Penguin is a continuation of Panda. The best way to increase your search engine rankings is get more relevant links from high authority sites. Try to get more natural links as they are an indication of great content.
Unfortunately, Google has yet to outline exactly what signals Penguin is picking up on, so many site owners that were negatively impacted are in the dark as to where they want wrong with their onsite SEO. Many in the SEO community have speculated that some contributing factors to Penguin might be things like: 1. Aggressive exact-match anchor text 2. Overuse of exact-match domains 3. Low-quality article marketing & blog spam 4. Keyword stuffing in internal/outbound links Its a better way to follow panda and penguin's update to avoid such results.
Penguin is a continuation of Panda. The best way to increase your search engine rankings is get more relevant links from high authority sites.
Its very impressive no doubt in it. Please add followings in it: 16. Panda 3.6 on April 27th 17. Panda 3.7 on June 9th 18. Panda 3.8 on June 25th (Panda 3.8 was the latest version) Thanks
Penguin is a continuation of Panda. The best way to increase your search engine rankings is get more relevant links from high authority sites. Try to get more natural links as they are an indication of great. please said...................
Penguin targets things like keyword stuffing and over-optimization of anchor tags Panda targets poorly made sites
Penguin update is for preventing spam and panda is for preventing duplicate and low quality content . This is the basic difference .
Search engines Panda: Here is a malfunction of all the Panda up-dates and their launch schedules. If your website's visitors took a significant hit around one of these periods there is a excellent possibility it was flagged by Panda. Google Penguin: 1. Competitive exact-match core text 2. Excessive use of exact-match domains 3. Low-quality content promotion & weblog spam 4. Keyword and key phrase filling in internal/outbound links
Actually they are all Google algorithm, There is minor difference and sometimes major, but it appears in the time of using.
Hi Clive2, This is a good question since it can be unclear which algorithm is affecting a change in rankings. The brunt of it is that Google Penguin attacks low quality links while Google Panda attacks low quality, thin content. Margin media mentions these differences on their digital marketing blog as does Search Engine Journal (SEJ). One of the statements Margin Media makes is "The chief focus on Panda is the punishment of thin content. This basically means content that is of little to no value to internet users," while SEJ states "Since Penguin and Panda target two different issues, it’s extremely important to know the exact algorithm update that hit your website. Panda targets low quality content, thin content, duplicate content, etc., while Penguin targets webspam (and at this point it’s heavily targeting unnatural inbound links)." The posts can be found here: http://blog.marginmedia.com.au/Our-...Panda-vs-Google-Penguin-What-s-the-Difference http://www.searchenginejournal.com/...algorithm-update-impacted-your-website/43751/ Hope this helps, Shawn
Google Panda - The Google Panda update was first launched in April with the goal of lowering the ranks of websites that include duplicate content, low-quality and keyword stuffed articles, and copied content from other websites. That’s why content farms were hit the hardest when Panda was first launched because they produced articles were submitted or rewritten multiple times just to obtain links. Google Penguin - Google Penguin, targets websites that are belied to be violating Google’s existing quality guidelines. Penguin reduces the ranks of sites that use spamming to obtain higher ranks on search results. Black hat tactics, including keyword stuffing, unnatural inbound links, and comment spamming in blogs with the exact anchor test for targeted keywords, are all penalized by Google.