Google Hummingbird

Google’s Newest Little Friend: Hummingbird

We now all know Hummingbird affected 90% of searches worldwide. In this article we discuss some of its effects.

Google’s newest friend the Hummingbird, is the latest “big thing” from Google. It was introduced in late September. What was most striking about the announcement was not the fact that there is a new algorithm, but that it has been live for at least 30 days, with no prior announcement.

In fact, after a lot of activity in the search signals about a month ago everyone was speculating that either a Penguin or (rolling) Panda update had run.  When asked about it at the time, Google said they had nothing to report and nothing was up.  Guess they just weren’t ready to introduce their newest little friend.

So what exactly is Hummingbird?

For starters, Hummingbird affected 90% of searches worldwide. To put things in perspective, Penguin only impacted about 3% of searches. Hummingbird isn’t designed to weed out spammy sites, and though the number of searches impacted was large; the falling out was minor.

Unlike Panda and Penguin, Google’s Hummingbird is not a filter, it’s an algorithm. This particular algorithm focuses on artificial intelligence, (AI) and how data is accessed and presented to users.

Google’s Amit Singhal said, “With more complex queries, the algorithm can better understand concepts vs. words as well as relationships between concepts.”

Google’s Hummingbird is focused on natural language processing. SEO is no longer about using phrases on your site in hopes of ranking for those precise phrases. It is about providing quality content that is organized around a theme and that answers questions and offers valuable information to your site visitors.

Hummingbird Is New and Different

This statement has inevitably caused confusion and questions.  I think the best way I can explain it is to say: Google is now better at understanding the theme and topic of your site when they crawl your content. They are now paying attention to the meaning behind a query, rather than just a few words within the query.  This is a rare good move by Google! It actually opens things up to deliver you more traffic. You see, once Google understands the theme of your site, the potential traffic is almost limitless.  Searchers also benefit from this change, since the goal is to deliver results that offer the info the searcher actually needs and not just a page that happens to have a precise phrase on it.

Tip: think about the questions your site visitors may have, think about their problems and think about the solutions you offer and make sure your content clearly conveys all of this.

In conjunction with the introduction of Hummingbird, other changes have been happening at Google. You’ve probably heard the recent talk about Google no longer providing keyword data in Analytics or Webmaster Tools.  So, while there is a definite move away from keywords, it is still a good idea to know what language your potential customers will use to search for you and implement it naturally within your site. 

According to Danny Sullivan, Hummingbird continues to rely on link analysis as one of 200 “ingredients” that Google uses to rank sites.  He also claims that Panda and Penguin will continue to run as filters and these filters will very likely continue as components of Hummingbird.

What Does All Of This Mean For You?

Content creation and optimization continues to be as important as ever and the focus on quality is more important than ever.  In addition to that, here are some other important tips:

  • Build authority links naturally (create a strong Social strategy to spread your content)
  • Offer solutions to your site visitors and make sure your content clearly and concisely conveys the information
  • Optimize for mobile
  • Be active in Social
  • Focus on semantic analysis when doing keyword research
  • Understand that “context” is now a part of the equation, meaning Google will do the best they can to determine the full meaning of the query and the intent behind it. In addition to analyzing the words, they will use any other data they can – typically local info, personalization info and device and platform info.  User intent is going to matter more than pure keyword matching.
  • Authorship and Structured Data are going to be more important going forward.  Authorship because it connects you to your content and Structured Data because it’s a good way to feed specific details to the crawler.

Conclusion

This has been the most volatile couple years in the history of the engines, in my opinion. Arguably, even more so than the old days of the Google Dance. The best thing you can do is actively create and work a content strategy and stay informed.

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6 Responses

  1. Jennifer, this is an outstanding article. In the coming months and years I think people will look back at this and say “wow, she really hit the nail on the head.” All over the internet we have seen “content is king” for years; however, for the most part, links have been king. Hummingbird and its future iterations actually may be the first approach taken by Google that truly makes content the king over the long-term. I applaud Google for this as I think it will drive traffic to websites that actually generate unique, informative, and user-focused content. I wholeheartedly agree that we should all focus on our content and our content strategies.

    Do you have any advice on what content strategies you think will be the most successful moving forward?

    1. I think the impact is less Shalin, because it’s not designed to weed out spam or get rid of sites. It’s designed to better understand what the intent of the searcher is and deliver better results. Does that make sense?

  2. This is one of the best articles that I’ve seen so far about this topic. Good job. One thing that I’ve seen others say that I think is wrong, is that Hummingbird is just a minor change. Well, it completely changes the way searches are performed, so, how is that minor?

    Nice job.

    Josh

    1. Josh,

      This change has long term implications but in terms of people actually seeing and noticing a change in traffic to their site because of this, that has been less in comparison to Panda/Penguin. It’s also not designed to weed out sites so again that means less noticeable changes for site owners. As they continue to expand their capabilities in natural language processing, we’ll see more and more changes. Thanks for the kind words about my article.

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We now all know Hummingbird affected 90% of searches worldwide. In this article we discuss some of its effects.

WHAT’S NEXT?

SUPPORT OUR AUTHOR AND SHARE
Interested in Guest Posting?
Read our guest posting guidelines.

6 Responses

  1. Jennifer, this is an outstanding article. In the coming months and years I think people will look back at this and say “wow, she really hit the nail on the head.” All over the internet we have seen “content is king” for years; however, for the most part, links have been king. Hummingbird and its future iterations actually may be the first approach taken by Google that truly makes content the king over the long-term. I applaud Google for this as I think it will drive traffic to websites that actually generate unique, informative, and user-focused content. I wholeheartedly agree that we should all focus on our content and our content strategies.

    Do you have any advice on what content strategies you think will be the most successful moving forward?

    1. I think the impact is less Shalin, because it’s not designed to weed out spam or get rid of sites. It’s designed to better understand what the intent of the searcher is and deliver better results. Does that make sense?

  2. This is one of the best articles that I’ve seen so far about this topic. Good job. One thing that I’ve seen others say that I think is wrong, is that Hummingbird is just a minor change. Well, it completely changes the way searches are performed, so, how is that minor?

    Nice job.

    Josh

    1. Josh,

      This change has long term implications but in terms of people actually seeing and noticing a change in traffic to their site because of this, that has been less in comparison to Panda/Penguin. It’s also not designed to weed out sites so again that means less noticeable changes for site owners. As they continue to expand their capabilities in natural language processing, we’ll see more and more changes. Thanks for the kind words about my article.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

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