4 thoughts on “Content specialization – the secret to success for websites and blogs”
Posted: Sun Jan 05, 2025 5:58 am
Then you have to select the one that seems most likely for your target group. And there are a few other subcategories (visit-in-person searches are very location-based, website intent shows websites as a result, etc.) Again in detail In classic SEO work, a distinction is made between informational, transactional, commercial, navigational and brand keywords. As mentioned above, Google breaks this down to Do (transactional), Know (informational) and Go (navigational - the visitor wants to go to a specific page, e.
g. the brand's website or a page with directions). As far as india mobile phone numbers database intention goes, commercial searches are do-intentions and with brands it depends on the brand (usually Go). For me, the further gradations therefore make no sense and probably not really for Google at the moment either. The issue of search intent can sometimes seem very complex and depends on many factors. Google determines the intent based on the user's location and device, as well as the context and semantic relationships within the search query.
With Google's latest Fred update, the search engine has made further progress here and understands the user even better. At least in the way that an algorithm can understand a user, because YouTube constantly does NOT show me videos from subscribed channels, even though I would like to see the videos. But if the algorithm thinks I'm not clicking enough on the channel's videos, Google knows better than I do. In this sense, I would never take search intent per se too seriously.
g. the brand's website or a page with directions). As far as india mobile phone numbers database intention goes, commercial searches are do-intentions and with brands it depends on the brand (usually Go). For me, the further gradations therefore make no sense and probably not really for Google at the moment either. The issue of search intent can sometimes seem very complex and depends on many factors. Google determines the intent based on the user's location and device, as well as the context and semantic relationships within the search query.
With Google's latest Fred update, the search engine has made further progress here and understands the user even better. At least in the way that an algorithm can understand a user, because YouTube constantly does NOT show me videos from subscribed channels, even though I would like to see the videos. But if the algorithm thinks I'm not clicking enough on the channel's videos, Google knows better than I do. In this sense, I would never take search intent per se too seriously.