error Rates Begins June 1st

As you know, Google has sunset the AdWords API on April 27th. But Google let it work over the past month or so. Well, starting June 1st, Google will increase the rates of errors you get when trying to use the old AdWords API from 50% error rate on June 1st to 100% error rate on July 31, 2022.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Five SEO content types to power and grow your business through 2020

30-second summary:

  • The convergence of content and SEO has happened and digital is next.  
  • Brands that produce quality content over quantity using insights to understand intent stand to capture market share from competitors.  
  • Producing search friendly, optimized content out of the gate and aligned with paid media strategy gives marketers the best opportunity to dominate SERP real estate. 
  • In B2B combined search averages 76% of traffic. 
  • Content also provides value beyond SEO and across whole organizations from branding and awareness through to sales, customer service, and product marketing.
  • Jim Yu shares the top five content types that also serve SEO value.

The convergence of SEO and content has happened. Today, we’re experiencing the convergence of content with all things digital. That was evolution enough—then a pandemic swept through to really shake things up, accelerating digital transforming digital nearly overnight. 

As businesses look to reopening, people are hungrier than ever for content. Media consumption is spiking as so many scour their laptops, phones, and tablets for information about which businesses are open, what products and services they can access nearby, and how businesses are adjusting to the “new normal”. 

In the coming months, businesses are going to be challenged to adapt their SEO and content strategies to meet the constantly shifting needs of consumers. Now you have not only seasonal trends and personalization to contend with but different stages of business recovery and access across verticals and regions, too. 

Look to SEO now for real-time customer insights

We have never before experienced a global, all-encompassing, and near-universal experience such as this. Nearly every customer has been affected in some way. Customer journey maps must be updated but moreover, it is critical now that you are set up to monitor and analyze customer data in as near to real-time as possible.  

You can expect the rest of 2020 to bring dramatic shifts and swings in consumer behavior, and SEO insights are about as close to real-time voice-of-customer as you can get. 

Search data is rich in customer needs and intent. Now more than ever, consumers are turning to search engines for their every need. The insights gleaned from search trends and queries, local search analytics, and on-site activity will help inform the decisions your business must make going forward. Aligning SEO and PPC strategy is becoming more critical. According to BrightEdge research in B2B combined search averages 76% of traffic. 

 If you didn’t have a structured method of communicating search insights to department heads and the C-level before, now is the time. Start with the questions your organization needs answered and work backward from there: 

  • Are consumers remaining loyal to their usual/familiar brands, or is it a mix of usual and new brands (perhaps out of necessity and due to availability)? 
  • Where are your customers spending their time online right now? 
  • What are customers saying about your brand in social media, on review sites, and elsewhere on the web—and are you in a position to engage and respond in real-time? 
  • How have your customers’ needs changed due to COVID-19? 
  • Are you seeing any surprising or unexpected behavioral changes in how people discover and consume your content?  
  • Are consumers using your products or services (or others similar to yours) in new or different ways? 

These insights will help guide not only your marketing strategy but how the entire organization rebuilds and find opportunities for growth in the coming months.  

Five content types to power your content strategy now and in future

Get ready to move fast on opportunities for prime search visibility and share of voice, as there’s a distinct advantage to being the first-mover. Choose your content types wisely to ensure you’re presenting information to customers in the best format for their needs, devices, and intent, and experience. 

Make sure these five types of search-friendly content are part of your arsenal: 

1. Written word 

Text-based web content still drives the vast majority of search results. It can be made more interesting and engaging with the inclusion of other content types (which we’ll talk about in a minute), but a well-written article or webpage is still one of the most powerful tools in your content arsenal.  

This is what Google calls “Main Content” in its Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines—“any part of the page that directly helps the page achieve its purpose”. It can be text, imagery, video, or even user-generated content, and includes the page title. The written word is often complemented by multimedia elements but usually serves as the basis on which the content piece is built. 

Writing is a great way to establish thought leadership, to guide users through step-by-step processes, to share opinions and perspectives and expertise. Landing pages, glossaries, listicles, feature stories, media releases—there are countless ways to tell your company’s stories and share messages in writing.  

How can you make your written content stronger and maximize its SEO value?  

  • Understand what Google is looking for: “…unique and original content created by highly skilled and talented artists or content creators. Such artistic content requires a high degree of skill/talent, time, and effort.” 
  • Avoid writing mistakes that Google says detracts from the quality of a piece: grammar and punctuation errors, paraphrasing another piece of content but introducing inaccuracies, lack of adherence to E-A-T principles, poor quality writing, meaningless statements, failing to cite sources, sharing mostly commonly known information, text broken up by large ads that disrupt the user experience. 

2. Visual content types: Photos, infographics, and illustrations

Images can feature prominently in search results, depending on the query, and can really enhance the quality of a piece of written content. They can help tell the story, illustrate specific points, help a reader envision a complex idea, and more. 

We know that image alt text helps Google understand an image’s relevance to the rest of the page content (and to the query, as a result). But it serves an even more important function: improving the accessibility of your content. By now, descriptive alt texts should be best practice for all content teams. 

What else do we know about Google’s evaluation of image content? 

  • Images can be considered “Main Content” by Google. In section 4.2, Google states that quality evaluators are to look for “a satisfying amount of main content’ and list multiple product images as one example of achieving this. 
  • Evaluators are to consider the “skill/talent, time, and effort” it appears to have taken to create images. 
  • Shocking images that don’t match the main content, sexually suggestive or grotesque images, deceptive images that imply a celebrity endorsement where is none for example, and images that don’t fit the screen on mobile are all examples of image content that detract from the user experience and therefore their SEO value.  

Google says that a picture truly is worth a thousand words, in some cases. Using the example of a trestle bridge, the guidelines state that “a picture may be more helpful than a text description due to the unique design of the bridge.” Keep this in mind as you create written content—if you’re writing at length to explain something, could an image help? 

3. Video content types

More than 500 hours of video are being uploaded to YouTube per minute and users still can’t get enough, devouring over a billion hours of YouTube content per day. If video isn’t yet a part of your content mix, this is the time to figure out how you’re going to make it so. 

Videos can also count as the main content, and they’re great for augmenting written text. Explainers, how-to guides, product or service demos, behind-the-scenes looks, expert interviews, and more are all great material for a high-quality video. 

And what is Google looking for when it comes to video? Increase its SEO value by keeping in mind that: 

  • Google considers “a satisfying or comprehensive amount of very high-quality main content” and “High E-A-T for the purpose of the page” indicators of quality in video content. 
  • Other characteristics of a good quality video include that it is well-produced, subject matter expertise, uniqueness and originality. 
  • Things that detract from your video’s SEO value include a subject matter with no clear expertise on the topic, publishing on a network with little oversight, or an attempt to deceive audiences in some way. 

Note that Google specifically instructs raters that they “must consider the reputation and E-A-T of both the website and the creators of the MC in order to assign a Page Quality rating”. Protect the reputation of your creators and your site by ensuring that these best practices are employed in every video you publish. 

4. Audio content types

The explosion in popularity of voice search and content formats such as podcasts and internet radio has made audio content a key component in the marketing mix. in optimizing audio content for voice search, you want to make sure you’re using structured data, concise headlines, and descriptions that help people understand what the content is about. Google’s main concerns about voice search as far as search quality goes have to do with mobile-friendliness. When a person uses their mobile phone for a voice query, for example, it’s not a good user experience if the page they are delivered to isn’t optimized for mobile.  

For audio content such as podcasts, the content you create around the episode is key. In fact, you should be considering SEO implications even as you choose your topics and structure your shows, to ensure you’re talking about things people are actually looking to hear about. Optimize your podcast title and description in the same way you do other web content, around a focused keyword. Write a blog post that helps people understand what the episode is about and share a transcript, if possible. 

5. Interactive content types

Webinars, virtual events, online courses, and other similar interactive content, when put together well, offer great value for participants and therefore can be considered quality content by Google. We’re about to see an explosion in their popularity, given the potential long-term implications of the coronavirus pandemic, too. 

You can improve the SEO strength of your interactive content and virtual events by creating and optimizing supportive content for each channel in which you’ll promote the event. Create graphics to promote the speakers. Shoot a quick explainer video that tells people what they’ll learn or experience if they participate.  

And don’t just hold the event and forget it about it—share the recording, write a wrap-up blog post, create an infographic with the top takeaways, create an ebook, and more. Ask participants to share their best photos and feedback and share them on a dedicated page on your site. 

The best content isn’t just optimized for search—it starts with search

Optimizing for search isn’t an activity you tack onto the end of the writing process or something you do to an image before publishing. How and where your audience will discover and engage with your different types of content needs to be a key consideration from the very earliest planning stages of your content strategy. 

Redesigning the website? Ask how SEO needs to be involved. Writing content? Consider how it can be optimized to fit the SEO strategy. Launching a new product? Involve SEO sooner in the planning. SEO needs to be ingrained throughout every aspect of the business right now, from the very initial planning stages of any project or initiative.  

As you become more intentional in strategic content planning, your data will show you which content formats work best at each stage of your unique funnel. Work on developing these measurement and attribution systems, if you do not already have them in place. They will drive your content creation, optimization, and amplification strategy across all channels throughout your COVID-19 recovery and beyond. 

Jim Yu is the founder and CEO of leading enterprise SEO and content performance platform BrightEdge. He can be found on Twitter .

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: Jim Yu

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Google Fixing Bug Where Dealership Service Shops Show Over Main Dealership Local Panel

In early March, Google added a feature to Google My Business that allow car dealerships to have multiple Google My Business listings within Google Local and Google Maps. But now it seems that for some dealerships, the service listing is showing above the main dealership listing – which is causing problems for these dealerships.

The new policy allows a single car dealership can have a listing for each brand it sells, plus a listing for each brand’s sales, parts, or services departments. But now, in some cases, Google is showing the services department when a search is done.

The example given by Greg Gifford was a search for [apple ford columbia md], which shows the service listing over the main dealership listing:

Danny Sullivan of Google said he is aware of these issues and Google “recently made an improvement that we thought largely resolved these types of cases.” So he will look into this report and see if they can do better.

Forum discussion at Twitter.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

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Monday 30 May 2022

Google Online Care Icon Added To Local Pack

We have seen Google add the “get online care” details to a local panel, when you click on a medical and health related local result in Google. But now Google has added the “online care” icons to the higher level, local pack.

Here is a screen shot of a query for [doctors near 10010] showing two doctor offices with online care icons:

Tom Waddington shared some examples of this happening on Twitter.

Forum discussion at Twitter.

This marketing news is not the copyright of Scott.Services – please click here to see the original source of this article. Author: barry@rustybrick.com (Barry Schwartz)

For more SEO, PPC, internet marketing news please check out https://news.scott.services

Why not check out our SEO, PPC marketing services at https://www.scott.services

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