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The 🗺 Rich Snippet Google Ranking Guide

Written by and published



State of The Serps

 

The SERPs have grown leaps and bounds over the past decade. Increased PPC presence, voice search, hyper-local targeting, and machine learning are just some of the trends of the SERP’s today, and Google continues to add more and more features that provide businesses with new opportunities to become visible. With all of these changes come a myriad of marketing opportunities, specifically for SEO. A Google Ranking Guide can never provide all of the answers, but we’ve created several sections that cover SERP features, optimization tips, and we’ve even curated some expert quotes and content for additional research. 

Sections

  1. The Main Types of Rich Snippets
  2. Best Practices for Getting Rich Snippets
  3. Featured Snippet Statistics
  4. Local 3-Pack Snippets and How to Get Them
  5. Sitelinks, Top Stories, and Image Snippets
  6. Knowledge Graphs
  7. The Newest SERP feature (still in development): Podcasts

 

How to Optimize for Rich Snippets (Featured Snippets)


Featured Snippets are designed to give specific answers to search queries that are question-related. The featured snippet is in position 0 for SERPs, which means that it will appear above position one, and even above many advertisements. We’ve addressed in short form position 0 optimizations earlier, but this post is designed to delve much deeper into the SERP.

 

Google's Featured Snippet Example

 

Rich Snippets were introduced to the SERPS by Google in 2014. Google stated that they believe that this new addition to the SERPs would “help people more easily discover what they’re seeking…”

Google has been increasing the importance of voice and mobile when it comes to searches, and the various featured snippet additions are clearly Google’s attempt at optimizing for voice and mobile. According to Google,


Mobile search traffic has surpassed desktop traffic worldwide. And with the growth in voice-activated digital assistants, more people are doing voice queries. In these cases, the traditional “10 blue links” format doesn’t work as well, making featured snippets an especially useful format.

Mobile isn’t the only other evolution to search. Voice search products are now in the mix, creating an entirely new way for searchers to interact with the internet. As Andrew from Optimisey notes, “Alexa, Siri, Cortana et al will often respond to questions by effectively reading out a SERP – and they only read the first result or answer box. With voice search there’s no ‘page 1’ there’s just position 1, or position 0. Everything else is nowhere.” Syndiket SEO has my favorite quote – “If you ain’t first, you’re last!”

 

Main Types of Rich Snippets

 

  • Paragraph Snippet

     

Raven Tools Featured Snippet

The paragraph snippet includes a few lines of text along with a picture. The paragraph that is featured will always have the search query terms in bold, as seen above with “grass” and “green”. The paragraph snippet will be shown whenever Google thinks that a search query can be answered quickly. The paragraph is also a way to further entice searchers to click the link if they like the featured paragraph’s information.

  • Table Snippet

Featured Snippet Table

The table snippet is created by Google when it sees a graph that answers a query. The above example is a table snippet from Statistica, which is a site that’s also ranked in the top 10 for organic traffic. As far as we can tell, the table snippet is awarded to the top 10 organic SERP results exclusively. This is not true for every featured snippet, as I’ll discuss later (spoiler: you can be on page 7 and still get a snippet).

 

  • List Form Snippet

     

Featured Snippet List

The list snippet is similar to the paragraph but it categorizes the information in short steps that can be bulleted or numbered.

 

  • Video Snippet

Video snippets can appear on a SERP among organic results when Google thinks that they aid the user. Video snippets have a title, a link, and a description just like usual snippets, but they also include a video’s thumbnail, duration, and upload time.

Videos featured snippets are increasingly appearing in Google’s SERPs, particularly for DIY niche content searches.

Video Snippet

Best Practices for Getting Featured Snippets

Featured Snippets are a window into how Google, as well as consumers, want you to structure your content. Here are a few suggestions for getting a rich snippet.

  • One of the secrets to optimizing a featured snippet is to provide the maximum amount of information possible while enticing the customer to read more. Strategically cut off the paragraph by taking a note from clickbait articles.
  • The list snippet is acquired by creating a list and categorizing that list by H3’s.  Interestingly enough, this is a perfect example of the importance of headers in forming a rich snippet. We recommend doing some reverse engineering when looking at rich snippets to see what they do right and potentially what you could do better.
  • Optimizing for a video snippet isn’t terribly difficult, but as always, you need to have a proper architecture and you need to seen as authoritative. Video snippets are just about exclusively found in the DIY niche.1. Make sure to get a text version of your video. You can get a transcript extraction tool to accomplish this.2. Organize videos into small steps.3. Organize transcript into small chunks (similar to the methodology of the paragraph snippet) while optimizing with some long-tail keywords in the introduction, which you’ll paste into the description.
  • Organize your content into short sentences and paragraphs, each having no more than 40 to 50 words. 
  • Plan posts in FAQ style, so that you can maximize the usage of question form keywords.
  • Include a how-to section on your website.
  • Structure your content in the form of short paragraphs, each having a question form subheading, with a long-tail keyword included.
  • Out of 2,960 hub URLs in SEMrush’s dataset that earned 20 or more featured snippets, 83% were on Https://

 

Eric Enge of Stone Temple made a great discovery on optimizing for snippets using video descriptions. This is another great opportunity for getting the coveted 0 position.

Youtube Rich Snippet Opportunity

 

Featured Snippet Statistics

Ahrefs released a great study that actually illustrates how featured snippets affect organic search results. While featured snippets provide some new opportunities, they definitely have some side effects for traditional SEO.

 

Ahrefs Featured Snippet Study

Ahrefs also discovered that long-tail keywords are much more likely to trigger featured snippets.

Long Tail Keywords and Featured Snippets

An SEMRush analysis has shown that most featured snippet result answers are between 40 to 50 words and “57% of questions have featured snippets.” 70% of all snippets are 35-50 words, which leads us to believe that this is a huge factor in determining the likelihood of snippetizing (not a real word).

SEM Rush Snippet Graph

 

What Sites Get Featured Snippets?

This information is definitely interesting, but if you are anything like us, you’re probably wondering about the typical features of snippet holders. Word Stream put together this nice little graphic that analyzes the organic ranking for featured snippets in a study of around 1,000 sites.

Organic Ranking with Featured Snippets

This means that some featured snippets come from position 71! Organic rank definitely plays some factor, but other factors obviously come into play to allow positions 11-71 to claim the coveted position 0 SERP placement.

 

Local 3-Packs and How to Get Them

 

A Local 3-Pack shows up in SERPs when a query has a local intent or includes a geographical name, such as “Nashville photographer.” Google originally had 7 options but recently updated the SERP to just show 3.

 

Local 3-Pack

Optimizing for Local Pack

  1. Make sure your Google+ Local page is completely filled and accurate.
  2. Cultivate reviews on your Google+ account. Receiving multiple positive reviews can be very beneficial when it comes to boosting your visibility, particularly since Google reviews and stars will be plainly visible on the 3-Pack.
  3. Make sure your listings throughout the web are accurate and consistent (link to project page about listings).
  4. Cultivate locally relevant links to boost your visibility.
  5. Build standard backlinks to raise your organic rank. Backlinks are earned by generating rock solid content. My rule of thumb is that you should only be generating content that can actually compete with the top 10 SERP results for your topic.
  6. Build a strong presence on social media and other platforms to establish yourself as a local business with loyal followers

Sitelinks, Top Stories, and Image Snippets


Sitelinks


This feature enhances usual snippets by adding extra links under the search results. If Google deems that it is valuable to the user and aligned with their search intent, they may get a varied number of additional links (e.g., for specific categories or sections of a site). This is an effective way to get users to their destination and spread traffic throughout the site.

Google’s Sitelinks have an essential SEO benefit that is proven to drive qualified click-through from Google SERPs to your website. This article reports that Sitelinks can increase your click-thru rate (CTR) by 64%!

1. The user gets an immediate understanding on the relevancy of the website before they click to visit. If your site is optimized properly, users can easily get an idea of the type of information you have available on your site.

  1. If it turns out they find the exact info they need from your site, from one of the Sitelinks listed below your main domain, they’ll be able to click directly to that page to get the answer they require. A simple, easy, and seamless transition for the user.

1. Submit Your XML Sitemap to Google

I’ve audited many websites that had not ever submitted their sitemap to Google and guess what, Google rarely indexed 10% of the site’s pages and 1% of the images!

An XML sitemap will help Google index your entire website, media, images, etc., and will also tell Google the most important and priority pages. It will be these pages that1 Google would chose for your Sitelinks.

2. Crystal Clear Navigation & User Experience

If you think about Sitelinks being used for the main purpose of the searcher easily being able navigating a website, you can understand how important clear navigation is for Google. Google will sometimes use your navigation hierarchy to show Sitelinks in search results.

Google might take high traffic, relevant pages to show in Sitelinks. These could be pages like your “about”, “contact”, or “signup” pages.

3. Optimize Your Internal Linking Structure

A solid internal linking strategy is part of any “good” SEO strategy. When done properly and strategically, internal links pass value and “SEO juice” from one page to another. In Google’s eyes, your most important page will have the most internal links.

Following that logic, your second most relevant page with have the second most internal links according to Google. So a comprehensive internal linking strategy can possibly push Google into showing those top pages in Sitelinks.

Pro Tip: You can improve the quality of your sitelinks if your SEO uses optimized anchor text and alt text that’s informative, relevant, and not “stuffed” with keywords. Be sure to use this strategy is your main navigation as well. I often see many web developers or SEOs miss this trick. Use relevant and descriptive titles for your navigation.

The Google Webmaster Youtube page has a very insightful video on sitelinks that we recommend.

 

Top Stories:

 

Top Stories is a block of news articles relevant to a query. It appears in the top half of the SERP and includes time stamps and publisher names. Its incredibly difficult to be featured in this section of the SERP unless you are The New Yorker, Huffington Post, Washington Post, NPR, etc. so I won’t go into an optimization strategy for top stories. Part of the reason for this difficulty is that Top Stories is a feature of Google where they grab news stories from the most trusted sources. 

 

Top Stories SEO

SEO optimization for Top Stories doesn’t make much sense, but you can still capitalize on PR campaigns that bring your company into the limelight in certain news outlets. If you’ve got a product or some sort of conversion goal, you can build landing pages that can appropriately make use of the PR campaign efforts.

 

Images:

Just as with Video Snippets, Image Packs appear when Google thinks that visual content will serve for a more comprehensive results page.

How to Get your Image Seen according to Yoast

 

  • Pick the right file name for your image
  • Use a relevant image that matches your text
  • Make sure image dimension match the image size as displayed
  • Use srcset if possible
  • Reduce file size for faster loading
  • Add a caption for easier scanning of the page
  • Use an image alt text, the title text is optional
  • Add OpenGraph and Twitter Card tags for the image
  • Don’t break the left reading line using an image
  • Use images in your XML sitemaps

Yoast has a helpful article on this that goes much deeper.

 

Twitter:

Twitter


A couple of years back Google partnered with Twitter, and started to index tweets and started showing them in the SERPs. A pack of the most recent and trending tweets usually appears when it is somehow related to the query, like specific people, organizations or events. Optimization for tweets means that you should be tweeting as a company. Social outreach has become a massively benefical avenue for growing your organic following. Tap Clicks has an amazingly thorough guide to socials for marketers.

Knowledge Graph:


The Knowledge graph, while different from a snippet is an informational feature native to SERPs that provides an extensive answer to a specific question. It differs from a Featured Snippet in terms of the source of information. The Knowledge Panel along with some other SERP features is powered by the Knowledge Graph – Google’s database that gathers information from a variety of trustworthy sources.


knowledge graph


Rank Ranger has a good guide on knowledge panels on their blog. An entirely separate blog could be written on this densely packed feature of Google, so I suggest reading Rank Ranger’s blog post on knowledge panels to get additional information on this SERP feature. 

The Newest SERP Feature: Podcasts 


This search feature is brand new and it even has a native podcast player on search results. This specific feature adds a new layer of SEO optimization possibilities. Podcasts can now show up in snippet-type results. Google hasn’t unrolled the podcast SERP  universally but it’s Chrome browsers are the only browsers that generate these types of search results. The best place (and to my knowledge the only real knowledge source) for SEO podcast knowledge is straight to google. Podcasting hasn’t quite developed from an SEO perspective as featured snippets, but podcasting is something to keep an eye on in the ever-changing SERP environment. Google developers describe the new podcast SERP feature on their dev site if you’d like additional information.

Podcast SERP

I’ll include one more photo from the official Google blog because I’m a huge podcast nerd. This newest SERP feature will provide a whole new range of opportunities for the SEO world and it is definitely something we plan on following as it develops.

Podcasting with Google

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Additional Information: SEO Outside of the U.S.

Many of these features with featured snippets are not available outside of the US, so if you are doing SEO outside of the United States, keep your eye on the update when Google brings this over. We recommend optimizing for the rich snippets earlier rather than later.

US SERP v. UK SERP

 

 

 

 

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