With the end of 2011 in sight, I thought it would be a nice time to reflect on the good old days. Remember the good old days? Back then, men were Real Men, women were Real Women, and SERPs were Real SERPs. Good, decent, God-fearing SERPs had 10 listings β no more, no less. You could count them on your calloused fingers after a hard dayβs work, and you knew that all was right with the world.
Then Google got fancy, like some city boy wearing $100 pants and a man-purse. Now, decent folk everywhere are subjected to images, news, videos, and coffee shop listings, when all they want is a good, old-fashioned link. Worse yet, you canβt even count on a SERP to add up to 10. No sir, I donβt like it.
Itβs getting harder and harder for SEOs to count rankings the old-fashioned way. While we need to let go of rankings as our only metric, being able to count a SERP reliably and consistently is still an important SEO task, and it seems to be getting tougher every day. Iβd like to give a few examples of SERPs that donβt add up to 10, and discuss how to cope with Googleβs new math.
Sadly, even the children arenβt safe from Googleβs new math. Hereβs a Google SERP for βMuppetsβ (logged out and with the βpws=0β depersonalization parameter added):
Letβs say we had never seen a vertical search result before, and we just counted them the old-fashioned way. These numbers are in red. If we skipped the βTop Referencesβ section (since the headline isnβt linked), weβd end up with 13 results for this SERP.
Of course, you and I know that vertical SERPs are different, so weβd be smart enough to skip Showtimes, Videos, Images, and News, right? That count is in orange, and we’d end up with β hold on β only 8 results. So, whatβs missing? Well, it looks like the video results do count β even though Google owns YouTube, those are still external links. Using the green counting method, we end up with 10 results, as expected.
These results were depersonalized β what if I add in personalization, and with it, social signals? Surely my friends will save me from this counting conundrum! Sadly, they only add to the mess. On a search for βmuppetsβ while logged in, I get an extra listing:
Although the logged-in SERP varies a bit from the example above, the social listing is an add-on. Even by our SEO-savvy green counting method, itβs #11. Fortunately, you can currently tell these apart by the β…shared thisβ indicator at the bottom, but expect social results to evolve dramatically over the next year. When counting your SERPs, trust no one.
But wait, it gets weirder. Letβs look at a SERP for good, old-fashioned pizza pie. This one is also depersonalized, but itβs localized to Vero Beach, FL (I discovered this one by accident, based on the location of one of my hosting companies):
Just for comparison, letβs count them the old-fashioned way (in red). If we lump in everything, we get 16 results. Obviously, weβre smarter than that, so weβll cut out the Images and News results. That count (in orange) is 14, still 4 over our sacred 10.
The savvy SEOs among you will immediately recognize that the top results have addresses next to them β these are integrated Places results (a 7-pack, in this case). Problem solved, right? Letβs remove those Places results and, sure enough, we get (in green) β wait a minute β 7? Thatβs right, this page has 7 organic results.
Hold on: 2 of those Places results have Google Maps addresses and not their own URLs. Those must not be βrealβ results. Subtract those 2 from the orange count and we get β tada! β 12. Ok, wait a minute, Iβve got it now. Dominoβs and Pizza Hut both have mini site-links β they must actually be organic results. Add those back into the green count, and weβre up to β crap β 9.
This counting thing isnβt turning out to be so easy after all. If we canβt tell which listings are technically βorganicβ (not Places or vertical) by looking at them, maybe the source code can help us. There are markers in the code, but theyβre tough to tease apart. The most telling markers are currently as follows:
(1)Β The
Wrapper
Each listingβs link is wrapped in an
tag, but that header doesnβt seem to distinguish between Places and organic results. Even expanded site-links are wrapped in this
tag, so it seems to be purely a design convention.
(2)Β The βcd=β Parameter
(2)Β The βcd=β Parameter
In each listingβs Google cache link, thereβs a parameter called βcd=β which counts up with the listings (cd=1, cd=2, etc.). At first glance, βcd=β isnβt very reliable, because it seems to tag vertical categories on the left-hand navigation as well (βImagesβ, βMapsβ, βVideosβ, etc.).
In the example above, though, something interesting happens. The first 3 listings are tagged with cd=1, cd=2, cd=3, but then the next listing to get tagged is the Wikipedia entry, with cd=8. The rest of the listing each have a cd= parameter. This suggests that only the top 3 Places listings (in this example) are being counted the same as regular organic results. Finally, 3 + 7 = 10.
Sorry, but it probably wonβt. Google has been experimenting mad-scientist style with the SERPs in 2011, and I only expect that to continue. Weβve got little choice but to adapt and do our best to keep metrics consistent. Itβs entirely likely Google could even apply the βinfinite scrollβ approach used in Google Images to organic listings, killing SERP pagination as we know it.
While itβs fun to dig into the inner workings, the reality is that we need to take a broader view and stop relying only on rankings. Rankings will become tougher to measure and personalization is only going to get more aggressive. If you arenβt already training your clients to look at their organic traffic, unique keywords, organic conversion, and deeper metrics, itβs time to get started.