The information ranks well on Google
Posted: Wed Feb 19, 2025 8:34 am
There is a very widespread and very popular belief among people that what ranks well on Google is accurate and trustworthy. We have seen this a lot in practice over the years. For example, when people cite statistics, they often type in the keyword + statistics. They look at the number one result, find the statistics for it, cite that summary article, and select the publication.
This is all nice at first glance, but then you realize that kenya phone number data someone at some point took a statement or statistic out of context and turned it into something it never was. Unfortunately, Google doesn't always rank the correct or best answers. Google's algorithms are not able to fully determine accuracy .
Fortunately, many SEO experts are paying close attention to every piece of information Google says about SEO. Marie Hayes is one of them. Her agency documents everything Google says. Whether it's in blog posts, videos, Hangouts, forums, specific announcements, and anywhere else.
“We keep the information internally,” Haynes said. “For most SEO topics, whether they’re myths or not, we can back up our recommendations with a link that shows what Google recommends.”
Orainti founder Aleyda Solis takes a similar approach. “I link to Google’s official documentation on the topic where everything is explained, or I look for a quote from a Google representative where the topic has been addressed and is explained, along with my explanation and a ‘real life’ example.”
This is all nice at first glance, but then you realize that kenya phone number data someone at some point took a statement or statistic out of context and turned it into something it never was. Unfortunately, Google doesn't always rank the correct or best answers. Google's algorithms are not able to fully determine accuracy .
Fortunately, many SEO experts are paying close attention to every piece of information Google says about SEO. Marie Hayes is one of them. Her agency documents everything Google says. Whether it's in blog posts, videos, Hangouts, forums, specific announcements, and anywhere else.
“We keep the information internally,” Haynes said. “For most SEO topics, whether they’re myths or not, we can back up our recommendations with a link that shows what Google recommends.”
Orainti founder Aleyda Solis takes a similar approach. “I link to Google’s official documentation on the topic where everything is explained, or I look for a quote from a Google representative where the topic has been addressed and is explained, along with my explanation and a ‘real life’ example.”