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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mobilegeddon
Mobilegeddon
Mobilegeddon is a name for Google's search engine algorithm update of April 21, 2015.[1] The term was coined by Chuck Price in a post written for Search Engine Watch on March 9, 2015. The term was then adopted by webmasters and web-developers.
The main effect of this update was to give priority to websites that display well on smartphones and other mobile devices. The change did not affect searches made from a desktop computer or a laptop.[2]
Google announced its intention to make the change in February 2015.[3] In addition to their announcement, Google published an article, "Mobile Friendly Sites," on their Google Developers page to help webmasters with the transition.[4] Google claims the transition to mobile-friendly sites was to improve user experience, stating "the desktop version of a site might be difficult to view and use on a mobile device."[4]
The protologism is a blend word of "mobile" and "Armageddon" because the change "could cause massive disruption to page rankings."[5] But, writing for Forbes, Robert Hof says that concerns about the change were "overblown" in part because "Google is providing a test to see if sites look good on smartphones"..[6]
Search engine results pages on smartphones now show URLs in "breadcrumb" format, as opposed to the previous explicit format.[7]
Impact
Based on their data set, software company Searchmetrics found that the average loss of rankings for the non-mobile friendly sites measured was 0.21 positions on average.[8] Content marketing company BrightEdge has tracked over 20,000 URLs since the update, and is reporting a 21% decrease in non mobile-friendly URLs on the first 3 pages of search results.[9] According to Peter J. Meyers it was "nothing to write home about."[10]
See also
References
- "7 Days After Mobilegeddon: How Far Did the Sky Fall?". Moz. Retrieved 2018-11-08.
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