Post by account_disabled on Jan 27, 2024 3:25:31 GMT -5
However, maybe those sites improved over the past few months since the last update. Again, it is hard to tell, “The big question is: Was this a reversal of some of the things rolled out with the August 2023 Core Update? The answer is, who the hell knows? Manually looking at both some of the keyword-level ranking trends and domain-level trends – I would anecdotally say, no (at least in terms of it being the underlying nature of the update),” Mordy Oberstein told me. RankRanger/SimilarWeb. The RankRanger/SimilarWeb team is still working on their deep dive but their SERP Seismometer shows a similar peak of volatility on the 10th of October. Shay Harel from SimilarWeb said, “our analysis is based on the massive spike we saw on the 10th.
Similarweb 1 They plotted the average position changes DB to Data for all the Core updates since December 2020 in the chart below. fluctuations for the October update, you can see that it has the lowest average position changes since November 2021. Similarweb2 This next chart looks at the top 3, top 5, and top 10 positions. You can see that the October update showed lower rank volatility than the August update in the top 3 and top 5 positions: Similarweb3 seoClarity. Mark Traphagen from seoClarity shared the seoClarity Rank Fluctuation tracker and some winners and losers charts.
Again, you can see the spike hit on October 10th: Seoclarity 1697821062 These winner and loser charts are “the biggest estimated traffic gainers in nine industries, based on a before vs after for both of the major October updates (Core and Spam),” Mark Traphagen told us. Sistrix. Steve Paine from Sistrix did its own analysis and told Search Engine Land, “Dual concurrent updates doesn’t let us do any conclusive analysis but we’ve looked at many hundreds of domains to see if certain sectors have been hit harder than others.” “It doesn’t take long to see that many established sites that lost large percentages were reference sites, Losing domains were more pronounced and more widespread than winning domains,” Paine added.
Similarweb 1 They plotted the average position changes DB to Data for all the Core updates since December 2020 in the chart below. fluctuations for the October update, you can see that it has the lowest average position changes since November 2021. Similarweb2 This next chart looks at the top 3, top 5, and top 10 positions. You can see that the October update showed lower rank volatility than the August update in the top 3 and top 5 positions: Similarweb3 seoClarity. Mark Traphagen from seoClarity shared the seoClarity Rank Fluctuation tracker and some winners and losers charts.
Again, you can see the spike hit on October 10th: Seoclarity 1697821062 These winner and loser charts are “the biggest estimated traffic gainers in nine industries, based on a before vs after for both of the major October updates (Core and Spam),” Mark Traphagen told us. Sistrix. Steve Paine from Sistrix did its own analysis and told Search Engine Land, “Dual concurrent updates doesn’t let us do any conclusive analysis but we’ve looked at many hundreds of domains to see if certain sectors have been hit harder than others.” “It doesn’t take long to see that many established sites that lost large percentages were reference sites, Losing domains were more pronounced and more widespread than winning domains,” Paine added.