Newsletter Subject

What June brought us in the SEO world (Top 5)

From

acemsrve.com

Email Address

adam@loganixmail.com

Sent On

Thu, Jun 24, 2021 04:08 PM

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open up for this month's industry insights! Â Hi, {NAME}, The longest day of the year has come and

open up for this month's industry insights!  Hi, {NAME}, The longest day of the year has come and gone, which means it’s time for our June roundup. Today we are counting down the top 5 SEO happenings this month. Let’s jump into it! 1. Google adds more ways to edit your Google My Business listing straight from the SERPs This is an expansion of the capabilities Google started rolling out last year that let business owners edit basic information straight from the search results. In order to edit your information, all you have to do is log into the Google account associated with your GMB and search for your business listing. From there you can now edit details such as contact information and opening hours. New this month, Google now lets you… - Create posts - Add services - Accept take out and delivery orders - Help customers find products with Pointy To learn more, [check out this article by Search Engine Journal](. 2. Google’s FAQ-rich results are now limited to two per page FAQ structured data has a big benefit of allowing a website to take up more space in the search results. Google’s Danny Sullivan [tweeted]( this month, confirming that Google was now limiting this to only show 2 FAQs. However, it looks like this hasn’t rolled out everywhere just yet. Google originally allowed a website to show up to 10 FAQs, meaning that one website could take over a good amount of the first page of the SERP. Now that the FAQ result will take up less real estate, this gives the rest of the results a more even playing field. 3. Google is testing a new article carousel for authors in the knowledge panel Google is testing a carousel that shows the recent articles by an author or journalist in the person's knowledge panel. This is in the very beginning stages, but Google is “looking to expand the feature over time to more journalists, devices and languages”. This can be a big win for authors and allow them to drive more traffic to their articles. Check out an [example of what the new feature looks like here.]( 4. Google announced that PageSpeed Insights will now publish all available field data What is field data, you might ask? This is the page speed metric of real users of a website. The data is collected through the Chrome mobile browser and is used by Google for ranking purposes. Previously Google would only show this data if enough had been collected to meet Google's specific threshold of data – this would cause about 30% of the data to not show. But now, [in Google’s own words]( “PageSpeed Insights field data is now provided for pages and origins that might have insufficient data for a metric, but sufficient data for other metrics. Previously, field data was only surfaced if all metrics for a page or origin met a threshold of data. Now, any metric that meets the data threshold will be provided. This is reflected in the loadingExperience and originLoadingExperience objects in the API, and also in the frontend.” 5. On June 2nd Google released a core update. Google releases several core updates every year and with each update some shifting of the SERPs might occur. Here’s [what webmasters should know about Google's core updates]( and how to implement them effectively. Our big takeaway? Always focus on delivering high quality content. That’s it for our June SEO roundup. What did you think? Anything that we missed? Send us a reply and let us know :) Until next month! Adam  Explore services, place and track orders and connect directly with your support specialists via the [Loganix Dashboard](. Not interested in this email? [Click here]( to let us know your email preferences or [unsubscribe](. Loganix Inc., 170-422 Richards Street, Vancouver, BC V6B 2Z4, Canada

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