What Does Google’s March 2019 Core Update Mean for Your Website?

by

3–5 minutes

read

Earlier this week, Google confirmed that a broad core algorithm update was released on March 12, 2019. While search marketers were originally referring to this update as “Update Florida 2” as it is the second Google algorithm update that has coincided with the popular, annual SEO conference, Pubcon Florida, Google’s official name for this update is the “March 2019 Core Update”.

What is a Broad Core Update?

Broad core updates are refinements to Google’s overall algorithm to better understand search queries and user intent and the site pages that will best satisfy the queries. These improvements help Google to provide better, more relevant results or “answers” to search queries which enable Google to achieve its primary goal of providing the best possible experience for its users.

Past notable algorithm updates like “Penguin” and “Panda” have targeted specific factors within Google’s algorithm like links and content, respectively. Broad core updates are more about the algorithm as a whole.

While some search marketers speculate that algorithm updates are designed around specific industries or niches, Google states that broad core algorithm updates do not target anything specific (i.e. industry, niche, ranking signals, etc.). Although Google claims that broad core algorithm updates are released several times a year, the last, publicly confirmed broad core update took place on August 1, 2018.

Post-Update SERP Volatility

According to the information provided by Google, the March 2019 Core Update is one of the biggest updates that the search engine has released in years. When Google has implemented major algorithm overhauls in the past, sites can experience significant position changes in the search results. However, the tools we use to monitor algorithm updates have yet to report the usual above average volatility that sites experience during a general, unconfirmed Google algorithm update.

REQ Google March Update SERP Volatility

How Did the Algorithm Change with this Update?

It is too soon to tell how the algorithm was specifically updated, but Google will generally divulge some details after it has rolled out major changes to its algorithm. The search industry predicts that Google will likely share general information about how the algorithm has evolved with this update in the upcoming months.

Since the update was released, members of the search industry have been very active online, sharing observations and speculating about how the algorithm was likely changed. According to some leaders in the SEO industry, the March 2019 Core Update may be a rollback of some of the more recent algorithm updates rather than a “broad core” update, as many sites are reporting improvements or recoveries from their position changes after previous algorithm updates. Other industry experts have proposed the possibility of a connection between backlink quality and rankings as there were reports of aggressive spidering by GoogleBot leading up to this update. There was also speculation around possible changes to E-A-T (expertise, authoritativeness, trustworthiness) combined with user intent, which would indicate that Google is focusing more on relevancy.  

The exact changes will never be fully known, but we will likely be able to infer some of the bigger elements that this algorithm update touched within the next week or two once it has been fully rolled out.

What Are the Next Steps?

Major Google algorithm updates occur several times a year, but Google representatives have not offered specific recommendations on what webmasters should change if their sites appear to have been negatively impacted by the March 2019 Core Update.  

A representative from Google offered the same guidance shared during the March 2018 broad core updates: there is nothing to do to address or “fix” the pages that were negatively impacted by the algorithm update aside from continuing to focus on producing “great content.” Creating and publishing quality content continues to be top of mind when it comes to Google’s algorithm, which is aligned with the search engine’s focus on user satisfaction.

With any Google algorithm update, it is best to not make drastic changes to a site until we are able to gather more information and see the residual, more lasting effect of the update. During this time, we will continue to monitor sites’ organic traffic and keyword rankings for major changes. We are also in the process of auditing the backlinks of each site in search of unnatural links to disavow in Google Search Console. From Google’s perspective, updates to its algorithm improve the quality of search results. Per Google’s recommendation, our focus will continue to be on the quality and relevance of the content published on our clients’ sites.

The CMO Who Gave Up Sales Pitches to Build Real Relationships

The CMO Who Gave Up Sales Pitches to Build Real Relationships

Chatting with Nathan Burke of 7AI on why relationship-building outperforms traditional B2B marketing Nathan Burke is intentionally doing less of what most B2B marketers are taught to do. As CMO of 7AI, he’s opting out of the usual B2B playbook, the awkward steak dinners with a pitch attached, the conference badge scanning arms race, and…

How UVEye’s Unicorn Drives Trade Show Excitement

How UVEye’s Unicorn Drives Trade Show Excitement

Trade shows are crowded. Competitive. Expensive. Every booth promises innovation. Every brand is trying to stand out to the sea of overwhelmed and tired attendees. For AI-driven vehicle inspection company UVEye, standing out meant not just thinking creatively. It meant creating a unicorn. UVEye calls its technology an “MRI for cars.” It provides AI-driven technology that…

How WalkMe’s Melanie Pasch Humanized the Enterprise AI Adoption Problem with “AI Shame”

How WalkMe’s Melanie Pasch Humanized the Enterprise AI Adoption Problem with “AI Shame”

Ask an executive how many software applications their company uses, and they’ll probably guess 30 or 40. The average organization, according to research by digital adoption platform (DAP) pioneer WalkMe, actually runs about 625 applications. This staggering digital ecosystem is where most tech investments stall, not because the technology is poor, but because employees can’t…

From $200M ARR to Pre-Seed: How Karina Lawrence Rewrites the Marketing Playbook for Early-Stage Startups

From $200M ARR to Pre-Seed: How Karina Lawrence Rewrites the Marketing Playbook for Early-Stage Startups

When you’ve helped scale a developer-focused company from roughly $200M to nearly $250M in ARR, you know what “grown-up” marketing looks like. Today, though, Karina Lawrence is back at the very beginning—leading marketing at Macrovo, a pre-seed, ~10-person startup that blends AI and human expertise to help financial institutions make faster, smarter decisions. It’s a…

B2B Videos You Actually Want to Watch? Meet Jared Evers of Medallia.

B2B Videos You Actually Want to Watch? Meet Jared Evers of Medallia.

For Jared Evers and his small and scrappy content team at Medallia – provider of customer and experience software – if you can’t do something stellar, there’s no sense in doing it at all. For proof, check out how the team is pushing the boundaries of corporate videos with Experience Now, Medallia’s own streaming platform.…

How HII’s Jaime Orlando Builds Connection, Culture, and Momentum Inside a Legacy Brand

How HII’s Jaime Orlando Builds Connection, Culture, and Momentum Inside a Legacy Brand

Q: Jaime, for those who might not know HII Mission Technologies, can you give us a quick overview of what your team does? Jaime Orlando Absolutely. HII as a company has an incredible legacy. It’s America’s largest shipbuilder, with more than 135 years of experience. About 75% of HII’s business comes from shipbuilding at our…

How Jenifer Kern Helped Qu Redefine Restaurant Tech

How Jenifer Kern Helped Qu Redefine Restaurant Tech

On the Radar sat down with Jenifer Kern, CMO of Qu, to talk about how she helped create a new category in restaurant technology, why maintaining industry focus has been key to business growth, and what it means to elevate marketing in a longstanding industry undergoing rapid transformation. Q: When you joined Qu, what did the industry…

From The New York Times to Muck Rack: Linda Zebian on Knowing What’s Newsworthy

From The New York Times to Muck Rack: Linda Zebian on Knowing What’s Newsworthy

Linda Zebian knows how to tell a good story. As VP of Communications at Muck Rack, she leads a lean, high-impact team responsible for brand, content, product marketing, internal comms, and more. Her approach is grounded in the instincts she developed over 10 years in corporate comms at The New York Times, where she learned…

How Sam Baldridge is Turning Culture Into a Competitive Edge

How Sam Baldridge is Turning Culture Into a Competitive Edge

At Applied Systems, Sam Baldridge wears a lot of hats. Officially, she’s the Senior Communications and Culture Specialist. Unofficially, she might be better known as the “Vibes Director.” Sam is part of a small but mighty three-person team tasked with building internal connection, shaping employer branding, and turning culture into a competitive advantage.  We caught…

How Kristina McConnell Uses Precision and AI to Power Account-Based Marketing at H1

How Kristina McConnell Uses Precision and AI to Power Account-Based Marketing at H1

A Director of Marketing at H1, Kristina McConnell brings structure, creativity, and a test-and-learn mindset to every campaign she touches. With a small team and a niche audience in the pharma space, she has helped transform H1’s account-based marketing (ABM) approach into a tightly aligned, data-driven engine. Her team goes far beyond basic alignment with sales.…

CONTACT US
CONTACT US

WE HELP BRANDS OWN WHAT’S NEXT

Our integrated PR and digital campaigns build reputations, drive growth, and shape conversations that define markets. Let’s talk about how we can help you do the same.