Fresh Content – Freshness Factors in Google’s Ranking Algorithm

Google Loves Fresh Content – So Do Your Visitors

How do you feel about eating that 4 day old salad you left in the fridge? How about that salmon that’s still in the garbage bin after a few days?

And do you remember the smell of fresh baked bread or pastries right out of the oven at your local cafe? Do you search for fresh new news reports on Google or Youtube?

The word fresh means a lot when you’re grocery shopping or out for your morning walk. It turns out fresh is big with Google, Facebook, Instagram, and Linkedin too. For some reason, they believe Now is important.

Fresh Content is More Relevant!

Content strategists may not talk about freshness very often, but we all know from our analytics, that old content doesn’t get read much. It’s not quite as enjoyable.  It might as well be put away in the archives.

And in the era of social media, everyone expects or prefers fresh content. If Google changed its search box to let users choose the date, most searchers would turn off anything older than 1 year.

It’s often the freshness of content that draws people to Facebook, or Twitter or to your blog. We all like the feeling of spontaneity, novelty, and real time interaction.

In this post, I wanted to point out how new content and updated content can catapult your Google rankings and help keep your customers better informed, engaged, and confident in your company.

It’s important for a digital marketing specialist of any type to be mindful of the quality of the content quality. And freshness is a part of it.

In this post we take a look at what fresh content is composed of, as far as Google is concerned, and for reasons of visitor engagement, lead funnel optimization, and sales conversion.

What is Fresh Content Anyway?

Fresh Content is up to date, which means visitors and customers are more assured and confident that the info they’re consuming is relevant and accurate. Who can make buying decisions on outdated information? That’s kind of risky and could lead to business losses.

For that reason and many others, Google decided to make content freshness an important component of their algorithm. In fact, they filed a patent for it. The importance of freshness however is relative to other factors they take into account. That means if your content is of the low quality, non-engaging variety, it may not matter as much.

Yet, if you have a high ranking, high domain authority, relevant website, Google may be eager to spider your content very quickly. Yet, as you know, Google does assess your site’s trustworthiness and keyword/topic relevance, so your content updates will be “processed” to discover their true merit. A good SEO copywriter can take this into account when doing updates.

From moz.com whiteboard Fridays, Rand Fishkin said the Fresh factor affects 30% of queries, however freshness would apply to all keyword searches, just some more than others.

Google can measure user’s engagement in your content too, and notice changes in visit times, clicks, scrolling, and more. Googlebot can determine that you’ve changed your content and that users are liking it. In response, those pages will enjoy higher rankings.

So when you’re managing your content and worrying too much about library science you should instead focus on user engagement. With fresh as a priority, you’re getting at the things Google, Bing, and Yahoo all care about.
Freshness was a big topic a few years back when Google didn’t have what is called “realtime” capability which DuckDuckGo had. That’s when they acted to include a freshness factor. They initially called it the Cafeine algorithm update.

Today, this freshness rating would be controlled by RankBrain and all keywords according to Google engineers, are not treated the same. That’s getting into technical territory, so let’s keep it simple for you.

You need to update your content intelligently for continued high Google rankings. If you pay attention to each of these factors you’ll find as I have, a reward of higher rankings. And you’ll likely make a bigger impact on your visitors.

What are The Fresh Content Factors?

Here’s a few things Google might assess:

  1. blog posting date (timestamp)
  2. amount of material changed (headings, embedded links, text, text, data, charts)
  3. most recent change/update previously
  4. relevance of the material changed to which keywords that page ranks for
  5. the keywords visitors used in their search
  6. new inbound links discovered pointing to your site
  7. new inbound links discovered from active/fresh websites
  8. the rate of growth in new inbound links discovered point to your site
  9. the keyword topic of the changes on other pages on other sites that link to your page
  10. new social shares discovered
  11. rate or frequency of content updates
  12. new pages created on the particular topic that page ranks for and which it links to

Trying to Get Fresh? Sounds Like a Plan

As part of your social media strategy or visitor engagement strategy you’ll want design your content so that it can be refreshed continuously in a way that Google trusts and which lets you repost it repeatedly on Facebook, Buzzfeed Twitter or Linkedin.  With fresh new angles, you can post it forever and people will love it.

If it grows its own cult or following, wow, you’re  brilliant overachiever (make sure you let me know).

New content is great so keep on blogging. However, it’s actually that old content when revitalized that generates the big traffic (and qualified prospects too).

Here’s How to Optimize for Freshness:

  • update key parts of your page/post so that it is keyword relevant
  • update the upper part of your page because it is important to Google
  • update text and images throughout the document
  • give the post a different theme, but try to keep the relevant keywords used in the headings
  • retarget the page for a particular customer group and promote strong to them
  • repost on social media to create new fresh shares and links
  • update your blog post date
  • use your update date in your meta description tag (it shows up in the search results page)
  • make fresh changes to other pages on your site and link to that page
  • create fresh new post on similar topics and link to that page

It’s important when you update your content, that you you don’t over optimize by accident. Vary the words you use, especially in hyperlinks . Google can tell when you’re beefing things up to get better rankings. This is where SEO skill is invaluable.

This isn’t the ultimate oracle about the freshness factor, but it will help you.  I hope you’ll return for farm fresh nutritious updates, (nudge nudge wink wink).  It’s like a vitamin shot for your web marketing.