Agreed — some of these results aren’t great. This is actually a difficult and long-standing technical challenge for all search engines (you can compare results on others). That’s because search engines reflect how things on the web are labeled — they rely primarily on the text surrounding the image, which doesn’t always match the content of an image as you might expect. As a more trivial example of this, look at the query “yellow dress and green socks”. We’ll continue to look for ways to improve this.
Today we celebrate the 25 years of online service of https://t.co/n1rfk6Vwva
It is not just a website, but an online home where millions worldwide connect with @Amritanandamayi Amma’s teachings, events, and humanitarian activities.
Thank you all.
The best SEOs are boring.
1. Create content that users are searching for.
2. Build (or attract) links and mentions.
3. Repeat, forever.
Do the boring stuff consistently on a long enough timeframe and you win.
Panel Discussion on “Driving Change with Compassion - Women taking the Lead” – a #C20 outreach event organized at the M.A. Center Germany, by #GenderEquality WG:
.June 4, 2023
10:30am CET - 2pm IST
Live on YouTube:
https://t.co/lDTrk1Cmrl
Some dear friends @WissamDandan & @schikowski came back 10 years later with great updates & thoughtful insights. Has SEO changed in 10 years?https://t.co/WAwuQ9DT5J Not really, but users have...
@CyrusShepard@authorityhacker This is what happens, for example, when people promise their clients a certain number of links per month. They take the easy and predictable route to getting links. The number of link exchanges surprises me though!
@scottclark@scottclark have you figured out why this happened? I would prefer two documents ranking (that's what it sounds like) over just one - even if one of the two is a PDF. I would also be tempted to wait and see whether this is a short-lived test or something more permanent.