Effective today, Google will penalize mobile sites with intrusive pop-up ads. Google announced this update last August, and said it would take effect today—January 10. The Webmaster Central Blog stated,
Pages that show intrusive interstitials provide a poorer experience to users than other pages where content is immediately accessible. This can be problematic on mobile devices where screens are often smaller. To improve the mobile search experience, after January 10, 2017, pages where content is not easily accessible to a user on the transition from the mobile search results may not rank as highly.
On the internet, an interstitial is a page that appears before the expected content. Interstitials that qualify as “intrusive,” and that will penalize websites include:
Features that will not harm a page’s organic ranking include:
Google has acknowledged two circumstances wherein the penalty may not apply.
First, Google has specified that pop-up ads will cause a decline in rankings when they, “cover the main content immediately after the user navigates to a page from the search results, or he/she is looking through the page.” John Mueller later confirmed that exit-intent popup ads won’t trigger this penalty.
What we’re looking for is really interstitials that show up on the interaction between the search click and going through the page and seeing the content. So that’s kind of the the place we’re looking for those interstitials. What you do afterwards like if someone clicks on stuff within your website or closes the tab or something like that then that’s kind of between you and the user.—John Mueller
Secondly, the original Google announcement reminds marketers that the change is just one of 200+ ranking signals. The new interstitials signal isn’t going to de facto penalize authoritative sites with really great content that meet the user’s need.
The intent of the search query is still a very strong signal, so a page may still rank highly if it has great, relevant content.—Doantam Phan
If your site has non-essential interstitials that delay the user’s access to content, it’s time to reevaluate that strategy. If your pop-up produces a lot of good leads, and you don’t see rankings slipping at first, it will be tempting to ignore the warnings. But if the short history of SEO has proven anything, it’s that Google gets what Google wants. Resistance has consistently proven futile.
A/B test some alternatives to discover what works best for you and your audience:
Google wants to provide the best user experience, and users hate pop-ups. If a site’s content is truly exceptional, you may not notice a slip in rankings right away. But as the competition gets rid of their intrusive interstitials and continues to improve their content, Google’s favor will change sides.
Google continues to prove their dedication to a mobile-first marketplace, and to the user experience. Users have spoken—they like mobile and they don’t like pop-ups—and Google is responding.
And remember, Google is testing and planning to roll out mobile-first indexing. That means that while this update currently only affects mobile rankings, it’s about to affect desktop rankings as well.
Start reviewing the pop-ups on the brand’s site on a mobile device to see if they’re about to set the rankings back. If so, set up a few banners, a few exit interstitials, and a few content CTAs to start testing which engages your audience the best.
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