Google: Page-Level & Site-Wide Signals Both Matter For Rankings via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google updates search documentation to clarify how both page-level and site-wide signals influence ranking in search results.

  • Google’s ranking systems evaluate content primarily at the page level, but site-wide signals also matter.
  • Good site-wide signals won’t guarantee high rankings for all pages, and poor site-wide signals won’t doom all pages.
  • This documentation update clarifies existing practices rather than introducing new ranking factors.
Google Clarifies Site Reputation Abuse Policy via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google has issued new clarification for its site reputation abuse policy, first launched earlier this year, which targets “parasite SEO” practices where websites leverage established domains to manipulate search rankings through third-party content.

Chris Nelson from the Google Search Quality team states:

“We’ve heard very clearly from users that site reputation abuse – commonly referred to as ‘parasite SEO’ – leads to a bad search experience for people, and today’s policy update helps to crack down on this behavior.”

Policy Clarification

The updated policy states that using third-party content to exploit a site’s ranking signals violates Google’s guidelines, regardless of first-party involvement or oversight.

This clarification comes after Google’s review of various business arrangements, including white-label services, licensing agreements, and partial ownership structures.

The updated policy language states:

“Site reputation abuse is the practice of publishing third-party pages on a site in an attempt to abuse search rankings by taking advantage of the host site’s ranking signals.”

Policy Details

What’s A Violation?

Google outlines several examples of policy violations, including:

  • Educational sites hosting third-party payday loan reviews
  • Medical sites publishing unrelated content about casino reviews
  • Movie review sites featuring content about social media services
  • Sports websites hosting third-party supplement reviews without editorial oversight
  • News sites publishing coupon content from third parties without proper involvement

What’s Not A Violation?

Google acknowledges there’s a difference between abusive practices and legitimate third-party content.

Acceptable examples include:

  • Wire service and syndicated news content
  • User-generated content on forum websites
  • Editorial content with close host site involvement
  • Properly disclosed advertorial content
  • Standard advertising units and affiliate links

Background

Enforcement of the site reputation abuse policy began in May.

The rollout is having a notable impact in the news and publishing industry, as documented by Olga Zarr.

Major organizations including CNN, USA Today, and LA Times were among the first to receive manual penalties, primarily for hosting third-party coupon and promotional content.

Glenn Gabe shared early observations:

The recovery process has shown clear patterns: sites that removed offending content or implemented noindex tags on affected sections have started seeing their manual actions lifted. However, ranking recovery takes time as Google’s crawlers need to process these changes.

Looking Ahead

While enforcement relies on manual actions, Google has indicated plans for algorithmic updates to automate the detection and demotion of site reputation abuse, though no specific timeline has been announced.

Site owners found in violation will receive notifications through Search Console and can submit reconsideration requests.


Featured Image: JarTee/Shutterstock

Google Rolls Out AI-Powered In-Store Shopping Tools via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google announced new features for in-store shopping and expanded payment options, marking changes to its retail technology offerings.

Key Updates

Google Lens

Google Lens, which reportedly processes 20 billion searches monthly, will enable users to photograph products in stores to find price comparisons and reviews.

The system uses Google’s product database of over 45 billion listings and its Gemini AI models.

Google announcement states:

“This new update is made possible by major advancements in our AI image recognition technology. It’s powered by the Shopping Graph’s 45 billion+ product listings, in-stock inventory data from a range of retailers and our Gemini models to bring you an entirely new way to shop in-store.”

Internal research cited by the company suggests that 72% of Americans use smartphones while shopping in physical stores.

The feature will initially be launched for beauty products, toys, and electronics at participating retailers in the United States.

Users must opt into location sharing through the Google app on Android or iOS to access the functionality.

In a related development, Google Maps will incorporate product search capabilities, allowing users to locate specific items at nearby stores.

Security Measures

Google also announced plans to test new fraud detection services for merchants.

The system aims to identify fraudulent transactions better while reducing false positives that may block legitimate purchases.

Google explains:

“We’re always working to protect consumers and businesses from fraud, which is forecasted to grow substantially in the coming years. Soon we’ll begin piloting a service to help merchants better identify fraudulent transactions and help prevent fraudsters from using stolen financial information. This will also help unblock good transactions that may be mistaken as fraud.”

Looking Ahead

The announcements come as retailers prepare for increased holiday shopping activity.

According to company statements, the features are expected to roll out gradually over the coming weeks.

The timing coincides with broader industry efforts to integrate AI technology into retail experiences while addressing growing concerns about payment security.

What is search intent and why is it important for SEO?

SEO is a way to get more traffic to your website. By ranking high on Google, you attract more people to your site, which leads to more sales and returning visitors. You must optimize your content for the right words to get people to your site. However, you should consider search intent to increase your chances of ranking, convincing people to buy your stuff, subscribing to your newsletter, or even returning to your website. In this post, we’ll tell you what search intent is and how you can optimize your content for search intent.

Table of contents

What is search intent?

Search intent (or user intent, audience intent) is the term used to describe the purpose of an online search. It’s the reason why someone conducts a specific search. After all, everyone who does an online search hopes to find something. But is someone looking for an answer to a question they have? Are they looking to visit a specific website? Or are they searching online because they want to buy something? Many of these types of searches are part of the user journey online, but often they represent different stages.

Over the years, Google has worked hard to improve its algorithm to determine people’s search intent. Google wants to rank pages that best fit the search term someone is using and the search intent behind the search query. That’s why you need to make sure that your post or page fits your audience’s search intent.

Four main types of search intent

There are a few distinct types of search intent. We’ll go into the four most commonly used ones, but we’ll start with an infographic describing the four types in short:

There are four main types of search intent

1. Navigational intent

The first type of search intent is called navigational intent. People with this intent want to visit a specific website. For example, people searching for [Facebook] online are usually on their way to the website. So, you want to make sure that your website can be found when someone searches for your company’s name online.

an example of a navigational search, in this case for yoast
Google’s search results for the term [Yoast]

Remember that ranking high for a navigational term is mainly beneficial if your site is what people are looking for. Years ago, we had a Google Analytics plugin that ranked well for the term [Google Analytics]. But that didn’t drive any traffic to our site. People searching for [Google Analytics] specifically were looking for the Google Analytics website and were often not interested in our plugin.

2. Informational intent

On to informational intent. People looking for information do lots of searches on the internet. This could be information about the weather, educating children, SEO, you name it. People with informational intent have a specific question or want to know more about a topic.

an example of an informational search for the term tomato sauce in google
Google’s search results for the term [omato sauce]

You should know that Google understands intent beyond simply showing results that give information about a specific term. It knows, for instance, that people looking for [tomato sauce] are most likely looking for recipes, not for the sauce’s culinary history. It understands that most people typing in [Mercury] are looking for the planet, not the element. Google even understands it’s handy to include videos and images for search terms, like [how to build a bird feeder].

3. Commercial investigation

Some people intend to buy in the (near) future and use the web to research. What washing machine would be best? Which WordPress SEO plugin is the most helpful? These people also have transactional intent but need more time and convincing. These types of search intents are usually called commercial investigating intents.

google results with more commercial information about washing machines
Google’s search results for the term [best washing machines 2024]

4. Transactional intent

The fourth type of search intent is transactional intent. Many people buy stuff online and browse the web to find the best purchase. People are searching with transactional intent when they intend to buy something at that moment. That means that they already know exactly what they want to buy and want to get to that product page immediately.

google search result for an ikea lamp showing places to buy
Google’s search results for the term [IKEA PS 2014]

Keyword intent

People’s words in their search queries give us insight into user intent. This also works the other way around. By formulating keywords with intent-specific words, you can increase your chances of being seen by people with matching search intent.

What do we mean by intent-specific words? Well, keywords with transactional intent will often contain words like:

  • buy
  • deal
  • discount
  • product names

To give another example, informational searches can (but don’t necessarily have to) contain words like:

  • information
  • how to
  • best way to
  • why

How to optimize your content for search intent

Why are we telling you this? Because you want to ensure that a landing page fits your audience’s search intent. If people are looking for information, you don’t want to show them a product page. At least, not immediately. You’ll scare them away. But if someone wants to buy your product and lands on one of your lengthier blog posts, you might lose them. In this case, you want to lead them to your shop and the right product page.

Optimizing your product pages for commercially driven keywords is a good idea. For instance, if you sell dog vitamins, you could optimize a product (category) page for the search term [buy dog vitamins]. Perhaps you also have an article about administering vitamins. You could optimize that article for the search term [how to give vitamins to my dog] and aim it at people with informational intent.

Research your audience’s search intent

Sometimes, it can be quite hard to determine the search intent of a query. And perhaps different users that use the same search term will have a (slightly) different user intent. Luckily, there is a direct source to look at to know which intent fits your keywords best: the search results pages. Find out how you can use the results pages to create intent-based content.

If you want to know more about your audience’s search intent, another way is to ask them. Create a short survey containing questions about what people are searching for, and make that survey pop up when people visit your website. That’ll give you valuable insights into your audience and their intent. Please don’t be too intrusive with these kinds of pop-ups, as this can hurt the user experience on your website.

Search intent in Yoast SEO with Semrush

Aiming your content with the right intent is important, but it becomes even more important for ecommerce content. Here’s how to apply this with a focus on ecommerce.

Start by identifying the intent behind your main keyword. In ecommerce, this often revolves around transactional or commercial investigation intents. If users are ready to buy (“transactional”), your content should guide them toward purchasing. If they’re still researching (“commercial investigation”), provide comparisons, reviews, or detailed product information.

Look for related keyphrases that match these intents. Use tools like the Semrush integration in Yoast SEO to find variations that potential customers might use. For a keyword like “buy running shoes online,” related phrases could include “discount running shoes,” “running shoes with free shipping,” or “best price running shoes.”

In the Yoast SEO Related Keyphrases interface, the different intents will be color-coded using Semrush’s system:

  • C (yellow): Commercial intent
  • N (purple): Navigational intent
  • I (blue): Informational intent
  • T (green): Transactional intent

Examine search results for the keyphrases you’ve found to see what ecommerce sites are doing. Pay attention to product pages, reviews, and comparison guides that rank well. This helps you understand what customers expect and how you can differentiate your offerings.

Incorporate these keyphrases naturally into your product descriptions, category pages, and blog posts. Make sure the content answers potential buyer questions and highlights unique selling points. Include clear calls to action to drive purchases, especially for transactional intent.

If you focus well on search intent, you can create content that improves SEO and enhances the shopping experience. Ultimately, you want higher conversions and better customer satisfaction.

the interface for yoast seo's related keyphrases tool with search intent insights by semrush
Yoast SEO shows search intent insights powered by Semrush

Conclusion on search intent for SEO

It’s crucial to ensure that your content fits the terms people are searching for and your audience’s search intent. Ensure your post or page is informational when people seek information. Be the first result when someone searches for your company name. Provide content that helps people make an informed decision while still investigating their options. But lead people to your sales pages if they want to buy one of your products.

Read more: Keyword research: the ultimate guide »

Coming up next!

Demand Intelligence: Empower Your Strategies With Actionable Data via @sejournal, @alexanderkesler

In the context of B2B marketing, demand intelligence is a consolidation of data from various sources filtered through an actionable lens to provide critical insights.

This data can be utilized to anticipate client demand and implement targeted strategies to engage key stakeholders.

Simply put, demand intelligence enables marketing and sales teams to identify who is interested, why they are interested, and their likelihood to convert. Obtaining this data, however, can be challenging.

In this article, I will share best practices for sourcing, analyzing, and applying demand intelligence to maximize your return on investment (ROI).

The Importance Of Collecting Actionable Data And Leveraging It Effectively

The cost of missed opportunities due to outdated or incomplete data can quickly reach millions. Consider the time and resources invested in campaigns that target obsolete leads or contacts with limited information.

With prospect data averaging a lifespan of just nine months – often due to frequent job and title changes – relying on old data is a waste of both time and effort.

Only 16% of the marketers interviewed for our own 2024 market research utilize advanced buyer and account intelligence to inform their sales and marketing strategies.

This reveals a significant opportunity to leverage data to pinpoint the right accounts and personas – those who are truly qualified for your solutions – for more effective outreach.

To drive demand performance, sales and marketing teams need up-to-date, actionable data that accurately reflects the buyer’s behavior and preferences in their purchase journey.

Without this insight, nurture campaigns will fail to hit the mark, leaving prospects to disappear from your sales funnel entirely and, often, cause them to switch to a competitor.

What Is Actionable Data?

Consider actionable data as real-time insights that reveal prospect intent, behavior, and preferences, while also supporting predictive analytics.

This type of data provides valuable takeaways about prospects, helping you identify their pain points and tailor your outreach effectively.

With accurate and timely information, you can craft messaging that resonates with current prospect challenges and drive engagement for your solutions.

Sources of demand intelligence include:

  • Technographic data: Identifying prospect technologies to uncover opportunities for increasing your tech wallet share.
  • Engagement data: Insights from website interactions, blog activity, social media, and email communications.
  • Buyer personas and key account profiles: Detailed profiles of existing target audiences, decision-makers, and key accounts.
  • Buyer intent data: Behavioral cues, such as frequent searches or downloads related to specific solutions, indicating a readiness to purchase or, at least, buyer interest in your solutions.
  • Analysis of successful conversions: Examining the behaviors and patterns of successful conversions to inform future demand intelligence.
  • Average deal size and revenue: The average deal size can act as a benchmark for future sales opportunities.
  • Client lifetime value (CLTV): Client success teams can identify the common characteristics of prospects that generate the highest long-term revenue.

The key is to unify these diverse data sources into an intelligent demand system – one that reveals where engagement is happening in the funnel and via which channel, in order to predict where it is likely to occur in the future.

This approach holds immense potential for organizations to fuel precise and timely engagement strategies that drive meaningful results – because they can engage the appropriate buyers with the most relevant messaging at the optimal time.

How To Collect Demand Intelligence Data

Building your proprietary database enables you to track market behaviors and trends, and develop strategies to address them effectively.

The best sources of information for your database include:

  • First-party data: Information collected directly from your channels, including your website, social media, events, and customer relationship management (CRM) analytics.
  • Data partners: Verified data partners can provide access to valuable first-party intent, behavioral, and technographic data.
  • Client-facing teams: Insights from your sales, marketing, and client success teams offer valuable first-hand perspectives on existing clients.
  • Community engagement: Utilize social listening and sentiment analysis tools to understand what clients say online and gather insights from reviews.
  • Surveys and feedback: Directly ask clients about their needs and pain points to inform your outreach and refine your solutions.

Enhance these insights by analyzing industry benchmarks and competitor reports that align with your target audience. If your budget permits, consider investing in the expertise of external specialists.

Combining these resources will help you develop a comprehensive demand intelligence profile.

How To Build A Framework For Collecting, Analyzing, And Applying Demand Intelligence

Below is a three-step framework to develop your demand intelligence strategy:

1. Build A Database Primed For Demand Intelligence

Your first step in leveraging demand intelligence as a growth driver is to gather insights from across your organization and create a secure, centralized dataset in a tool like your CRM or data warehouse.

The goal is to establish a unified view of your prospect and account data that can be easily accessed by your client-facing teams.

Focus on essential campaign-driving information like pain points and intent data, which can be tested to refine your demand intelligence.

Intent signals can be a valuable addition because they help marketers understand prospect behavior to enable the tailoring of services more precisely to buyer needs.

Before testing your dataset, you will need to perform some housekeeping:

  • Leverage automated data cleansing software or AI to identify duplicates and errors.
  • Set up filters and criteria to highlight actionable factors, such as budget range and buying group size.
  • Enrich your data with synthetic, or stand-in data, where necessary.
  • Ensure your data practices comply with regional privacy laws like GDPR and CCPA.

2. Launch, Analyze, And Adjust

Launch a short-term campaign to test your first dataset and validate your existing demand intelligence sources, filters, and criteria. For example, this can be in the form of an awareness campaign via email and social media.

You will need to set up processes to ensure data flows into your analytics, not only to measure the results but to enable continuous assessment and improve the quality of your demand intelligence.

This can be done by:

  • Gating content with forms.
  • Creating UTM tracking links.
  • Using heatmaps to measure website engagement.
  • Sending email touches through your CRM.

Once your test campaign is complete, analyze the results to refine your data further. It is also worth adopting processes to gain feedback directly from your audience, such as through surveys or sales team outreach.

Focus on KPIs and metrics that will help the organization achieve its GTM and growth goals, such as:

  • Conversion rate.
  • Engagement metrics such as downloads, click-through rates, web traffic, bounce rate, and social engagement.
  • Buying group engagement on an account level.
  • Opportunities generated.
  • Sales or demo bookings.
  • Satisfaction scores (NPS, CSAT).

3. Continuous Optimization

Once you have your campaign results, translate them into actionable insights to inform ongoing marketing and sales strategies.

Processes that can be adopted for this purpose include:

  • Keyword and topic analysis: Identify the themes and discussions that generate the most interest among your prospects.
  • Engagement timing and frequency: Track engagement to understand interaction patterns and plan strategies accordingly.
  • Buyer’s journey assessment: Analyze the buyer’s journey and evaluate how prospect behavior aligns with it. Consider potential areas for improvement.
  • Effective content touchpoints: Identify which touchpoints are most effective in driving discussions among decision-makers in buying groups.

Adjust your strategy with targeted changes to your messaging and UVP, tracking the impact to refine further. It is better to make select, strategic changes that can then be monitored to assess performance.

Three areas of improvement to prioritize are:

  • Maintaining an updated database: Regularly assess the quality of your data and its relevance to your organizational goals to ensure it remains current and useful.
  • Refining buyer intelligence collection: Continuously improve your data collection methods based on insights gained, feedback received, and any changes in your objectives or technology.
  • Fostering organizational alignment: Share and align data across teams to promote collaboration and innovation within the organization.

Done well, demand campaigns have immense potential to amplify an organization’s bottom line. The goal of demand intelligence is to optimize strategies to better engage, nurture, and convert buyers – no matter where they are in their journey.

Businesses focusing on demand generation are better equipped to navigate the complexities of the evolving B2B landscape and drive sustained revenue growth.

Key Takeaways

  • Prioritize first-party data: Actionable data from owned channels and partners will help you to better understand and anticipate client demand.
  • Gain feedback from client-facing teams: Unique and timely client insights can be sourced from your own teams to guide your demand strategies.
  • Build a clean database: Focus on essential campaign-driving insights, such as client pain points, intent, and account information, while avoiding unactionable data points to not bloat your database.
  • Test, analyze, repeat: Continuously update your database to reflect evolving audience needs and the value of your demand intelligence.

More resources:


Featured Image: Viktoria Kurpas/Shutterstock

Yoast x Semrush: Keyword difficulty and intent straight in your Yoast SEO

Take your content strategy to the next level with expanded Semrush insights in the Yoast SEO plugin! Simplify your SEO process and focus on what matters the most: crafting and optimizing content that resonates and ranks. The Yoast Semrush integration means all Yoast SEO users can access keyword intent, and keyword difficulty and track and analyze up to four keywords. All powered by Semrush—seamlessly integrated into Yoast’s focus keyphrase section.

Keyword difficulty and intent:

Make your keyword choices smarter with data-driven insights:

  • Keyword difficulty shows how challenging it is to rank for a specific keyword, helping you focus on keywords that are within reach and maximize your chances of ranking.
  • Keyword intent, or search intent, reveals whether users searching for a keyword are looking for information, products, or services. This gives you the context to create content that genuinely connects with their needs.

These insights empower you to shape content that ranks and resonates—right from Yoast SEO’s analysis section.

Terms can sometimes be overwhelming, so the Yoast team prepared a comprehensive glossary with all the SEO terms you need to build and implement an SEO strategy successfully. 

Get started

Click “Get related keyphrases” below the focus keyphrase box to get started. If you haven’t activated your Yoast Semrush integrations, you will be redirected to the Semrush login page. Afterward, you will instantly see keyword insights in the related keyphrases section. This makes adapting your content strategy seamless, allowing you to make quick, data-driven adjustments as you write.

Get started in simple steps:

  1. Click “Get related keyphrases” below the focus keyphrase box.
    •  If you haven’t activated your Yoast Semrush integrations, you will be redirected to the Semrush login page.
  2.  You will instantly see keyword insights in the related keyphrases section.

This makes adapting your content strategy seamless, allowing you to make quick, data-driven adjustments as you write. To learn more about activating your integrations within Yoast SEO, visit our help center.

About Yoast Semrush integration

Expanded Semrush insights are available at no additional cost to all users with a Semrush account. Just update your plugin and enjoy the data you need to rank higher, right next to your keywords—effortless, real-time SEO insights, all within Yoast!

Integrate your Semrush account into your Yoast SEO and boost your ranking with valuable data within the plugin. Directly bringing comprehensive keyword research tools to your fingertips without switching platforms. Learn more about the Yoast Semrush integration.

Coming up next!

7 Things To Look For In An SEO-Friendly WordPress Host

This post was sponsored by Bluehost. The opinions expressed in this article are the sponsor’s own.

When trying to improve your WordPress site’s search rankings, hosting might not be the first thing on your mind.

But your choice of hosting provider can significantly impact your SEO efforts.

A poor hosting setup can slow down your site, compromise its stability and security, and drain valuable time and resources.

The answer? Choosing the right WordPress hosting provider.

Here are seven essential features to look for in an SEO-friendly WordPress host that will help you:

1. Reliable Uptime & Speed for Consistent Performance

A website’s uptime and speed can significantly influence your site’s rankings and the success of your SEO strategies.

Users don’t like sites that suffer from significant downtime or sluggish load speeds. Not only are these sites inconvenient, but they also reflect negatively on the brand and their products and services, making them appear less trustworthy and of lower quality.

For these reasons, Google values websites that load quickly and reliably. So, if your site suffers from significant downtime or sluggish load times, it can negatively affect your site’s position in search results as well as frustrate users.

Reliable hosting with minimal downtime and fast server response times helps ensure that both users and search engines can access your content seamlessly.

Performance-focused infrastructure, optimized for fast server responses, is essential for delivering a smooth and engaging user experience.

When evaluating hosting providers, look for high uptime guarantees through a robust Service Level Agreement (SLA), which assures site availability and speed.

Bluehost Cloud, for instance, offers a 100% SLA for uptime, response time, and resolution time.

Built specifically with WordPress users in mind, Bluehost Cloud leverages an infrastructure optimized to deliver the speed and reliability that WordPress sites require, enhancing both SEO performance and user satisfaction. This guarantee provides you with peace of mind.

Your site will remain accessible and perform optimally around the clock, and you’ll spend less time troubleshooting and dealing with your host’s support team trying to get your site back online.

2. Data Center Locations & CDN Options For Global Reach

Fast load times are crucial not only for providing a better user experience but also for reducing bounce rates and boosting SEO rankings.

Since Google prioritizes websites that load quickly for users everywhere, having data centers in multiple locations and Content Delivery Network (CDN) integration is essential for WordPress sites with a global audience.

To ensure your site loads quickly for all users, no matter where they are, choose a WordPress host with a distributed network of data centers and CDN support. Consider whether it offers CDN options and data center locations that align with your audience’s geographic distribution

This setup allows your content to reach users swiftly across different regions, enhancing both user satisfaction and search engine performance.

Bluehost Cloud integrates with a CDN to accelerate content delivery across the globe. This means that whether your visitors are in North America, Europe, or Asia, they’ll experience faster load times.

By leveraging global data centers and a CDN, Bluehost Cloud ensures your site’s SEO remains strong, delivering a consistent experience for users around the world.

3. Built-In Security Features To Protect From SEO-Damaging Attacks

Security is essential for your brand, your SEO, and overall site health.

Websites that experience security breaches, malware, or frequent hacking attempts can be penalized by search engines, potentially suffering from ranking drops or even removal from search indexes.

Therefore, it’s critical to select a host that offers strong built-in security features to safeguard your website and its SEO performance.

When evaluating hosting providers, look for options that include additional security features.

Bluehost Cloud, for example, offers comprehensive security features designed to protect WordPress sites, including free SSL certificates to encrypt data, automated daily backups, and regular malware scans.

These features help maintain a secure environment, preventing security issues from impacting your potential customers, your site’s SEO, and ultimately, your bottom line.

With Bluehost Cloud, your site’s visitors, data, and search engine rankings remain secure, providing you with peace of mind and a safe foundation for SEO success.

4. Optimized Database & File Management For Fast Site Performance

A poorly managed database can slow down site performance, which affects load times and visitor experience. Therefore, efficient data handling and optimized file management are essential for fast site performance.

Choose a host with advanced database and file management tools, as well as caching solutions that enhance site speed. Bluehost Cloud supports WordPress sites with advanced database optimization, ensuring quick, efficient data handling even as your site grows.

With features like server-level caching and optimized databases, Bluehost Cloud is built to handle WordPress’ unique requirements, enabling your site to perform smoothly without additional plugins or manual adjustments.

Bluehost Cloud contributes to a better user experience and a stronger SEO foundation by keeping your WordPress site fast and efficient.

5. SEO-Friendly, Scalable Bandwidth For Growing Sites

As your site’s popularity grows, so does its bandwidth requirements. Scalable or unmetered bandwidth is vital to handle traffic spikes without slowing down your site and impacting your SERP performance.

High-growth websites, in particular, benefit from hosting providers that offer flexible bandwidth options, ensuring consistent speed and availability even during peak traffic.

To avoid disaster, select a hosting provider that offers scalable or unmetered bandwidth as part of their package. Bluehost Cloud’s unmetered bandwidth, for instance, is designed to accommodate high-traffic sites without affecting load times or user experience.

This ensures that your site remains responsive and accessible during high-traffic periods, supporting your growth and helping you maintain your SEO rankings.

For websites anticipating growth, unmetered bandwidth with Bluehost Cloud provides a reliable, flexible solution to ensure long-term performance.

6. WordPress-Specific Support & SEO Optimization Tools

WordPress has unique needs when it comes to SEO, making specialized hosting support essential.

Hosts that cater specifically to WordPress provide an added advantage by offering tools and configurations such as staging environments and one-click installations specifically for WordPress.

WordPress-specific hosting providers also have an entire team of knowledgeable support and technical experts who can help you significantly improve your WordPress site’s performance.

Bluehost Cloud is a WordPress-focused hosting solution that offers priority, 24/7 support from WordPress experts, ensuring any issue you encounter is dealt with effectively.

Additionally, Bluehost’s staging environments enable you to test changes and updates before going live, reducing the risk of SEO-impacting errors.

Switching to Bluehost is easy, affordable, and stress-free, too.

Bluehost offers a seamless migration service designed to make switching hosts simple and stress-free. Our dedicated migration support team handles the entire transfer process, ensuring your WordPress site’s content, settings, and configurations are moved safely and accurately.

Currently, Bluehost also covers all migration costs, so you can make the switch with zero out-of-pocket expenses. We’ll credit the remaining cost of your existing contract, making the transition financially advantageous.

You can actually save money or even gain credit by switching

7. Integrated Domain & Site Management For Simplified SEO Administration

SEO often involves managing domain settings, redirects, DNS configurations, and SSL updates, which can become complicated without centralized management.

An integrated hosting provider that allows you to manage your domain and hosting in one place simplifies these SEO tasks and makes it easier to maintain a strong SEO foundation.

When selecting a host, look for providers that integrate domain management with hosting. Bluehost offers a streamlined experience, allowing you to manage both domains and hosting from a single dashboard.

SEO-related site administration becomes more manageable, and you can focus on the things you do best: growth and optimization.

Find A SEO-Friendly WordPress Host

Choosing an SEO-friendly WordPress host can have a significant impact on your website’s search engine performance, user experience, and long-term growth.

By focusing on uptime, global data distribution, robust security, optimized database management, scalable bandwidth, WordPress-specific support, and integrated domain management, you create a solid foundation that supports both SEO and usability.

Ready to make the switch?

As a trusted WordPress partner with over 20 years of experience, Bluehost offers a hosting solution designed to meet the unique demands of WordPress sites big and small.

Our dedicated migration support team handles every detail of your transfer, ensuring your site’s content, settings, and configurations are moved accurately and securely.

Plus, we offer eligible customers a credit toward their remaining contracts, making the transition to Bluehost not only seamless but also cost-effective.

Learn how Bluehost Cloud can elevate your WordPress site. Visit us today to get started.


Image Credits

Featured Image: Image by Bluehost. Used with permission.

In-Post Image: Images by Bluehost. Used with permission.

The rise of Bluesky, and the splintering of social

You may have read that it was a big week for Bluesky

If you’re not familiar, Bluesky is, essentially, a Twitter clone that publishes short-form status updates. It gained more than 2 million users this week. On Wednesday, The Verge reported it had crossed 15 million users. By Thursday, it was at 16 million. By Friday? 17 million and counting. It was the number one app in Apple’s app store. 

Meanwhile, Threads, Meta’s answer to Twitter, put up even bigger numbers. The company’s Adam Mosseri reported that 15 million people had signed up in November alone. Both apps are surging in usage. 

Many of these new users were seemingly fleeing X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. On the day after the election, more than 115,000 people deactivated their X accounts, according to Similarweb data. That’s a step far past not logging on. It means giving up your username and social graph. It’s nuking your account versus just ignoring it. 

Much of that migration is likely a reaction to Elon Musk’s support of Donald Trump, and his moves to elevate right-leaning content on the platform. Since Musk took over, X has reinstated a lot of previously banned accounts, very many of which are on the far right. It also tweaked its algorithm to make sure Musk’s own posts, which are often pro-Trump, get an extra level of promotion and prominence, according to Kate Conger and Ryan Mac’s new book Character Limit

There are two points I want to make here. The first is that tech and politics are just entirely enmeshed at this point. That’s due to the extreme extent to which tech has captured culture and the economy. Everything is a tech story now, including and especially politics. 

The second point is about what I see as a more long-term shift away from centralization. What’s more interesting to me than people fleeing a service because they don’t like its politics is the emergence of unique experiences and cultures across all three of these services, as well as other, smaller competitors.

Last year, we put “Twitter killers” on our list of 10 breakthrough technologies. But the breakthrough technology wasn’t the rise of one service or the decline of another. It was decentralization. At the time, I wrote: 

“Decentralized, or federated, social media allows for communication across independently hosted servers or platforms, using networking protocols such as ActivityPub, AT Protocol, or Nostr. It offers more granular moderation, more security against the whims of a corporate master or government censor, and the opportunity to control your social graph. It’s even possible to move from one server to another and follow the same people.”

In the long run, massive, centralized social networks will prove to be an aberration. We are going to use different networks for different things. 

For example, Bluesky is great for breaking news because it does not deprioritize links and defaults to a social graph that shows updates from the people you follow in chronological order. (It also has a Discover feed and you can set up others for algorithmic discovery—more on that in a moment—but the default is the classic Twitter-esque timeline.) 

Threads, which has a more algorithmically defined experience, is great for surfacing interesting conversations from the past few days. I routinely find interesting comments and posts from two or three days before I logged on. At the same time, this makes it pretty lousy at any kind of real time experience—seemingly intentionally—and essentially hides that standard timeline of updates from people you follow in favor of an algorithmically-generated “for you” feed. 

I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that while these are quite different, neither is inherently better. They offer distinct takes on product direction. And that ability to offer different experiences is a good thing. 

I think this is one area where Bluesky has a real advantage. Bluesky lets people bend the experience to their own will. You aren’t locked into the default following and discover experiences. You can roll your own custom feed, and follow custom feeds created by other people. (And Threads is now testing something similar.) That customization means my experience on Bluesky may look nothing like yours. 

This is possible because Bluesky is a service running on top of the AT Protocol, an open protocol that’s accessible to anyone and everyone. The entire idea is that social networking is too important for any one company or person to control it. So it is set up to allow anyone to run their own network using that protocol. And that’s going to lead to a wide range of outcomes. 

Take moderation, as an example. The moderation philosophy of the AT Protocol is essentially that everyone is entitled to speech but not to reach. That means it isn’t banning content at the protocol level, but that individual services can set up their own rules. 

Bluesky has its own community guidelines. But those guidelines would not necessarily apply to other services running on the protocol. Furthermore, individuals can also moderate what types of posts they want to see. It lets people set up and choose different levels of what they want to allow. That, combined with the ability to roll your own feeds, combined with the ability of different services to run on top of the same protocol, sets up a very fragmented future. 

And that’s just Bluesky. There’s also Nostr, which leans toward the crypto and tech crowds, at least for now. And Mastodon, which tends to have clusters of communities on various servers. All of them are growing. 

The era of the centralized, canonical feed is coming to an end. What’s coming next is going to be more dispersed, more fractured, more specialized. It will take place across these decentralized services, and also WhatsApp channels, Discord servers, and other smaller slices of Big Social. That’s going to be challenging. It will cause entirely new problems. But it’s also an incredible opportunity for individuals to take more control of their own experiences.

If someone forwarded you this edition of The Debrief, you can subscribe here. I appreciate your feedback on this newsletter. Drop me a line at mat.honan@technologyreview.com with any and all thoughts. And of course, I love tips.

Now read the rest of The Debrief

The News

TSMC halts advanced chip shipments for Chinese clients. It comes after some of its chips were found inside a Huawei AI processor.

Google DeepMind has come up with a new way to peer inside AI’s thought process.

An AI lab out of Chicago is building tools to help creators prevent their work from being used in training data.

Lina Khan may be on the way out, but she’s going out with a bang: The FTC is preparing to investigate Microsoft’s cloud business.

The Chat

Every week I’ll talk to one of MIT Technology Review’s reporters or editors to find out more about what they’ve been working on. For today, I spoke with Casey Crownhart, senior climate reporter, about her coverage of the COP29 UN climate conference.

Mat: COP29 is happening right now in Azerbaijan, do you have a sense of the mood?

Casey: The vibes are weird in Baku this week, in part because of the US election. The US has been a strong leader in international climate talks in recent years, and an incoming Trump administration will certainly mean a big change.

And the main goal of these talks—reaching a climate finance agreement—is a little daunting. Developing countries need something like $1 trillion dollars annually to cope with climate change. That’s a huge jump from the current target, so there are questions about how this agreement will shake out.

Mat: Azerbaijan seems like a weird choice to host. I read one account from the conference saying you could smell the oil in the air. Why there?

Casey: Azerbaijan’s economy is super reliant on fossil fuels, which definitely makes it an ironic spot for international climate negotiations.

There’s a whole complicated process of picking the COP host each year—five regions rotate hosting, and the countries in that region have to all agree on a pick when it’s their turn. Russia apparently vetoed most of the other choices in the Eastern European group this year, and the region settled on Azerbaijan as one of the only viable options.

Mat: You write that if Trump pulls out of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, it would be like riding away on a rocket. Why would that be so much worse than dropping out of Paris?

Casey: Trump withdrew from the Paris Agreement once already, and it was relatively easy for Biden to rejoin when he came into office. If, during his second term, Trump were to go a step further and pull out of the UNFCCC, it’s not just an agreement he’s walking away from, it’s the whole negotiating framework. So the statement would be much bigger.

There’s also the question of reversibility. It’s not clear if Trump can actually withdraw from the UNFCCC on his own, and it’s also not clear what it would take to rejoin it. When the US joined in the ’90s, the Senate had to agree, so getting back in might not be as simple as a future president signing something.

Mat: What from COP29 are you optimistic about?

Casey: Tough to find a glimmer of hope in all this, but if there is one, I’d say I’m optimistic that we’ll see some countries step up, including the UK and China. The UK announced a new emissions target at the talks already, and it’ll be really interesting to see what role China plays at COP29 and moving forward.

The Recommendation

Once upon a time I was a gadget blogger. It’s fun writing about gadgets! I miss it! Especially because at some point your phone became the only device you need. But! My beloved wife bought me a Whoop fitness tracker for my birthday. It’s an always-on device that you wear around your wrist. I’ve been Oura-curious for some time, but frankly I am a little bit terrified of rings. I spent a number of months going to a hand rehab clinic after a bike accident, and while I was there first learned about degloving and how commonly it happens to people because a ring gets caught on something. Just thought I’d put that in your head too. Anyway! The whoop is a fabric bracelet with a little monitor on it. It tracks your movement, your heart rate, your sleep, and a lot more. There’s no screen, so it’s very low profile and unobtrusive. It is, however, pretty spendy: The device is free but the plan costs $239 annually.

The Download: Bluesky’s rapid rise, and harmful fertility stereotypes

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.

The rise of Bluesky, and the splintering of social

You may have read that it was a big week for Bluesky. If you’re not familiar, Bluesky is, essentially, a Twitter clone that publishes short-form status updates. Last Wednesday, The Verge reported it had crossed 15 million users. It’s just ticked over 19 million now, and is the number one app in Apple’s app store.

Meanwhile, Threads, Meta’s answer to Twitter, reportedly signed up 15 million people in November alone. Both apps are surging in usage.

Many of these new users were seemingly fleeing X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, in reaction to Elon Musk’s support of Donald Trump, and his moves to elevate right-leaning content on the platform. But there’s a deeper trend at play here. We’re seeing a long-term shift away from massive centralized social networks. Read the full story

—Mat Honan

This story is from The Debrief, our newly-launched newsletter written by our editor-in-chief Mat Honan. It’s his weekly take on the real stories behind the biggest news in tech—with some links to stories we love and the occasional recommendation thrown in for good measure. Sign up to get it every Friday!

Why the term “women of childbearing age” is problematic

—Jessica Hamzelou

Every journalist has favorite topics. Mine include the quest to delay or reverse human aging, and new technologies for reproductive health and fertility. So when I saw trailers for The Substance, a film centered on one middle-aged woman’s attempt to reexperience youth, I had to watch it.

I won’t spoil the movie for anyone who hasn’t seen it yet (although I should warn that it is not for the squeamish). But a key premise of the film involves harmful attitudes toward female aging. 

“Hey, did you know that a woman’s fertility starts to decrease by the age of 25?” a powerful male character asks early in the film. “At 50, it just stops,” he later adds. He never explains what stops, exactly, but to the viewer the message is pretty clear: If you’re a woman, your worth is tied to your fertility. Once your fertile window is over, so are you. 

The insidious idea that women’s bodies are, above all else, vessels for growing children has plenty of negative consequences for us all. But it also sets back scientific research and health policy. Read Jess’s story to learn how

This story is from The Checkup, MIT Technology Review’s weekly biotech newsletter.  Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Thursday.

The must-reads

I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 Trump plans to loosen US rules for self-driving cars 
No prizes for guessing who might be behind that idea. (Bloomberg $)
Elon Musk is ramping up his legal fight against OpenAI and Microsoft. (WSJ $)
Trump has appointed the FCC’s Brendan Carr to lead the agency. (NPR)
Robotaxis are here. It’s time to decide what to do about them. (MIT Technology Review)

2 How Bluesky is handling its explosive growth
It has just 20 employees, and they’re working round the clock to deal with bugs, outages and moderation issues. (NYT $)
+ Just joined Bluesky? Here’s how to use it. (The Verge)
How to fix the internet. (MIT Technology Review)

 3 Biden agreed to some small but significant AI limits with Xi Jinping 
I think we can all get behind the idea that nuclear weapons should be exclusively controlled by humans. (Politico)
Biden has lifted a ban on Ukraine using long-raise missiles to strike inside Russia. (BBC)

4 Big Tech is trying to sink the US online child safety bill 
And, as it stands, its lobbying efforts look very likely to succeed. (WSJ $)

5 Amazon has launched a rival to Temu and Shein 
Nothing on ‘Haul’ costs more than $20. (BBC)
+ Welcome to the slop era of online shopping. (The Atlantic $)

6 The Mike Tyson-Jake Paul fight on Netflix was plagued by glitches
Despite that, 60 million households still tuned in. (Deadline)

7 AI models can work together faster in their own language 
Linking different models together could help tackle thorny problems individual ones can’t solve. (New Scientist $)

8 Tech companies are training their AI on movie subtitles 
A database called OpenSubtitles provides a rare glimpse into what goes into these systems. (The Atlantic $)

9 McDonald’s is trying to bring back NFTs
Remember those? (Gizmodo)

10 A lot of people are confusing Starlink satellites with UFOs
Guess it’ll take us a while for us to get used to seeing them. (Ars Technica)

Quote of the day

“F*** you, Elon Musk.”

—Brazil’s first lady, Janja Lula da Silva, makes her views clear during a speech calling for tougher social media regulation ahead of the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro, Reuters reports.

 The big story

Alina Chan tweeted life into the idea that the virus came from a lab

Alina Chan

COURTESY PHOTO

June 2021

Alina Chan started asking questions in March 2020. She was chatting with friends on Facebook about the virus then spreading out of China. She thought it was strange that no one had found any infected animal. She wondered why no one was admitting another possibility, which to her seemed very obvious: the outbreak might have been due to a lab accident.

Chan is a postdoc in a gene therapy lab at the Broad Institute, a prestigious research institute affiliated with both Harvard and MIT. Throughout 2020, Chan relentlessly stoked scientific argument, and wasn’t afraid to pit her brain against the best virologists in the world. Her persistence even helped change some researchers’ minds. Read the full story.

—Antonio Regalado

We can still have nice things

A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet ’em at me.)

+ Why Quincy Jones was the best of the best.
+ These handy apps are a great way to save articles to read later on (Pocket is my own personal favorite.)
+ How to resurrect a ghost river in the Bronx.
+ Look after your stainless steel pans, and your stainless steel pans will look after you.

9 Books to Strengthen Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity threats are nonstop. This curated selection of recent books offers perspectives from cybersecurity experts, covering everything from the psychology of cyber attackers to practical defense strategies.

Understand the Cyber Attacker Mindset

Cover of Understand the Cyber Attacker Mindset

Understand the Cyber Attacker Mindset

by Sarah Armstrong-Smith

Armstrong-Smith is Microsoft’s chief security advisor and a sought-after speaker. In this book, she bridges the gap between technology and psychology by focusing on the human aspects of cybersecurity, including the types of attackers and their motivations and methods. The author draws on interviews with ex-criminals, the advice of top experts, and a wide range of case studies to demonstrate why the human element in cybersecurity is more important than ever.

The AI Revolution in Networking, Cybersecurity, and Emerging Technologies

Cover of The AI Revolution in Networking, Cybersecurity, and Emerging Technologies

The AI Revolution

by Omar Santos, Samer Salam, and Hazim Dashir

Artificial intelligence is affecting seemingly every aspect of business, and cybersecurity is no exception. The authors, all executives at Cisco, provide an overview of how AI can help identify and resolve network security threats, explaining both its theory and application. They offer a comprehensive guide to guarding against potential security and privacy pitfalls, security monitoring and alerting, and modernizing and fortifying operations.

Hacking and Security

Cover of Hacking and Security

Hacking and Security

by Michael Kofler, Klaus Gebeshuber, Frank Neugeberger, and others

A team of German experts explains essential security techniques for various infrastructures, including Linux, Microsoft, mobile, cloud, and the internet of things. The book covers identifying system vulnerabilities and possible attack vectors and offers step-by-step instructions for withstanding security attacks.

Practical Cybersecurity

Cover of Practical Cybersecurity

Practical Cybersecurity

by Nicholas Marsh

With a focus on practical strategies and real-world examples, Marsh draws on his experience in small, medium, and large enterprises in multiple industries. The book addresses practices, policies, and products that can help increase network security and reduce risks, explaining both the “why” and the “how” of more than 250 cybersecurity best practices.

Cybersecurity Myths and Misconceptions

Cover of Cybersecurity Myths and Misconceptions

Cybersecurity Myths and Misconceptions

by Eugene Spafford, Leigh Metcalf, and Josiah Dykstra

Three leading cybersecurity experts go beyond common tactics to demystify false ideas and faulty assumptions that can undermine security efforts. The book offers tips for recognizing and avoiding 175 frequent misconceptions shared by users, leaders, and cybersecurity professionals.

Cybersecurity All-in-One For Dummies

Cover of Cybersecurity All-in-One For Dummies

Cybersecurity All-in-One For Dummies

by Joseph Steinberg, Kevin Beaver, Ira Winkler, and Ted Coombs

Steinberg, a top global cybersecurity influencer, combines into one volume six “For Dummies” books: “Grasping Cybersecurity Basics,” “Enhancing Personal Cybersecurity,” “Safeguarding a Business,” “Securing the Cloud,” “Testing Your Security,” and “Enhancing Cybersecurity Awareness.” The result is a one-stop reference for smart security decisions.

Firewalls Don’t Stop Dragons, 5th ed.

Cover of Firewalls Don’t Stop Dragons, 5th ed.

Firewalls Don’t Stop Dragons, 5th ed.

by Carey Parker

Writing with minimal jargon for laypeople, Parker offers simple, effective precautions everyone should take in the virtual world. The book offers straightforward explanations, with a checklist in each chapter of expert tips, step-by-step instructions, and screenshots.

Managing Risks in Digital Transformation

Cover of Managing Risks in Digital Transformation

Managing Risks in Digital Transformation

by Ashish Kumar, Shashank Kumar, and Abbas Kudrati

Practical examples, case studies, and eye-opening stats highlight digital threats that could affect a business’s reputation and bottom line. Focusing on new and emerging risks, the book offers tips for navigating the ever-evolving risk and compliance landscape. It provides a roadmap of the risk mitigation process for business owners, technology leaders, and cybersecurity professionals.

Hacked

Cover of Hacked

Hacked

by Jessica Barker

Barker, a top cyber security advisor to the U.K. government, explains the tactics and technologies hackers use and offers common-sense solutions to safeguard yourself and your business in a world where everyone is a potential cyber-attack victim. The book includes commentary from experts and stories of real-world attacks, showing how to safeguard and respond if you’ve been targeted.