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Panda Update 4.0: Winners and Losers – Google USA

A new Panda update has been rolled out by Google, and it’s important to everybody in SEO. So we’ve carried out an immediate analysis, and here are the results.

Update: In order to get this analysis to you as quickly as possible, the data we used was independent of the Suite Software. However, it is included now in the Searchmetrics Suite Research Area, and the data is viewable in the client project area as usual, depending upon your individual update cycles.

Google Panda Update 4.0Matt Cutts, Google’s Head of Webspam, announced the release of the Panda 4.0 update via his Twitter feed yesterday. Initially called “Farmer Update”, it was rolled out in the US in February 2011 and globally in August of the same year. The update aims to push pages with poor content and spam from the search results.

This fourth generation of Panda started rolling out yesterday and Searchengineland.com are projecting that it will impact 7.5% of (english) search queries. Other languages may well be affected in differing proportions. As it revealed itself in the SERPs, we decided to take a look at it:

Payday Loans 2.0 for “very spammy queries”

At the same time as Panda 4.0, or even a little earlier (last weekend), “Payday – Loans 2.0” was rolled out. This update is more link-based and focuses on keywords with high search volumes and CPC in which the potential proportion of spam in the SERPs is likely to be very high.

According to Matt Cutts, the proportion of affected searches in the United States was only about 0.3%, so let’s concentrate on Panda here.

Panda 4.0 – A ‘Delicate’ Update

After many smaller, almost monthly “refreshes”, the fourth Panda update seems to be a major one. However, according to the rumor mill, this update is more “soft and gentle” than previous ones, and will supposedly serve as a basis for future adjustments to the algorithm.

Matt Cutts - Panda 4.0 tweet US

However, as Matt Cutts announced at last year’s Pubcon in Las Vegas, Google’s future Panda is supposed to be “baked” into the algorithm, it’s surprising that this update comes as a new version when we were not expecting Google to roll it out with such a public announcement.

Preliminary analysis – Foundation: SEO Visibility – delta value

The following data is based on the organic SEO Visibility for each domain for all researched keywords, compared to our last data point. The actual traffic by each domain – for example brand and/or direct traffic etc. – can vary with values given here.

Since there seems to be another reason for SEO Visibility loss of some domains, next to the Panda update (more on this below), and also some exceptions that I would not call Panda losers, I will call this a preliminary analysis. We will update this article as soon as we had a deeper look into the data, but I wanted to give you some insights right away. So lets start with a provisional lists – please interpret with caution:

Google SERPs: Panda 4.0 Losers

The lists are ordered by absolute loss / gain, which is shown in the respective column as rounded percentage. Basis of the analysis are domains that at least had a value of 10000 SEO Visibility before Panda 4.0 and that show now a change of at least +/-20 %.

domain

percent

ask.com

> – 50%

ebay.com

> – 33%

biography.com

> – 33%

retailmenot.com

> – 33%

starpulse.com

> – 50%

history.com

> – 33%

isitdownrightnow.com

> – 50%

aceshowbiz.com

> – 75%

examiner.com

> – 50%

yellowpages.com

> – 20%

yourtango.com

> – 75%

dealcatcher.com

> – 50%

livescience.com

> – 50%

webopedia.com

> – 50%

xmarks.com

> – 50%

simplyrecipes.com

> – 33%

siteslike.com

> – 50%

digitaltrends.com

> – 50%

health.com

> – 50%

spoonful.com

> – 75%

songkick.com

> – 75%

realsimple.com

> – 33%

appbrain.com

> – 33%

thehollywoodgossip.com

> – 50%

dealspl.us

> – 33%

techtarget.com

> – 33%

gossipcop.com

> – 50%

rd.com

> – 75%

chow.com

> – 33%

doxo.com

> – 50%

heavy.com

> – 50%

csmonitor.com

> – 33%

toptenreviews.com

> – 20%

parenting.com

> – 50%

globalpost.com

> – 75%

espnfc.com

> – 50%

serviceguidance.com

> – 50%

mnn.com

> – 75%

mystore411.com

> – 50%

urlm.co

> – 33%

delish.com

> – 50%

healthcentral.com

> – 33%

whatscookingamerica.net

> – 50%

columbia.edu

> – 20%

songlyrics.com

> – 20%

internetslang.com

> – 33%

ibiblio.org

> – 50%

webutation.info

> – 50%

cheapflights.com

> – 33%

mybanktracker.com

> – 50%

 

Google SERPs: Panda 4.0 Winners

domain

percent

glassdoor.com

> 100%

emedicinehealth.com

> 500 %

medterms.com

> 500 %

yourdictionary.com

> 50%

shopstyle.com

> 250%

zimbio.com

> 500 %

myrecipes.com

> 250%

couponcabin.com

> 250%

buzzfeed.com

> 25%

consumeraffairs.com

> 100%

wordpress.com

> 20%

thinkexist.com

> 250%

onhealth.com

> 250%

alternativeto.net

> 100%

whosdatedwho.com

> 250%

reverso.net

> 50%

wikimedia.org

> 100%

dogtime.com

> 100%

findthebest.com

> 50%

eatingwell.com

> 100%

quotegarden.com

> 100%

goodhousekeeping.com

> 250%

everydayhealth.com

> 25%

simplyhired.com

> 100%

momswhothink.com

> 100%

similarsites.com

> 100%

southernliving.com

> 50%

theknot.com

> 25%

allaboutvision.com

> 100%

openculture.com

> 50%

babyzone.com

> 50%

tasteofhome.com

> 33%

gotquestions.org

> 100%

movie4k.to

> 50%

wmagazine.com

> 33%

ycharts.com

> 100%

historyplace.com

> 50%

rcn.com

> 100%

salary.com

> 50%

skepdic.com

> 100%

mediawiki.org

> 100%

oodle.com

> 100%

abbreviations.com

> 100%

homes.com

> 100%

spokeo.com

> 50%

hlntv.com

> 33%

sparkpeople.com

> 33%

hayneedle.com

> 50%

emedtv.com

> 100%

 

Analysis: aggregators with little original content lose visibility

As expected, the update mainly relates to the content area. In the loser list you will find a strong number of aggregators who mainly ranked with information from external sources – for example in the area of Coupons, News (here especially the celebrity/ gossip sector), Software – or of course price comparism websites. Also, some forums and weather portals are on the list.

On the other hand, we also find some of the aggregators among the winners. Particularly strong are some price and product comparism sites, health pages and some local aggregators. The conclusion is therefore somehow unclear. It is possible that the Panda update is still not fully rolled out, so we will keep you updated.

SERP in SERP losses

Next to the mentioned aggregators, we found websites who lost at the directory level where they ranked with result pages. Presumably, this has not directly to do with the Panda update. We are currently working on a separate analysis.

First conclusion : This panda did not only punish

Some sites that should be potentially on the Panda loser list have actually shown a positive development. This could be the “learning from mistakes” (also from others), as some of these candidates have (now) written their own content. The losers on the other hand, tend to show syndicated content or even duplicate content. But this doesn’t mean that this is the end of the update. Google proofed in the past that they are able to perform improvements or rollbacks really fast. So we will see what will happen over the next weeks.

By the way, the Payday-Loan losers can be identified pretty easy -> URL completely removed from the index (it’s more like a link -based loss) or not (rather Panda).

Update: If you want to find out, if your business has been affected by the Panda 4.0 Update, feel free to contact us and get more information on the topic.

Marcus Tober

Marcus Tober

My name is Marcus Tober and I’m the founder of Searchmetrics. Because we really love to analyze all kinds of online data, we can give you more insights than any other company in SEO, SEM and Social Media. It’s not a job, it’s passion.

165 thoughts on “Panda Update 4.0: Winners and Losers – Google USA


  • One site that I was interested in seeing was Retailmenot. I know there has been a lot of talk about them and how well they did for a lot of searches related to coupons, should be interesting to see how it hurts their financial numbers if so at all.

  • Shrinidhi Hande 2014/05/24 at 2:33 am

    What’s in it for bloggers? Any summary?

  • Hi Guyz.
    I think it’s too early to come to a conclusion. Who are Winners and Who are Loosers. Lets give it atleast 3 weeks.

  • have you tested your own network?

  • Shahnawaz Sadique 2014/05/26 at 9:01 am

    Every one is saying that little original content or duplicate content website had punished but I have seen some sites which has original content (80%) and still they got punished.I found and believe that low quality back-links is a factor behind this hamper.Is there any one out there who has studied some winner sites SEO practices If yes then kindly share your views.

  • I wasn’t surprised about Retailmenot and especially dealcatcher. In fact, the opposite would have been surprising/suspicious.

    The structure dealcatcher is especially bad. Too many empty and useless pages (expired coupons).

    BTW, it looks like ebay might have been hit not only by Panda but also by a manual penalty. There was a post recently about it on SEL.

  • Wow some pretty big websites got hit with this one. Interesting to see Yellowpages took a hit. Will be interested to see if these changes are blips or longer lasting.

  • Good to see Google coming through and rewarding content websites with this update such as WordPress. Looks like Google are continuing to move towards websites benefiting that deserve it.

  • I like how people on here are saying “if you follow the rules you don’t have to worry about updates like these.” Really? In 2006 SEOs were dropping links in forums and web directories left and right and were still following the rules. Or what about in 2009 when sites were still using keyword rich anchors and still in Google’s good graces? Point being, SEO like Google’s algorithms, is ever-changing. The rules we abide by today most likely wont be the same we follow tomorrow. So everyone gather around your twitter account and wait for Cutts’ next tweet i.e. hint about what the rules will be by the next roll out. Because it’s not a black and white world we live in anymore – even by Google’s standards.

  • Steve - MilesWeb.com 2014/05/27 at 10:36 pm

    How much time it takes for the Panda update to settle? DA improved but rankings dropped. Should I wait for more time and then check the rankings?

  • Great insight Marcus!

    Based off some of the losers you indicated it doesn’t seem like Panda 4.0 was to delicate to some of the bigger brands out there.

    Again, fantastic job!

  • Thank you for the analysis and the article. We have been very concerned about our drop in traffic since the new Google update on May 19th. Yes, we have lost 50% of our traffic and it has hit us hard as What’s Cooking America (WCA) is not a spam site, yet the new algorithm has penalized us… again.

    WCA is one of the original cooking web sites on the internet, having started back in 1997. There are over 3500 pages of unique and substantial food related content. We are a family owned web site and one of the largest food related web sites that is still privately owned, not backed by a large company or magazine. My Mother has been the sole person maintaining all the content and trying to keep up with Google’s changes, and the changes in technology. Just recently, my sister and I began working with our Mother, on a part-time bases, to try and help with the vast amount of work.

    So what do we do? We feel this hit has really hurt our rankings, and as a result the income that my Mother makes has dropped significantly It is frustrating that we can’t talk to anyone to figure out what we can do to regain our previously well deserved high rankings on Google search engines. We have followed the rules, we are not a link farm, we don’t have duplicate content or sites, and we aren’t spamming. The rules keep changing and we don’t have a professional team to troubleshoot the continuous declines and penalties as a result of the changes.

  • AmbroseBiercesGhost 2014/05/29 at 7:05 am

    How did Columbia.edu end up as a “loser”?
    This is a wonderful example of how Google picks winners and losers in business. If Obama did this you would scream bloody hell. Pull your heads out of your SEO, folks.
    It’s time to bust the trust known as Google. They are full of B.S. hubris. Self-driving cars, deciding what is “good” content. Really? They are bad for the internet. They are bad for humanity. Stop worrying about spammers and start worrying about corporations that have far too much control over your lives. Google is new big brother. HBO’s Silicon Valley has it about right, expect there’s nothing funny about the increasing power and control Google has over our lives.

  • Search Engine Land has given the updates that Google Panda 4.0 may be After Press Release Sites? The final outcome is yet to be seen.

  • Ebay -33% in visibility…it´s incredible. Great post Marcus.


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