Google publishes document on more notable ranking systems

Google has published a new help document that talks about the more “notable” ranking systems Google has deployed over the years that are both currently in use and no longer in use in Google Search. The document is named a guide to Google Search ranking systems.

Ranking systems in use. The document specifies that these are the ranking systems that are currently in use at Google Search. Google also provides a brief explanation of each ranking system. Note, some of these are multiple systems and some are single systems

BERTCrisis Information systemsDeduplication systemsExact match domain systemFreshness systemHelpful content systemLink analysis systems and PageRankLocal news systemMUMNeural matchingOriginal content systemRemoval-based demotion system including legal removals and personal information removalsPage experience systemPassage ranking systemProduct reviews systemRankBrainReliable information systemsSite diversity systemSpam detection systems

Retired ranking systems. Here are some of the old ranking systems that are either no longer in use, or incorporated into new systems. Such as the page experience system replaced the old page speed system:

HummingbirdMobile-friendly ranking systemPage speed systemPanda systemPenguin systemSecure site system

Why we care. This is super useful to see what larger ranking systems are still in use and what is no longer in use. This list is also useful to see how Google defines each system, how it is used and what it means for Google Search.

The post Google publishes document on more notable ranking systems appeared first on Search Engine Land.