Post by shikharani00189 on Oct 31, 2024 5:42:32 GMT
Google published an article on its Search blog on February 28, 2018 to indicate that the results of the coveted Position 0 by SEOs will propose multiple answers if the queries are multi-intent . In other words, if a query is too general or the words it contains have several possible interpretations, Google will propose several adapted answers.
It can happen that questions or queries are double-edged . For a human, this off page seo service kind of sentence can already be difficult to interpret in terms of meaning, so imagine for algorithms (even those with artificial intelligence). This is why Google has decided to respond to several interpretations if the original query is too broad to offer only one precise answer. Google provides an example with the question "does the garden need full sun?", which can actually suggest several sub-questions such as "Which plants in the garden need full sun?" or "What counts in case of full sun?". The search engine no longer bothers and answers both questions directly... :-)
Google Featured Snippet Multi Faceted for Multiple Answers in SERPs
Google talks about nuanced queries to evoke the multi-search intent . In English, we also see the term " Featured snippets multi-faceted " to evoke the multi-faceted extracts that will be presented by the search engine. If Google is not yet precise enough, a block of related questions will be displayed just below the answer suggestions in order to guide the user towards a more precise question.
For the moment, no faceted snippet has appeared to me in France, and the article does not specify if the functionality is only available in the United States. In theory, we should therefore start to see this kind of multiple answers in the SERPs very soon. What worries me is that we are increasingly tending towards the answer engine so desired by Google, and Position 0 risks becoming "Position 0 to 3" at this rate , with more and more space used by Google for its own answers, to the detriment of organic results. The problem is becoming serious and raises the real question of the natural referencing of the future...