Each year, Google changes its search algorithm up to 500-600 times. While most of these changes are minor, every few months Google rolls out a “major” algorithmic update that affect search results in significant ways.
For search marketers, knowing the dates of these Google updates can help explain changes in rankings and organic website traffic. Below, we've listed the major algorithmic changes that made the biggest impacts on search. Understanding these updates can help with search engine optimization.
2012 Updates
Page Layout #2 — October 9, 2012
Google announced an update to its
original page layout algorithm change back in January, which targeted pages
with too many ads above the fold. It's unclear whether this was an algorithm
change or a Panda-style data refresh.
Penguin #3 — October 5, 2012
After suggesting the next Penguin
update would be major, Google released a minor Penguin data update, impacting
"0.3% of queries". Penguin update numbering was rebooted, similar to
Panda - this was the 3rd Penguin release.
August/September 65-Pack — October 4,
2012
Google published their monthly
(bi-monthly?) list of search highlights. The 65 updates for August and
September included 7-result SERPs, Knowledge Graph expansion, updates to how
"page quality" is calculated, and changes to how local results are
determined.
Exact-Match Domain (EMD) Update —
September 27, 2012
Google announced a change in the way
it was handling exact-match domains (EMDs). This led to large-scale
devaluation, reducing the presence of EMDs in the MozCast data set by over 10%.
Official word is that this change impacted 0.6% of queries (by volume).
The EMD Update: Google Issues “Weather Report” Of Crack Down On
Low Quality Exact Match Domains (SEL)
Panda #20 — September 27, 2012
Overlapping the EMD update, a fairly
major Panda update (algo + data) rolled out, officially affecting 2.4% of
queries. As the 3.X series was getting odd, industry sources opted to
start naming Panda updates in order (this was the 20th).
Panda 3.9.2 — September 18, 2012
Google rolled out another Panda
refresh, which appears to have been data-only. Ranking flux was moderate but
not on par with a large-scale algorithm update.
Panda 3.9.1 — August 20, 2012
Google rolled out yet another Panda
data update, but the impact seemed to be fairly small. Since the Panda 3.0
series ran out of numbers at 3.9, the new update was dubbed 3.9.1.
7-Result SERPs — August 14, 2012
Google made a significant change to
the Top 10, limiting it to 7 results for many queries. Our research showed that
this change rolled out over a couple of days, finally impacting about 18% of
the keywords we tracked.
DMCA Penalty — August 10, 2012
Google announced that they would
start penalizing sites with repeat copyright violations, probably via DMCA
takedown requests. Timing was stated as "starting next week"
(8/13?).
An update to our search algorithms (Google)
June/July 86-Pack — August 10, 2012
After a summer hiatus, the June and
July Search Quality Highlights were rolled out in one mega-post. Major updates
included Panda data and algorithm refreshes, an improved rank-ordering function
(?), a ranking boost for "trusted sources", and changes to site
clustering.
Panda 3.9 — July 24, 2012
A month after Panda 3.8, Google
rolled out a new Panda update. Rankings fluctuated for 5-6 days, although no
single day was high enough to stand out. Google claimed ~1% of queries were
impacted.
Link Warnings — July 19, 2012
In a repeat of March/April, Google
sent out a large number of unnatural link warnings via Google Webmaster Tools.
In a complete turn-around, they then announced that these new warnings may not
actually represent a serious problem.
Panda 3.8 — June 25, 2012
Google rolled out another Panda data
refresh, but this appeared to be data only (no algorithm changes) and had a
much smaller impact than Panda 3.7.
Panda 3.7 — June 8, 2012
Google rolled out yet another Panda
data update, claiming that less than 1% of queries were affect. Ranking
fluctuation data suggested that the impact was substantially higher than
previous Panda updates (3.5, 3.6).
May 39-Pack — June 7, 2012
Google released their monthly Search
Highlights, with 39 updates in May. Major changes included Penguin improvements,
better link-scheme detection, changes to title/snippet rewriting, and updates
to Google News.
Penguin 1.1 — May 25, 2012
Google rolled out its first targeted
data update after the "Penguin" algorithm update. This confirmed that
Penguin data was being processed outside of the main search index, much like
Panda data.
Knowledge Graph — May 16, 2012
In a major step toward
semantic search, Google started rolling out "Knowledge Graph", a
SERP-integrated display providing supplemental object about certain people,
places, and things. Expect to see "knowledge panels" appear on more
and more SERPs over time. Also, Danny Sullivan's favorite Trek is ST:Voyager?!
April 52-Pack — May 4, 2012
Google published details of 52 updates
in April, including changes that were tied to the "Penguin" update.
Other highlights included a 15% larger "base" index, improved
pagination handling, and a number of updates to sitelinks.
Panda 3.6 — April 27, 2012
Barely a week after Panda 3.5, Google
rolled out yet another Panda data update. The implications of this update were
unclear, and it seemed that the impact was relatively small.
Penguin — April 24, 2012
After weeks of speculation about an
"Over-optimization penalty", Google finally rolled out the
"Webspam Update", which was soon after dubbed "Penguin."
Penguin adjusted a number of spam factors, including keyword stuffing, and
impacted an estimated 3.1% of English queries.
Panda 3.5 — April 19, 2012
In the middle of a busy week for the
algorthim, Google quietly rolled out a Panda data update. A mix of changes made
the impact difficult to measure, but this appears to have been a fairly routine
update with minimal impact.
Parked Domain Bug — April 16, 2012
After a number of webmasters reported
ranking shuffles, Google confirmed that a data error had caused some domains to
be mistakenly treated as parked domains (and thereby devalued). This was not an
intentional algorithm change.
March 50-Pack — April 3, 2012
Google posted another batch of update
highlights, covering 50 changes in March. These included confirmation of Panda
3.4, changes to anchor-text "scoring", updates to image search, and
changes to how queries with local intent are interpreted.
Panda 3.4 — March 23, 2012
Google announced another Panda
update, this time via Twitter as the update was rolling out. Their public
statements estimated that Panda 3.4 impacted about 1.6% of search results.
Search Quality Video — March 12, 2012
This wasn't an algorithm update, but
Google published a rare peek into a search quality meeting. For anyone
interested in the algorithm, the video provides a lot of context to both
Google's process and their priorities. It's also a chance to see Amit Singhal
in action.
Panda 3.3 — February 27, 2012
Google rolled out another
post-"flux" Panda update, which appeared to be relatively minor. This
came just 3 days after the 1-year anniversary of Panda, an unprecedented
lifespan for a named update.
February 40-Pack (2) — February 27,
2012
Google published a second set of
"search quality highlights" at the end of the month, claiming more
than 40 changes in February. Notable changes included multiple image-search
updates, multiple freshness updates (including phasing out 2 old bits of the
algorithm), and a Panda update.
Venice — February 27, 2012
As part of their monthly update,
Google mentioned code-name "Venice". This local update appeared to
more aggressively localize organic results and more tightly integrate local
search data. The exact roll-out date was unclear.
Google Venice Update – New Ranking Opportunities for Local SEO (Catalyst eMarketing)
February 17-Pack — February 3, 2012
Google released another round of
"search quality highlights" (17 in all). Many related to speed,
freshness, and spell-checking, but one major announcement was tighter
integration of Panda into the main search index.
Google’s January Search Update: Panda In The Pipelines, Fresher
Results, Date Detection & More (SEL)
Ads Above The Fold — January 19, 2012
Google updated their page layout
algorithms to devalue sites with too much ad-space above the "fold".
It was previously suspected that a similar factor was in play in Panda. The
update had no official name, although it was referenced as "Top Heavy"
by some SEOs.
Page layout algorithm improvement (Google)
Panda 3.2 — January 18, 2012
Google confirmed a Panda data update,
although suggested that the algorithm hadn't changed. It was unclear how this
fit into the "Panda Flux" scheme of more frequent data updates.
Search + Your World — January 10,
2012
Google announced a radical shift in
personalization - aggressively pushing Google+ social data and user
profiles into SERPs. Google also added a new, prominent toggle button to
shut off personalization.
Search, plus Your World (Google)
January 30-Pack — January 5, 2012
Google announced 30 changes over the
previous month, including image search landing-page quality detection, more
relevant site-links, more rich snippets, and related-query improvements. The
line between an "algo update" and a "feature" got a bit
more blurred.
2011 Updates
December 10-Pack — December 1, 2011
Google outlined a second set of
10 updates, announcing that these posts would come every month. Updates
included related query refinements, parked domain detection, blog search
freshness, and image search freshness. The exact dates of each update were
not provided.
Panda 3.1 — November 18, 2011
After Panda 2.5, Google entered a
period of "Panda Flux" where updates started to happen more
frequently and were relatively minor. Some industry analysts called the 11/18
update 3.1, even though there was no official 3.0. For the purposes of this
history, we will discontinue numbering Panda updates except for very
high-impact changes.
10-Pack of Updates — November 14,
2011
This one was a bit unusual. In a bid
to be more transparent, Matt Cutts released a post with 10 recent algorithm
updates. It's not clear what the timeline was, and most were small updates, but
it did signal a shift in how Google communicates algorithm changes.
Ten recent algorithm changes (Google)
Freshness Update — November 3, 2011
Google announced that an algorithm
change rewarding freshness would impact up to 35% of queries (almost
3X the publicly stated impact of Panda 1.0). This update primarly affected
time-sensitive results, but signalled a much stronger focus on recent content.
Query Encryption — October 18, 2011
Google announced they would be
encrypting search queries, for privacy reasons. Unfortunately, this disrupted
organic keyword referral data, returning "(not provided)" for some
organic traffic. This number increased in the weeks following the launch.
Making search more secure (Google)
Panda "Flux" — October 5,
2011
Matt Cutts tweeted: "expect some
Panda-related flux in the next few weeks" and gave a figure of
"~2%". Other minor Panda updates occurred on 10/3, 10/13, and
11/18.
Panda 2.5 — September 28, 2011
After more than month, Google rolled
out another Panda update. Specific details of what changed were unclear, but
some sites reported large-scale losses.
516 Algo Updates — September 21, 2011
This wasn't an update, but it was an
amazing revelation. Google CEO Eric Schmidt told Congress that Google made 516
updates in 2010. The real shocker? They tested over 13,000 updates.
Pagination Elements — September 15,
2011
To help fix crawl and duplication
problems created by pagination, Google introduced the rel="next" and
rel="prev" link attributes. Google also announced that they had
improved automatic consolidation and canonicalization for "View All"
pages.
Expanded Sitelinks — August 16, 2011
After experimenting for a while,
Google officially rolled out expanded site-links, most often for brand queries.
At first, these were 12-packs, but Google appeared to limit the expanded
site-links to 6 shortly after the roll-out.
Panda Goes Global (2.4) — August 12,
2011
Google rolled Panda out
internationally, both for English-language queries globally and
non-English queries except for Chinese, Japanese, and
Korean. Google reported that this impacted 6-9% of queries in affected
countries.
Panda 2.3 — July 23, 2011
Webmaster chatter suggested that
Google rolled out yet another update. It was unclear whether new factors were
introduced, or this was simply an update to the Panda data and ranking
factors.
A Holistic Look at Panda with Vanessa Fox (Stone Temple)
Google+ — June 28, 2011
After a number of social media
failures, Google launched a serious attack on Facebook with Google+. Google+
revolved around circles for sharing content, and was tightly integrated into
products like Gmail. Early adopters were quick to jump on board, and within 2
weeks Google+ reached 10M users.
Panda 2.2 — June 21, 2011
Google continued to update
Panda-impacted sites and data, and version 2.2 was officially acknowledged.
Panda updates occurred separately from the main index and not in real-time,
reminiscent of early Google Dance updates.
Schema.org — June 2, 2011
Google, Yahoo and Microsoft jointly
announced support for a consolidated approach to structured data. They also created
a number of new "schemas", in an apparent bid to move toward even
richer search results.
Google, Bing & Yahoo Unite To Make Search Listings Richer
Through Structured Data (SEL) What is Schema.org?(Schema.org)
Panda 2.1 — May 9, 2011
Initially dubbed “Panda 3.0”, Google
appeared to roll out yet another round of changes. These changes weren’t
discussed in detail by Google and seemed to be relatively minor.
Google Panda 3.0 (SERoundtable)
Panda 2.0 — April 11, 2011
Google rolled out the Panda update to
all English queries worldwide (not limited to English-speaking countries). New
signals were also integrated, including data about sites users blocked via the
SERPs directly or the Chrome browser.
Panda 2.0: Google Rolls Out Panda Update Internationally &
Incorporates Searcher Blocking Data (SEL)
The +1 Button — March 30, 2011
Responding to competition by major
social sites, including Facebook and Twitter, Google launched the +1 button
(directly next to results links). Clicking [+1] allowed users to influence
search results within their social circle, across both organic and paid
results.
Recommendations when you want
them (Google)
Panda/Farmer — February 23, 2011
A major algorithm update hit sites
hard, affecting up to 12% of search results (a number that came directly from
Google). Panda seemed to crack down on thin content, content farms, sites with
high ad-to-content ratios, and a number of other quality issues. Panda rolled
out over at least a couple of months, hitting Europe in April 2011.
Attribution Update — January 28, 2011
In response to high-profile spam
cases, Google rolled out an update to help better sort out content attribution
and stop scrapers. According to Matt Cutts, this affected about 2% of queries.
It was a clear precursor to the Panda updates.
Algorithm Change Launched (Matt Cutts)
Latest Google Algorithm change (Search News Central)
Overstock.com Penalty — January 2011
In a rare turn of events, a public
outing of shady SEO practices by Overstock.com resulted in a very public Google
penalty. JCPenney was hit with a penalty in February for similar bad behavior.
Both situations represented a shift in Google's attitude and foreshadowed the
Panda update.
2010 Updates
Social Signals — December 2010
Google and Bing confirmed that they
use social signals in determining ranking, including data from Twitter and
Facebook. Matt Cutts confirmed that this was a relatively new development for
Google, although many SEOs had long suspected it would happen.
Negative Reviews — December 2010
After an expose in the New York Times
about how e-commerce site DecorMyEyes was ranking based on negative reviews,
Google made a rare move and reactively adjusted the algorithm to target sites
using similar tactics.
A Bully Finds a Pulpit on the Web (NY Times)
Instant Previews — November 2010
A magnifying glass icon appeared on
Google search results, allowing search visitors to quickly view a preview of landing
pages directly from SERPs. This signaled a renewed focus for Google on landing
page quality, design, and usability.
Google Instant — September 2010
Expanding on Google Suggest, Google
Instant launched, displaying search results as a query was being typed. SEOs
everywhere nearly spontaneously combusted, only to realize that the impact was
ultimately fairly small.
About Google Instant (Google)
Brand Update — August 2010
Although not a traditional algorithm
update, Google started allowing the same domain to appear multiple times on a
SERP. Previously, domains were limited to 1-2 listings, or 1 listing with
indented results.
Caffeine (Rollout) — June 2010
After months of testing, Google
finished rolling out the Caffeine infrastructure. Caffeine not only boosted
Google's raw speed, but integrated crawling and indexation much more tightly,
resulting in (according to Google) a 50% fresher index.
Our new search index: Caffeine (Google)
May Day — May 2010
In late April and early May,
webmasters noticed significant drops in their long-tail traffic. Matt Cutts
later confirmed that May Day was an algorithm change impacting the long-tail.
Sites with large-scale thin content seemed to be hit especially hard,
foreshadowing the Panda update.
Video: Google's Matt Cutts On May Day Update (SERoundtable)
Google Places — April 2010
Although "Places" pages
were rolled out in September of 2009, they were originally only a part of
Google Maps. The official launch of Google Places re-branded the Local Business
Center, integrated Places pages more closely with local search results, and
added a number of features, including new local advertising options.
Introducing Google Places (Google)
2009 Updates
Real-time Search — December 2009
This time, real-time search was for
real- Twitter feeds, Google News, newly indexed content, and a number of other
sources were integrated into a real-time feed on some SERPs. Sources continued
to expand over time, including social media.
Caffeine (Preview) — August 2009
Google released a preview of a
massive infrastructure change, designed to speed crawling, expand the index,
and integrate indexation and ranking in nearly real-time. The timeline spanned
months, with the final rollout starting in the US in early 2010 and lasting
until the summer.
Rel-canonical Tag — February 2009
Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo jointly
announced support for the Canonical Tag, allowing webmasters to send
canonicalization signals to search bots without impacting human visitors.
Learn about the Canonical Link Element in 5 minutes (MattCutts.com)
Vince — February 2009
SEOs reported a major update that
seemed to strongly favor big brands. Matt Cutts called Vince a "minor
change", but others felt it had profound, long-term implications.
Big
Brands - Google Brand Promotion: New Search Engine Rankings Place Heavy
Emphasis on Branding (SEO
Book)
2008 Updates
Google Suggest — August 2008
In a major change to their
logo-and-a-box home-page Google introduced Suggest, displaying suggested
searches in a dropdown below the search box as visitors typed their queries.
Suggest would later go on to power Google Instant.
Dewey — April 2008
A large-scale shuffle seemed to occur
at the end of March and into early April, but the specifics were unclear. Some
suspected Google was pushing its own internal properties, including Google
Books, but the evidence of that was limited.
Google's Cutts Asking for Feedback on March/April '08 Update (SERoundtable)
2007 Updates
Buffy — June 2007
In honor of Vanessa Fox leaving
Google, the "Buffy" update was christened. No one was quite sure what
happened, and Matt Cutts suggested that Buffy was just an accumulation of
smaller changes.
Google "Buffy" Update - June Google.com Update (SERoundtable)
SMX Seattle wrap-up (MattCutts.com)
Universal Search — May 2007
While not your typical algorithm
update, Google integrated traditional search results with News, Video, Images,
Local, and other verticals, dramatically changing their format. The old
10-listing SERP was officially dead. Long live the old 10-listing SERP.
2006 Updates
False Alarm — December 2006
There were stirrings about an update
in December, along with some reports of major ranking changes in November, but
Google reported no major changes.
Google
Update Debunked By Matt Cutts (SERoundtable)
Supplemental Update — November 2006
Throughout 2006, Google seemed to
make changes to the supplemental index and how filtered pages were treated.
They claimed in late 2006 that supplemental was not a penalty (even if it
sometimes felt that way).
Confusion Over Google's Supplemental Index (SERoundtable)
2005 Updates
Big Daddy — December 2005
Technically, Big Daddy was an
infrastructure update (like the more recent "Caffeine"), and it
rolled out over a few months, wrapping up in March of 2006. Big Daddy changed
the way Google handled URL canonicalization, redirects (301/302) and other
technical issues.
Indexing timeline (MattCutts.com)
Jagger — October 2005
Google released a series of updates,
mostly targeted at low-quality links, including reciprocal links, link farms,
and paid links. Jagger rolled out in at least 3 stages, from roughly September
to November of 2005, with the greatest impact occurring in October.
A Review Of The Jagger 2 Update (SERoundtable)
Google Local/Maps — October 2005
After launching the Local Business
Center in March 2005 and encouraging businesses to update their information,
Google merged its Maps data into the LBC, in a move that would eventually drive
a number of changes in local SEO.
Gilligan — September 2005
Also called the "False"
update ? webmasters saw changes (probably ongoing), but Google claimed no major
algorithm update occurred. Matt Cutts wrote a blog post explaining that Google
updated (at the time) index data daily but Toolbar PR and some other metrics
only once every 3 months.
What?s
an update? (MattCutts.com)
Personalized Search — June 2005
Unlike previous attempts at
personalization, which required custom settings and profiles, the 2005 roll-out
of personalized search tapped directly into users? search histories to
automatically adjust results. Although the impact was small at first, Google
would go on to use search history for many applications.
Search gets personal (Google)
XML Sitemaps — June 2005
Google allowed webmasters to submit
XML sitemaps via Webmaster Tools, bypassing traditional HTML sitemaps, and
giving SEOs direct (albeit minor) influence over crawling and indexation.
Bourbon — May 2005
"GoogleGuy" (likely Matt
Cutts) announced that Google was rolling out "something like 3.5 changes
in search quality." No one was sure what 0.5 of a change was, but
Webmaster World members speculated that Bourbon changed how duplicate content
and non-canonical (www vs. non-www) URLs were treated.
Google Update "Bourbon" (Batelle Media)
Bourbon Update Survival Kit (SERoundtable)
Allegra — February 2005
Webmasters witnessed ranking changes,
but the specifics of the update were unclear. Some thought Allegra affected the
"sandbox" while others believed that LSI had been tweaked.
Additionally, some speculated that Google was beginning to penalize suspicious
links.
Nofollow — January 2005
To combat spam and control outbound
link quality, Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft collectively introduce the
"nofollow" attribute. Nofollow helps clean up unvouched for links,
including spammy blog comments. While not a traditional algorithm update, this
change gradually has a significant impact on the link graph.
2004 Updates
Google IPO — August 2004
Although obviously not an algorithm
update, a major event in Google's history - Google sold 19M shares, raised
$1.67B in capital, and set their market value at over $20B. By January 2005,
Google share prices more than doubled.
Brandy — February 2004
Google rolled out a variety of
changes, including a massive index expansion, Latent Semantic Indexing (LSI),
increased attention to anchor text relevance, and the concept of link
"neighborhoods." LSI expanded Google's ability to understand synonyms
and took keyword analysis to the next level.
Google's Brandy Update Exposed (WebProNews)
How To Beat Google's "Brandy" Update (SitePoint)
Austin — January 2004
What Florida missed, Austin came in
to clean up. Google continued to crack-down on deceptive on-page tactics,
including invisible text and META-tag stuffing. Some speculated that Google put
the "Hilltop" algorithm into play and began to take page relevance
seriously.
Google Update Austin: Google Update Florida Again (Search-Marketing.info)
2003 Updates
Florida — November 2003
This was the update that put updates
(and probably the SEO industry) on the map. Many sites lost ranking, and
business owners were furious. Florida sounded the death knell for low-value
late 90s SEO tactics, like keyword stuffing, and made the game a whole lot more
interesting.
Supplemental Index — September 2003
In order to index more documents
without sacrificing performance, Google split off some results into the
"supplemental" index. The perils of having results go supplemental
became a hotly debated SEO topic, until the index was later reintegrated.
Fritz — July 2003
The monthly "Google Dance"
finally came to an end with the "Fritz" update. Instead of completely
overhauling the index on a roughly monthly basis, Google switched to an
incremental approach. The index was now changing daily.
Explaining algorithm updates and data refreshes (Matt
Cutts)
Esmerelda — June 2003
This marked the last of the regular
monthly Google updates, as a more continuous update process began to emerge.
The "Google Dance" was replaced with "Everflux". Esmerelda
probably heralded some major infrastructure changes at Google.
Google Update Esmeralda (Kuro5hin)
Dominic — May 2003
While many changes were observed in
May, the exact nature of Dominic was unclear. Google bots "Freshbot"
and "Deepcrawler" scoured the web, and many sites reported bounces.
The way Google counted or reported backlinks seemed to change dramatically.
Cassandra — April 2003
Google cracked down on some basic
link-quality issues, such as massive linking from co-owned domains. Cassandra
also came down hard on hidden text and hidden links.
Google - Update "Cassandra" is here (Econsultancy)
Boston — February 2003
Announced at SES Boston, this was the
first named Google update. Originally, Google aimed at a major monthly update,
so the first few updates were a combination of algorithm changes and major
index refreshes (the so-called "Google Dance"). As updates became
more frequent, the monthly idea quickly died.
2002 Updates
1st Documented Update — September
2002
Before "Boston" (the first
named update), there was a major shuffle in the Fall of 2002. The details are
unclear, but this appeared to be more than the monthly Google Dance and
PageRank update. As one webmaster said of Google: "they move the toilet
mid stream".
Dancing The Google Dance (Level343)
2000 Updates
Google Toolbar — December 2000
Guaranteeing SEO arguments for years
to come, Google launched their browser toolbar, and with it, Toolbar PageRank
(TBPR). As soon as webmasters started watching TBPR, the Google Dance began.
Google Launches The Google Toolbar (Google)
Source with courtsy URL: http://www.seomoz.org/google-algorithm-change#view-all
gud news for SEOs...
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