Yesterday Google once again, rocked the SEO world with its announcement that all author images would be removed from search results. To those not in the SEO world this might seem like a minor aesthetic change, but, to anyone well versed in online marketing knows the value of the author image. This change can have a devastating effect on many sites cutting their CTR down exponentially leaving them with only a small fraction of their previous traffic.
There are many possibilities surrounding this move by Google including the question as to whether it is a UX decision or a decision related to the AdWords ads that now occupy the top spots in Googles search. The reality is that Google is a company like any other, and the primary interest is the bottom line. The reality is that we might never know exactly what Google was thinking, leaving us only with the question as to where to go from here. For many sites recouping the traffic lost through this seemingly minor move will be a long process and require a lot of revenue and time.
As a free service Google makes money off ppc advertisements that it places strategically in on its search pages and on other sites via Adsense, if it's clicks drop due to the advantage of a free service, like Google Authorship, then eliminating the advantage would seem like a natural solution.
Another school of thought suggests that the internet giant has implemented the change solely for the purpose of removing the unfair advantage an image gives search results over their ads. In recent years PPC ads have taken over much of the prime space in Google search, and if they aren't being clicked on then the bottom line will be affecte.
It remains to be seen what else changes in the coming weeks. This comes only a little bit after the announcement of a Google "Panda" SEO adjustment, including the exclusion of backlinks factoring into search ranks.
The official reason given me the internet giant was that the change was simply due to their new policy dubbed 'Mobile First'. The vision behind this new thought process comes from the belief that mobile users will surpass desktop users this year, and the companies aim is to create one unified site that caters to all platforms. That, coupled with a recent study that showed users preferred no images in their searches was the stated reason.
There are many possibilities surrounding this move by Google including the question as to whether it is a UX decision or a decision related to the AdWords ads that now occupy the top spots in Googles search. The reality is that Google is a company like any other, and the primary interest is the bottom line. The reality is that we might never know exactly what Google was thinking, leaving us only with the question as to where to go from here. For many sites recouping the traffic lost through this seemingly minor move will be a long process and require a lot of revenue and time.
As a free service Google makes money off ppc advertisements that it places strategically in on its search pages and on other sites via Adsense, if it's clicks drop due to the advantage of a free service, like Google Authorship, then eliminating the advantage would seem like a natural solution.
Another school of thought suggests that the internet giant has implemented the change solely for the purpose of removing the unfair advantage an image gives search results over their ads. In recent years PPC ads have taken over much of the prime space in Google search, and if they aren't being clicked on then the bottom line will be affecte.
It remains to be seen what else changes in the coming weeks. This comes only a little bit after the announcement of a Google "Panda" SEO adjustment, including the exclusion of backlinks factoring into search ranks.
The official reason given me the internet giant was that the change was simply due to their new policy dubbed 'Mobile First'. The vision behind this new thought process comes from the belief that mobile users will surpass desktop users this year, and the companies aim is to create one unified site that caters to all platforms. That, coupled with a recent study that showed users preferred no images in their searches was the stated reason.
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