Wix announced a new Figma Plugin that enables designers to import Figma designs directly into Wix Studio and dramatically speed up site creation from the design stage to a functioning website.
Figma Design Tool
Figma is a SaaS (software as a service) collaborative design tool that allows designers, teams and clients to prototype designs, in this case website designs.
Figma enables designers, developers and other stakeholders to create, share, and test digital designs for websites (and other digital experiences). Its collaborative features streamline the back and forth of design, feedback and decision-making.
The Wix Figma Plugin allows a designer or design agency to export those designs into Wix Studio where it can then be realized into an actual functional website.
Wix Figma Plugin
Gali Erez, Head of Product at Wix Studio Editor offered the following statement:
“We are thrilled to present the new plugin to the design community… With its innovative features and intuitive interface the plugin empowers users to craft captivating designs, and swiftly streamline the path from design to production. This efficiency enhances their design and development experience and ultimately drives conversions.”
Wix is a SaaS website builder platform that makes it easy for anyone to create attractive high performance websites for virtually any industry, from ecommerce to online services. The announcement of Figma plugin is yet another innovation that makes Wix one of the most attractive platforms for creating websites.
Figma last month updated users about the imminent rollout of the Wix plugin, which generated a lot of excitement.
Typical comments:
“Awaiting its public release, very excited.”
“So excited for this plugin to come out. I am glad it’s coming out next month it’ll change the game in web design.”
Google quietly updated their organization structured data documentation in order to clarify two points about merchant returns in response to feedback about an ambiguity in the previous version.
Organization Structured Data and Merchant Returns
Google recently expanded their Organization structured data so that it could now accommodate a merchant return policy. The change added support for adding a sitewide merchant return policy.
The original reason for adding this support:
“Adding support for Organization-level return policies
What: Added documentation on how to specify a general return policy for an Organization as a whole.
Why: This makes it easier to define and maintain general return policies for an entire site.”
However that change left unanswered about what will happen if a site has a sitewide return policy but also has a different policy for individual products.
The clarification applies for the specific scenario of when a site uses both a sitewide return policy in their structured data and another one for specific products.
What Takes Precedence?
What happens if a merchant uses both a sitewide and product return structured data? Google’s new documentation states that Google will ignore the sitewide product return policy in favor of a more granular product-level policy in the structured data.
The clarification states:
“If you choose to provide both organization-level and product-level return policy markup, Google defaults to the product-level return policy markup.”
Change Reflected Elsewhere
Google also updated the documentation to reflect the scenario of the use of two levels of merchant return policies in another section that discusses whether structured data or merchant feed data takes precedence. There is no change to the policy, merchant center data still takes precedence.
This is the old documentation:
“If you choose to use both markup and settings in Merchant Center, Google will only use the information provided in Merchant Center for any products submitted in your Merchant Center product feeds, including automated feeds.”
This is the same section but updated with additional wording:
“If you choose to use both markup (whether at the organization-level or product-level, or both) and settings in Merchant Center, Google will only use the information provided in Merchant Center for any products submitted in your Merchant Center product feeds, including automated feeds.”
Read the newly updated Organization structured data documentation:
A new report from Reddit, in collaboration with GWI and AmbassCo, sheds light on the evolving search behaviors of Generation Z consumers.
The study surveyed over 3,000 internet users across the UK, US, and Germany, highlighting significant changes in how young people discover and research products online.
Here’s an overview of key findings and the implications for marketers.
Decline In Traditional Search
The study found that Gen Z uses search engines to find new brands and products less often.
That’s because they shop online differently. They’re less interested in looking for expert reviews or spending much time searching for products.
There are also frustrations with mobile-friendliness and complex interfaces on traditional search platforms.
Because of this, traditional SEO strategies might not work well for reaching younger customers.
Takeaway
Companies trying to reach Gen Z might need to try new methods instead of just focusing on being visible on Google and other search engines.
Rise Of Social Media Discovery
Screenshot from Reddit study titled: “From search to research: How search marketers can keep up with Gen Z.”, June 2024.
The study shows that Gen Z has used social media for product discovery 36% more frequently since 2018.
This change is affecting how young people shop online. Instead of searching for products, they expect brands to appear in their social media feeds.
Screenshot from Reddit study titled: “From search to research: How search marketers can keep up with Gen Z.”, June 2024.
Because of this, companies trying to reach young customers need to pay more attention to how they present themselves on social media.
Takeaway
To succeed at marketing to Gen Z, businesses will likely need to focus on two main things:
Ensure that your content appears more often in social media feeds.
Create posts people want to share and interact with.
Trust Issues With Influencer Marketing
Even though more people are finding products through social media, the report shows that Gen Z is less likely to trust what social media influencers recommend.
These young shoppers often don’t believe in posts that influencers are paid to make or products they promote.
Instead, they prefer to get information from sources that feel more real and are driven by regular people in online communities.
Takeaway
Because of this lack of trust, companies must focus on being genuine and building trust when they try to get their websites to appear in search results or create ads.
Some good ways to connect with these young consumers might be to use content created by regular users, encourage honest product reviews, and create authentic conversations within online communities.
Challenges With Current Search Experiences
The research shows that many people are unhappy with how search engines work right now.
More than 60% of those surveyed want search results to be more trustworthy. Almost half of users don’t like looking through many search result pages.
Gen Z is particularly bothered by inaccurate information and unreliable reviews.
Screenshot from Reddit study titled: “From search to research: How search marketers can keep up with Gen Z.”, June 2024.
Takeaway
Given the frustration with search quality, marketers should prioritize creating accurate, trustworthy content.
This can help build brand credibility, leading to more direct visits.
Reddit: A Trusted Alternative
The report suggests that Gen Z trusts Reddit when looking up products—it’s their third most trusted source, after friends and family and review websites.
Screenshot from Reddit study titled: “From search to research: How search marketers can keep up with Gen Z.”, June 2024.
Young users like Reddit because it’s community-based and provides specific answers to users’ questions, making it feel more real.
It’s worth noting that this report comes from Reddit itself, which probably influenced why it’s suggesting its own platform.
Takeaway
Companies should focus more on being part of smaller, specific online groups frequented by Gen Z.
That could include Reddit or any other forum.
Why SEJ Cares
As young people change how they look for information online, this study gives businesses important clues about connecting with future customers.
Here’s what to remember:
Traditional search engine use is declining among Gen Z.
Social media is increasingly vital for product discovery.
There’s growing skepticism towards influencer marketing.
Current search experiences often fail to meet user expectations.
Community-based platforms like Reddit are gaining trust.
Google spam updates have in previously been welcomed by the search marketing community. Today’s announcement reflected the sour mood of the search marketing and publishing community that is still reeling from six months of disruptive updates and the rollout of AI Overviews which is widely regarded as a traffic-stealing feature.
It’s not an overstatement to say that the response to Google’s spam update is relentlessly negative.
Does the SPAM stand for “Small Publishers Are Meaningless” ? I miss the days when updates favored better content rather than prioritizing big players and killing content sites by calling them spam.
Google’s March 2024 Core Update, which took about 45 days to complete, devastated the rankings for many site owners. Although Google no longer has a Helpful Content system (aka HCU), many site owners and SEOs who were affected by the HCU from last year are still waiting for a new update that would hopefully “fix” what many feel was a broken update.
“@JohnMu @searchliaison can this update remove the sitewide classifier still applied to sites since last September HCU? Or do we need to wait for a larger core update?”
Another person appeared to be laughing through their tears when they tweeted a screenshot showing their web traffic was down to six organic visitors:
“Google is coming after my last 6 organic visitors🤣Bring it on! Let’s see if we get to 0.”
Google is coming after my last 6 organic visitors🤣Bring it on! Let’s see if we get to 0. pic.twitter.com/jK42jLk71K
Another person shared that they are demoralized from having lost 95% of their traffic from past updates:
“Honestly, it doesn’t matter what update you have under your sleeve. I’m uninstalling Google Site Kit from my site. Seeing constant, declining charts and figures every time I log into WordPress is demoralizing. They remind me that I’ve lost 95% of my traffic for no reason at all.”
A tweet that’s representative of the widespread sentiment that Google’s updates are broken:
“Your harmful monopoly is ruining the internet. Every one of your updates kills more independent websites while boosting spam.”
It could be that Google’s last update missed the mark. But some of those who are affected by the updates from last year could (rightly or wrongly) be suffering from a shift in how Google defines site quality or relevance. Many are hoping that Google reverses course.
Backlash Against Pinterest In SERPs
Some of the feedback was about dissatisfaction with how Google ranked websites. One person tweeted that they hoped the spam update fixed Google’s preference for ranking Pinterest:
“Does this update means that Google will start to show my website when users make a “brand search” instead of my pins on pinterest?”
Backlash About Reddit in SERPs
Another person offered feedback about the (common) perception that Google is ranking Reddit for too many queries.
That sentiment about Reddit in the SERPs was shared by many others:
“Interesting to see Google roll out a spam update! I wonder how it will affect Reddit’s ranking in search results. Personally, I haven’t found a lot of truly helpful content there, Reddit is just spamming in search result.”
Will this stop ranking the irrelevant discussions on Reddit for most technical keywords? 😂
— Madusanka Premaratne (@maduspremaratne) June 21, 2024
What About The Site Reputation Update?
Site reputation abuse is a form of spam where a digital marketer publishes content on a third party website for the purpose leveraging the site reputation for quick rankings. It’s a shortcut for avoiding having to create and promote an entirely new website.
Google SearchLiaison responded to a question of whether this spam update included the algorithmic version of the site reputation abuse update that Google announced was forthcoming. SearchLiaison responded that no, this update didn’t contain algorithmic elements for targeting site reputation abuse.
“For the third time now, I’ll say again, I have every confidence that when we’re acting on site reputation abuse algorithmically, we’ll say that. It’s not right now. I also won’t be responding to this particular question every week so maybe let it go a month between asking (I don’t mean that as harsh as it sounds just that it’s not useful or productive for me to do the “are we there yet” over and over again)”
“I mean I’d figure most wondering about this would know it’s a standard spam update given there’s no blog post, no “FYI things to know” and it’s just a regular posting to our dashboard
That said, I know people are asking Barry even though I’ve said what I just said above at least twice before. So I figured if I’m going to say it at least a third time, I’ll try again to explain why it’s not really something to ask about each week.”
No Description Of Spam Update
Changes to Google’s rankings are rarely announced except when it’s anticipated that the effects to rankings may be noticeable, which by that measure makes this update notable and significant, particularly because the update will take an entire week to roll out.
Google sometimes publishes a blog post about their spam updates but there is no accompanying article that details what this spam update is targeting, which may be a factor contributing to the anxiety expressed in some of the responses to Google’s announcement.
Google Has A Sentiment Problem
A combination of AI Overviews, Helpful Content Update from late 2023 to the recent updates dating from March are all combining to create negative sentiment in the digital marketing community. The so-called leak added to fuel to that fire. Even though the data revealed nothing that wasn’t already known, some are using it justify their long held suspicions and accusing Google of lying. And it’s not just the search marketing community, independent web publishers and big brand news organizations have soured on Google, too.
So much negative sentiment has accumulated over the past year that the spam update, which would normally be cheered, is now met with skepticism and complaints.
Read Google’s spam announcement:
Today we released the June 2024 spam update.
It may take up to 1 week to complete, and we’ll post on the Google Search Status Dashboard when the rollout is done: https://t.co/EkzeXvUZwH
— Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) June 20, 2024
A recent study by the digital marketing agency Amsive documented a notable change in Google’s search results rankings over the last year.
The study found that Google is surfacing more ecommerce websites and sites featuring user-generated content while reducing the visibility of product review and affiliate marketing sites.
Here’s a look at the findings and the implications for online businesses if the shifts continue.
Ecommerce Dominance In Search Results
The study found a marked increase in ecommerce sites appearing in top search positions for many commercial queries.
Keywords that previously returned results from product reviews and affiliate sites now predominantly feature online retailers.
For example:
“Bird feeders“: Ecommerce stores now hold all 10 top positions, replacing several product review sites from the previous year.
“Laptops“: The top 10 results now consist exclusively of ecommerce websites, with some appearing multiple times.
“Towel warmer“: Ecommerce giants like Amazon and Walmart have multiple listings, completely replacing affiliate websites in the top results.
Rise Of User-Generated Content
Alongside ecommerce sites, user-generated content (UGC) platforms have seen a significant boost in search visibility.
Reddit, Quora, and YouTube now frequently appear in top positions for various queries where they were previously absent or ranked lower.
This trend is particularly noticeable for longer queries like “toys for 2-year-old boys,” where UGC sites are more visible.
Impact On Product Review & Affiliate Sites
The shift in search rankings introduces challenges for product review and affiliate websites, as they’re now less visible for many commercial queries.
While Google hasn’t explicitly stated that product review content is considered “unhelpful,” the data suggests that recent updates have disproportionately affected these pages.
Implications For Digital Marketing Strategies
Due to these changes, product review and affiliate sites may need to reconsider their strategies to maintain visibility and traffic.
Lily Ray and Silvia Gituto, the study’s authors, suggest diversifying traffic sources through:
For ecommerce sites, this is an opportunity to gain more visibility and traffic.
They could take advantage of this shift by getting more customer reviews and user-generated content on their sites.
Product review and affiliate sites may need to change strategies.
Promoting themselves on social media, making videos, starting podcasts, and engaging in online forums could help compensate for lost Google search traffic.
Adapting to these changes, especially around user-generated content, will likely be needed for continued success.
However, when they appear, they’re more detailed than they were previously.
The study digs into which topics and industries are more likely to get an AI overview. It also looks at how the AI snippets interact with other search features like featured snippets and ads.
Here’s an overview of the findings and what they mean for your SEO efforts.
Declining Frequency Of AI Overviews
In contrast to pre-rollout figures, 8% of the examined searches now trigger an AI Overview.
This represents a 52% drop compared to January levels.
Yevheniia Khromova, the study’s author, believes this means Google is taking a more measured approach, stating:
“The sharp decrease in AI Overview presence likely reflects Google’s efforts to boost the accuracy and trustworthiness of AI-generated answers.”
Longer AI Overviews
Although the frequency of AI overviews has decreased, the ones that do appear provide more detailed information.
The average length of the text has grown by nearly 25% to around 4,342 characters.
In another notable change, AI overviews now link to fewer sources on average – usually just four links after expanding the snippet.
However, 84% still include at least one domain from that query’s top 10 organic search results.
Niche Dynamics & Ranking Factors
The chances of getting an AI overview vary across different industries.
Searches related to relationships, food and beverages, and technology were most likely to trigger AI overviews.
Sensitive areas like healthcare, legal, and news had a low rate of showing AI summaries, less than 1%.
Longer search queries with ten words were more likely to generate an AI overview, with a 19% rate indicating that AI summaries are more useful for complex information needs.
Search terms with lower search volumes and lower cost-per-click were more likely to display AI summaries.
Other Characteristics Of AI Overviews
The research reveals that 45% of AI overviews appear alongside featured snippets, often sourced from the exact domains.
Around 87% of AI overviews now coexist with ads, compared to 73% previously, a statistic that could increase competition for advertising space.
What Does This Mean?
SE Ranking’s research on AI overviews has several implications:
Reduced Risk Of Traffic Losses: Fewer searches trigger AI Overviews that directly answer queries, making organic listings less likely to be demoted or receive less traffic.
Most Impacted Niches: AI overviews appear more in relationships, food, and technology niches. Publishers in these sectors should pay closer attention to Google’s AI overview strategy.
Long-form & In-Depth Content Essential: As AI snippets become longer, companies may need to create more comprehensive content beyond what the overviews cover.
Looking Ahead
While the number of AI overviews has decreased recently, we can’t assume this trend will continue.
AI overviews will undoubtedly continue to transform over time.
It’s crucial to monitor developments closely, try different methods of dealing with them, and adjust game plans as needed.
Google has announced the rollout of the June 2024 spam update, which aims to further improve search results by targeting websites that violate Google’s spam policies.
According to a statement, the update, which began on June 20, is expected to take up to one week to roll out fully.
Today we released the June 2024 spam update.
It may take up to 1 week to complete, and we’ll post on the Google Search Status Dashboard when the rollout is done: https://t.co/EkzeXvUZwH
— Google Search Central (@googlesearchc) June 20, 2024
Background On Google’s Spam Updates & Policies
Google regularly updates its systems to reduce low-quality and spammy content from its search results.
Spam updates target websites that break Google’s rules, such as:
Automatically generating content solely to improve search rankings.
Buying or selling links to manipulate rankings.
Having thin, duplicated, or poor-quality content.
Tricking users with hidden redirects or other deceptive techniques.
Despite the March update impacting many spammy websites, some AI-generated content still managed to rank well in search results.
Analysis by Search Engine Journal’s Roger Montti notes that some AI spam sites ranked for over 217,000 queries, with more than 14,900 ranking in the top 10 search results.
The sites employed tactics such as rapid content churn, AI-generated images, and templated article structures, exploiting a loophole that allowed new content to receive an initial ranking boost.
Potential Impact On Search Results
The June spam update will likely refine Google’s spam detection capabilities further.
However, past experiences have shown that closing loopholes can inadvertently impact legitimate websites.
As with any significant update, the June spam update may result in fluctuations in search rankings for some websites.
Websites that engage in practices that violate Google’s spam policies or rely heavily on AI-generated content may see a decline in their search visibility.
On the other hand, some websites may benefit from the update, as they will face less competition from spammy websites in search results.
Looking Ahead
Google says the June 2024 spam update may take up to one week to roll out fully.
Once the rollout is complete, Google will post an update on its Search Status Dashboard, and you can assess the update’s impact on your search rankings.
Bluehost announced a partner program that’s expressly designed to support WordPress agencies and freelancers that service small-to-medium size businesses (SMBs). The program offers revenue generating opportunities in the form of commissions, exclusive discounts, priority customer service, and other benefits that will help agencies grow their client base and earn more revenue.
Focus On WordPress Websites
Bluehost is an active member of the WordPress community, which includes helping to develop the WordPress core itself by directly sponsoring six WordPress core contributors. Bluehost is well-positioned to offer agencies the products, community, service and revenue generating opportunities that align with the goals of WordPress-based development agencies and freelancers that service SMBs.
A key element of the Agency Partner Program is Bluehost Cloud, a managed WordPress hosting platform that provides a 100% uptime SLA. Bluehost managed WordPress Cloud is designed as a secure high performance solution, which makes it ideal for freelancers and agencies that depend on performant hosting.
Exclusive Benefits for Partner Agencies
Acceptance into the program grants agencies early access to Bluehost’s referral program (commissions), product discounts, learning webinars, access to priority customer support, and membership in an exclusive LinkedIn network.
According to the Bluehost announcement:
“By partnering with Bluehost, agencies can now provide their clients with the highest quality customer service, WordPress expertise and some of the most comprehensive hosting products, including Bluehost Cloud, Yoast SEO and eCommerce plug-ins.”
The Bluehost Agency Partner Program offers the resources for WordPress agencies and freelancers to level up their service offerings, generate new revenue streams, and the resources to deliver superior results for their clients. It’s a win-win partnership that may be worth looking into.
Why is Reddit growing so fast, and what does this mean for businesses and SEO professionals?
Here’s our take on it.
Why Is Reddit Growing?
Several factors, including Google prioritizing “helpful content” from discussion forums in a recent algorithm update, have likely contributed to Reddit’s improved search rankings and visibility.
A report from Business Insider indicates that more people are now finding Reddit through Google searches than by directly visiting the reddit.com website.
Mordy Oberstein, Wix’s Head of SEO, shared recent data showing a consistent increase in the share of Reddit sources appearing in Google’s Discussion and Forums SERP feature.
A week ago I anecdotally “noticed” that perhaps there is less Reddit in the Discussion & Forums SERP Feature. @type_SEO noticed the same.
Asked the folks at @semrush to pull data to see if I was crazy or not and the answer is… maybe?
“Opinions shared on Reddit by people who lack expertise and are sharing opinions in anonymity qualify as dubious. Yet Google is not only favoring Reddit in the search results, it is also paying millions of dollars for access to content that is lacking in expertise, experience, authoritativeness and trustworthiness.”
This is challenging because it means your expert-written content could get outranked by the opinions of anonymous Reddit users.
Opportunities
Search Engine Journal founder Brent Csutoras offers a more optimistic view, believing marketers should lean into Reddit’s newfound prominence.
“If your brand has something meaningful to say and is interested in truly connecting with your audience, then yes, you should be on Reddit.”
However, Reddit’s community-driven nature requires a delicate approach, Csutoras adds:
“Reddit communities can be highly negative toward self-serving promotion. But if you put in the effort and solve people’s needs and problems, Reddit has the potential to be a high-performance channel.”
Why SEJ Cares
SEO professionals and marketers should be mindful that expert-written resources could be outranked by Reddit threads that reflect personal opinions rather than authoritative information.
However, by providing genuine value and respecting Reddit’s community guidelines, businesses may be able to leverage the platform’s prominence for increased visibility and audience engagement.
“Don’t get happy prematurely when search engines unexpectedly start to crawl like crazy from your site.”
He says there are two common problems to watch out for: infinite spaces and website hacks.
Infinite Spaces Could Cause Crawling Spike
An issue Illyes highlighted is sites with “infinite spaces”—areas like calendar modules or endlessly filterable product listings that can generate unlimited potential URLs.
If a site is crawled a lot already, crawlers may get extra excited about infinite spaces.
Illyes explains:
“If your site generally has pages that search users find helpful, crawlers will get excited about these infinite spaces for a time.”
He recommends using the robots.txt file to block crawlers from accessing infinite spaces.
Hacked Sites Can Trigger Crawling Frenzy
Another troubling cause of a crawling spike is a security breach where hackers inject spam onto a reputable site.
Crawlers may initially interpret this as new content to index before realizing it’s malicious.
Illyes states:
“If a no-good-doer somehow managed to get access…they might flood your site with, well, crap… crawlers will get excited about these new pages for a time and happily crawl them.”
Remain Skeptical Of Crawling Spikes
Rather than assuming a crawling spike is positive, Illyes suggests treating it as a potential issue until the root cause is identified.
He states:
“Treat unexpected sharp increases in crawling as a symptom…until you can prove otherwise. Or, you know, maybe I’m just a hardline pessimist.”
Fixing Hacked Sites: Help From Google
For hacked sites, Illyes pointed to a page that includes a video with further assistance:
Here are the key points.
Tips From Google’s Video
Google’s video outlines the steps in the recovery process.
1. Identify The Vulnerability
The first crucial step is finding how the hacker gained access. Tools like Google’s Webmaster Tools can assist in detecting issues.
2. Fix The Vulnerability
Once the security hole is identified, it must be closed to prevent any future unauthorized access. This could involve updating software, changing passwords, etc.
3. Clean The Hacked Content
Check the entire site’s content and code to remove any spam, malware, defaced pages, or other injections by the hacker. Security plugins like Wordfence can assist in this process.
4. Harden Security
Beyond fixing the specific vulnerability, take additional measures to harden the site’s security. This could include enabling firewalls, limiting user permissions, and more frequent software updates.
5. Request A Review
Once the vulnerability is patched and any hacked content is removed, you can then request Google to review the site and remove any security warnings or blacklists once it’s verified as clean.
The video notes that the review process is faster for malware issues (days) than spam issues (weeks) since Google has to inspect spam cleanup efforts further.
Additional Tips From Google’s John Mueller
Google’s John Mueller has previously offered specific advice on recovering from the SEO impact of hacked pages:
Use the URL removal tool to deindex the hacked pages quickly.
Focus on improving the overall site quality beyond removing hacked content.
Lingering impacts may persist for months until the site recovers Google’s trust.
Why SEJ Cares
Website security is crucial for all businesses, as hacked content can impact trust and search engine rankings.
Google’s Gary Illyes pointed out that sudden spikes in crawling activity could indicate security breaches or technical issues that need immediate attention.