Thursday, August 30, 2012

Difference between Google panda and Google Penguin


SEO marketers would have surely loved to receive a heads up regarding the fine details of the Google Panda and Google Penguin updates. The now infamous search engine updates that caused several brands to lose visibility, and forced even more to make dramatic changes to their search engine optimization strategy.

Matt Cutts, one of the top software engineers at Google, actually warned the public about some of the changes in an interview. Cutt’s friendly heads up involved two main issues regarding search:
  1. Over optimization will start to negatively affect rankings.
  2. The quality of content will soon be more of a focal point when determining rankings.
In Cutt’s own words, Google is attempting to “level the playing field” by essentially giving both SEO marketers with great optimization skills and great content an equal opportunity to increase their visibility in the SERPs (Search Engine Result Pages). The mission is all about enhancing the efficiency of the so-called “GoogleBot”, the company’s software that crawls the web and indexes pages, and in turn, create a more relevant and useful experience for the internet searcher. As a result, those who go overboard with their SEO will start to be penalized, while those who improve in the quality department will be rewarded.

Google Panda
Google dropped the bomb that was the Panda update in February of 2011. As you probably know, Google Panda had some complex components to it, but its primary objectives were simple – penalize sites with lower quality content and in the process, return sites with high quality content to the top of the results where they belong.

Google Penguin
Google launched the Penguin update in April 2012. This focused more on tackling spam and penalizing sites that didn’t follow Google’s quality guidelines. Google Penguin also looks to tackling Black hat SEO techniques that many sites use to increase their search engine ranking. This includes techniques like;
  • Keyword/keyphrases stuffing within content.
  • Comment spamming by including links using the same anchor text.
  • Links from article directories and directory listings.
  • Having excessive/unnatural internal links.
  • Too many external links pointing to your site that use the exact same anchor text.
  • Excessive links from low quality sites.

Google’s initiative to level the playing field is just another step in the road to making quality more important than quantity. It may take SEO marketers some getting used to, but those who want to keep benefiting from search traffic will embrace the Google Panda and Google Penguin updates and do what it takes to keep their rankings intact.

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