How to get rid of Google Panda effect
What is Google panda?
Google panda is an innovation from Google in order to filter out
the sites which are not up to the mark and fail in the department of content
and quality. It decides which sites are qualified to be in the top position in
the search engine based entirely on content and quality. Thus,
it has resulted in removal of many sites and a drastic drop in a
number of businesses. It is a domain level penalty and thus must be taken
seriously.Panda is the official name of a Google algorithm update developed to reduce the prevalence of low-quality, thin content in the search results, and to reward unique, compelling content.
At the time Panda launched, user complaints about the increasing influence of “content farms” were growing rampant.
Google’s Panda algorithm assigns pages a quality classification, used internally and modeled after human quality ratings, that is incorporated as a ranking factor.
Websites that recover from the impact of Panda do so by revamping pages with low-quality content, adding new high-quality content, eliminating filler words and above the fold ads, and in general improving the user experience as it relates to content.
Panda is the official name of a Google algorithm update developed to reduce the prevalence of low-quality, thin content in the search results, and to reward unique, compelling content.
At the time Panda launched, user complaints about the increasing influence of “content farms” were growing rampant.
Google’s Panda algorithm assigns pages a quality classification, used internally and modeled after human quality ratings, that is incorporated as a ranking factor.
Websites that recover from the impact of Panda do so by revamping pages with low-quality content, adding new high-quality content, eliminating filler words and above the fold ads, and in general improving the user experience as it relates to content.
Why Google Created Panda
In 2010, the falling quality of Google’s search results and the rise of the “content farm” business model became a subject that was repeatedly making the rounds.
As Google’s Amit Singhal later told Wired at TED, the “Caffeine” update of late 2009, which dramatically sped up Google’s ability to index content rapidly, also introduced “some not so good” content into their index. Google’s Matt Cutts told Wired this new content issue wasn’t really a spam issue, but one of “What’s the bare minimum that I can do that’s not spam?”
In 2010, the falling quality of Google’s search results and the rise of the “content farm” business model became a subject that was repeatedly making the rounds.
As Google’s Amit Singhal later told Wired at TED, the “Caffeine” update of late 2009, which dramatically sped up Google’s ability to index content rapidly, also introduced “some not so good” content into their index. Google’s Matt Cutts told Wired this new content issue wasn’t really a spam issue, but one of “What’s the bare minimum that I can do that’s not spam?”
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