Categories: Google

How Google continuous scroll has impacted organic traffic [Data]

For the greater part of the last decade, Google released a slew of updates enriching the mobile-first search experience. 

There was the mobile-friendly algorithm update from 2015 and the switch to mobile-first indexing in 2019.

In October 2021, Google introduced continuous scrolling on mobile. It’s a sensible change that matches users’ browsing experience in their social feeds. 

Fast forward to December 2022, Google rolled out continuous scrolling to desktop search results.

It roughly mirrors the user experience, which has been live on mobile for a while, but there’s a notable distinction:

  • On mobile, it is “infinite” scrolling where the results go on as long as you scroll down. 
  • For desktop, it is a “continuous” scroll – meaning you will scroll through ~60 search results (or previously six pages of SERPs) before needing to hit “See more.” (Don’t worry, Google Ads are still placed throughout the scroll to break up the results.)

Historically, few users browsed past Page 1 of the SERPs and clicked results beyond Page 2. 

Like many SEOs, I was curious to know how continuous scroll impacts organic traffic.

Would continuous scroll on desktop increase the value of organic results on those deeper pages? 

Or would consumers still rather change their search query if nothing was found on the first few search results?

I digged into the data to find out.

Organic traffic data: Pre- and post-continuous scroll change

To understand the impact of continuous scroll on desktop, I looked at data over a 30-day period pre- and post-continuous scroll change. 

While there are some seasonality considerations, this pre/post methodology gives a better view of organic ranking trends.

Meaning, if you looked year over year, SEO results would have (hypothetically) changed significantly. I also only included non-branded keyword data in the charts below. 

Branded data showed no significant changes of note. In fact, 99% of clicks in our data before and after this change went to positions 1-3. The data was similar for impressions, with 97% going to the top 3 positions for branded terms.

The simple answer is the first page is massively essential. Yes, this change moved some impressions and clicks to more profound results.

But, ultimately, the majority of traffic comes from the top 3 positions. Over 50% of impressions and 88% of clicks go to the top 3 positions. 

Impressions did increase for rankings 15-20 from 20% pre-continuous scroll to 25% post-continuous scroll. 

This reflects the updated user experience where consumers might not even realize they continued to go beyond the top 10 results to the top 20.

After that, things were fairly flat, and >30 only accounts for ~10% of total impressions. 

For clicks, it’s even more important to be in the top 3. Only 4% of total clicks occur after position 6. 

This is 2X what it was before continuous scroll changes (previously, 2% of clicks came from positions greater than 6). Wow. Desktop is really driven by those top positions, even with a slight shift in impressions to deeper results. 

As a comparison, I thought I would show mobile data from the same data set. Mobile has a more of a scrolling user experience. The data set showed “just” 40% of impressions going to the top 3 positions. 

The next largest cohort was in the 7-10 positions with 35%. Users are just flicking through results if they don’t see what they are looking for in the top 3. 

For clicks, it is still just dominated by the top 3. 91% of clicks came from those top 3 positions, and just 3% coming from anything >10. 


Get the daily newsletter search marketers rely on.


What this data means for search marketers

This data set should confirm two things for search marketers:

  • User behaviors are slightly altered by UX changes that Google or other platforms make.
  • It is still as relevant as ever to be in the top positions for your key search queries.

We still see so many brands think of SEO as something to set up when they redesign or re-platform their website. 

This is the equivalent of a New Year’s resolution with your fitness in the gym versus making the changes needed to really improve your health over the long term. 

You can’t just go to the gym in January and think you are healthy for the rest of the year. 

Keep writing content and optimizing technical elements to keep your website strong and healthy year round. 

No matter what change in user experience happens or AI thing comes along, your site will be ready for that change. 

Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Search Engine Codex is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – admin@searchenginecodex.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Share
Henry White

Leave a Comment
Published by
Henry White

Recent Posts

Optimizing for AI Overviews – Moz

Now, as I mentioned, there are caveats when it comes to optimizing. It is appearing.…

July 6, 2024

Daily Search Forum Recap: July 5, 2024

Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today, through the eyes…

July 5, 2024

Google Says Request Indexing Does Not Change Canonicalization

Google's John Mueller said on that using the request indexing feature in Google Search Console's…

July 5, 2024

Google Search Console Performance Reports Fixed

Google seems to have fixed the Google Search Console Performance Reports last night at about…

July 5, 2024

Google Search Console Difficulties, Google Ranking Volatility, Zero Click Study, Google Ads & More

This week, I posted the monthly Google Webmaster report and we had more search ranking…

July 5, 2024

Google Search Testing Longer Search Bar

Google is testing a longer search bar, so I guess you can enter in a…

July 5, 2024