The Passage Ranking Explained: What This Update Is Really About
5 March 2021 Leave a comment ALL-HANDS SEO
Sometimes itâs hard to find relevant information online. The answer to your query might be buried so deep in SERP that you would need some sort of internet archeologist to find it.
Google is aware of that, so it does its best to simplify online searchersâ lives. On February 10, the search giant fixed the issue by rolling out the passage ranking update. Itâs designed to help users find relevant information way easier. But whatâs more important to website owners like ourselves, this update can also increase our websitesâ visibility.
How?
Read this blog post to find out.
We are about to tell you everything we know about the passage ranking update. In the following paragraphs, we describe what it is, how it works, how this update may change SEO, and whether you should start optimizing for it.
What is passage ranking and how it works?
Passage ranking (also referred to as passage indexing) introduced a slight change in Googleâs ranking algorithm. The update is currently launched only for English queries in the US, but soon Google will roll it out for other languages. After its global release, it is expected to affect 7% of all online searches.
Passage ranking enables the search engine to pull out passages and rank them independently of the rest of the page. Before the update, Google evaluated all content on a webpage to determine whether it was relevant to some query. However, this method had issues. If you covered various topics within one article, the article might not rank well for all the topics you mentioned.
Let us illustrate our point with an example.
Say you published a blog post on bathing a cat. You wrote about how to bathe a cat without getting scratched, how often you should do it, whether cats even need bathing, and so on. You also put together a small paragraph where you shared your thoughts on why most felines are afraid of water. Since this particular paragraph is irrelevant to the bathing topic, your article most likely wonât rank well for âwhy cats are afraid of waterâ and similar queries.
However, with the passage ranking update, it can.
Now Google better understands the relevancy of specific passages to user queries. And whatâs more important, the search engine surfaces them in search results even if theyâre irrelevant to the main topic of a webpage.
As far as we see it, passage indexing helps Google return relevant results for keywords for which there were no relevant results before the update. Maybe 7% of queries mentioned above are those for which Google had nothing pertinent to offer. That explains why the search giant started analyzing passages independently of the rest of the page.
So letâs come back to the âbathing catâ example. If there were few results for the âwhy cats are afraid of waterâ query, Google would rank your article well even though only one of its passages is relevant to this term. However, if there were plenty of blog posts on the topic, Google would most likely pick the most meaningful and comprehensive content to rank it high in search results.
Thatâs why passage indexing doesnât guarantee your articles will rank well for all the topics you cover in them.
We hope now you understand passage indexing better. However, what may still confuse you is how passage ranking results look in SERP. As you know, Google has been able to surface passages from content since 2014. Thatâs what featured snippets are designed for, isnât it? So do passage indexing snippets look any different from featured snippets? If not, do they have any differences?
Let us answer these questions.
The difference between passage ranking and featured snippets
We donât think passage indexing looks any different from featured snippets.
Hereâs why.
When showcasing passage ranking on its recent blog post, Google included this image.
As you can see, there is a featured snippet in the âAfterâ part of the image.
Confused by this illustration, the founder of Search Engine Roundtable, Barry Schwartz, asked Dany Sullivan whether passage indexing search results would look any different from regular snippets.
He got this reply:
So what can we learn from this? As confirmed by Danny Sullivan, passage indexing snippets are visually indistinguishable from regular snippets. He also emphasized that passage ranking has nothing to do with how search results are displayed, so we can assume that passage ranking results look just like featured snippets.
Even though featured snippets and passage indexing look the same, it doesnât mean they donât have any difference. Based on what weâve learned, we can safely conclude that:
- Featured snippets choose the source based on the relevance of the entire website to the user query.
- Passage indexing snippets are based on the relevance of a given passage. The overall webpageâs relevance to the user query doesnât matter.
Now that you know the difference between passage indexing and featured snippets, itâs about time to discuss the passage ranking updateâs impact on SEO.
How passage indexing may change SEO?
Since the update isnât completely rolled out yet, itâs hard to analyze its impact on SEO. The only thing we can do is assume how passage indexing may affect website optimization in the long run.
In our opinion, the following events may happen:
The âone page per topicâ rule may become unnecessary
With passage indexing, you can cover multiple topics within one article and not worry that Google will pick only one topic to rank this article for. If you feel that itâs better to talk about several subjects within one copy, go for it.
Long-form content may get a boost
In SEJâs webinar, the founder of Onely, Bartosz GĂłralewicz, asked Webmaster Trends Analyst at Google, Martin Splitt, whether passage indexing could help longer content. Martin replied to him:
âYes, pretty much. Thatâs the core.â
Given that longer content often covers more than one topic, it definitely makes some sense. If you manage to create long-form content with answers to various queries that have never been answered before, you will boost your webpageâs visibility and increase traffic.
The importance of content structure may be slightly reduced
In the same webinar Martin Splitt also stated the following:
â⌠we try to help those who are not necessarily familiar with SEO or how to structure their content or content strategy. Because lots of people end up creating these long-winded pages that are having a hard time ranking for anything, really because everything is so diluted at this long content. We are helping those.â
So we can assume that passage indexing may slightly reduce the importance of content structure. However, the quality of content is and always will be crucial, so you shouldnât rely on passages if you produce poor content.
Given the above, you may wonder whether you should optimize for the passage ranking update. Thatâs what we want to discuss right now.
Should you optimize for passage indexing?
Now you have a sense of how passage ranking works. The next question: should you do something about this update?
Googleâs Martin Splitt doesnât think so.
In the already mentioned SEJâs webinar, Bartosz asked him whether SEOs had to do anything specific in response to that new algorithm. Here is the reply he got:
âNo. Thatâs a change that is pretty much purely internal, and there is nothing that you need to do. You donât need to make any changes to your website, you donât need to make changes to any of your pages, to any of your articles, or to your markup.
There is no special thing that you need to do.
Itâs just us getting better at more granularly understanding the content of a page and being able to score different parts of a page independently.â
However, this reply concerns already existing content. But what about new content? If there is an updated algorithm, you can do something to optimize your future articles for it, right?
Itâs not far-fetched to suggest so.
To optimize your content for passage indexing, you may try the following:
- Create long-form content on various topics.
- Cover as many user queries for each topic as you can.
- Include long-tail keywords with shallow search volumes (because Google may not have relevant content to display for such keywords).
To find terms with the low number of searches, you will need advanced SEO tools that can provide keyword search volume information. RankActiveâs Keyword Finder is one of them. In its Related Keywords section, you can find related search queries for any keyword and use them for content creation.
Say youâre writing a long article on some subject, and Himalayan salt lamps are one of its topics. Using the Related Keywords section, you can find some ideas to write about. Letâs type âHimalayan salt lampâ into the corresponding field and see what we can get.
The tool provided us with a hundred ideas.
Now we can sort these terms by search volume and display keywords with low search volumes at the top of the list.
As you can see, we already find some topics we can cover.
Do Himalayan salt lamps attract spirits?
And
Salt lamp giving me nightmares
While it may sound funny, the first topic has already been covered by some websites.
That means someone is interested in such topics, right? So why not capitalize on this and create content around these subjects to increase your websiteâs visibility and traffic?
For example, the âSalt lamp giving me nightmaresâ topic has never been covered, so if you be the one to do it, youâll most definitely rank high for this topic and attract users from organic search.
You can do the same with any keyword. Just repeat this process:
- Find some long-tail keywords with low search volumes using Keyword Finder.
- Google each keyword to discover whether there is some content around it.
- Add keywords for which there is no or little content to your list.
- Create your own content and drive traffic.
Profit!
If you believe that creating content for the updated algorithm is a good idea, no one is stopping you from doing it.
Conclusion
Google is always evolving, and passage ranking once again proves this. While it is not a core update, it still may change SEO as we know it in the long run. Thatâs why we believe it was important to cover this topic and tell you everything we know about the change in Googleâs ranking algorithm.
Forewarned is forearmed, as they say.
Let us repeat the key points of this article so that you can better memorize them:
- Passage ranking enabled Google to select passages and rank them regardless of their relevancy to the rest of the page. That means even if a specific passage is irrelevant to the rest of the article, it can still rank pretty well.
- The update is expected to affect 7% of all online queries.
- Passage indexing snippets look the same as regular featured snippets. You canât differentiate one from another visually.
- There is no need to optimize your existing content for the updated algorithm. However, you can do it with your future articles.
Donât miss the opportunity to increase your websiteâs visibility and traffic. Try to optimize for the new ranking algorithm with RankActiveâs tools. Sign up right now and use advanced SEO instruments for 14 days for free.
Tags: Google update, Keyword Finder, Passage Indexing, Passage Ranking, SEO
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