Alice, Author at Improve My Search Ranking https://www.improvemysearchranking.com/author/alice/ Improve My Search Ranking Thu, 23 Nov 2023 14:06:55 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 Google recommends using original product photos for product reviews https://www.improvemysearchranking.com/google-recommends-using-original-product-photos-for-product-reviews/ Mon, 14 Feb 2022 10:55:03 +0000 https://www.improvemysearchranking.com/?p=20387 Google recommends that product reviewers use original photos when creating product reviews. This tip was recently shared by Google’s John Mueller in a recent episode of Google Search Central SEO office-hours hangout session. According to John, using original product photos can trigger the Google search algorithm, which prefers and rewards in-depth product research and unique […]

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Google recommends that product reviewers use original photos when creating product reviews. This tip was recently shared by Google’s John Mueller in a recent episode of Google Search Central SEO office-hours hangout session.

According to John, using original product photos can trigger the Google search algorithm, which prefers and rewards in-depth product research and unique content. Because original product photos are unique content, it helps Google identify that you are using the best practices while publishing a product review.

“I think the guidelines that we have for reviews, or the recommendations that we have, should really be focused on unique photos that you create of these products, so not artificial review photos.”

What about edited photos?

What if you take existing product photos, edit them to make them unique, and use those images in your reviews?

According to John Mueller, editing existing product photos do not really count as “unique content.” 

Ideally, the photos should be the ones that you have taken yourself.

John Mueller clarified that their systems cannot identify the differences between a photo that you have taken yourself or taken from another source and edited to make your own. However, this is something that Google’s Quality Rater team will look at during a manual review.

“I don’t think our systems would automatically recognize that, but it’s probably something that we would look at, at least on a manual basis, from time to time.

So looking at the recommendations that we have, with regards to reviews, it feels like it’s not really in line with what we’re trying to do there, where we’re trying to really bubble up reviews, where we can tell that someone is actually testing this product in real life.”

And that last line is extremely important to understand here.

Google wants to rewards reviewers who have actually used the product — and have provided sufficient evidence for it. Rewarding reviewers who use original product photos is another step in that direction.

This idea also goes in line with the recent algorithm changes that Google made in December 2021 for product review websites.

Google’s December 2021 Product Review update

In December 2021, Google announced new algorithm changes for product review websites. Those updates were referred to as the Product Review update.

Here is a quick refresher of what that update contained for product reviewers:

  1. The first requirement was that the person who is reviewing a product should provide evidence of actually using that product, and
  2. The second requirement was about offering multiple buying options to users, i.e., links to multiple websites for users to buy.

Combine these two best practices with the recommendation of using original product photos in your reviews, and you should be golden.

Again, the idea is that you need to actually use the products that you are reviewing and show sufficient evidence to Google that you did indeed use a product before publishing your review.

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Google explains why FAQ rich results might not appear in Search https://www.improvemysearchranking.com/google-explains-why-faq-rich-results-might-not-appear-in-search/ Thu, 10 Feb 2022 10:27:06 +0000 https://www.improvemysearchranking.com/?p=20369 FAQ schema rich results, like other forms of rich results, are kind of beyond our control. Sometimes, they just do not appear in the search results, and we do not know why they don’t. This exact question was asked by a website owner during a recent Google Search Central SEO office-hours hangout session. Google’s John […]

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FAQ schema rich results, like other forms of rich results, are kind of beyond our control. Sometimes, they just do not appear in the search results, and we do not know why they don’t.
This exact question was asked by a website owner during a recent Google Search Central SEO office-hours hangout session. Google’s John Mueller, in his response, highlighted three possible reasons why an FAQ rich result may not show up in Google search results.
FAQ rich results are essentially similar to other types of rich results in that we have several levels that we take into account before we show them in the search results,” said John Mueller.


John then defined the three levels that Google takes into account before deciding whether or not to show an FAQ rich result in Search.

Level One — Technically Incorrect

According to Mueller, at the first level, it is analyzed whether the FAQ markup is technically correct or not.
Google Search Console can be used to identify any possible errors in the structured data.

Level Two — Compliant or Non-Compliant with Google’s Policies

Once it is established that the FAQ markup is technically correct, the next level is for analyzing whether or not it is in compliance with Google’s policy regarding structured data.
What are Google’s policies regarding FAQ markup?
There is only one major one, i.e., whether or not the questions and answers are visible on the page.
“I don’t think we have any kind of significant policies around FAQ rich results other than that the content should be visible on the page,” confirmed John Mueller.

Level Three — Does Google Trust the Content?

The markup is correct, and the content is available on the page. Cool. What’s next?
The next step is a quality check.
Does Google trust your website and the content you have? If there is a lack of trust, Google will not display the FAQs in search results.
“We need to be able to understand that this website is kind of trustworthy in that regard that we can trust this data to be correct.
And that is sometimes something where, from a quality point of view, we’re maybe not convinced about a website and then we wouldn’t show it.”

Takeaway

If next time your FAQ schema content isn’t appearing on search results, you know which factors to look at.
If you want to watch the full conversion, you can check it out in this video here.

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