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Google Cancels Mobile-First Switchover

Google Cancels Date For Mobile-First Switchover

Google Cancels Date For Mobile-First Switchover.
Google has announced that the deadline for the switch to a completely mobile-first index has been cancelled and there is currently no date for a final switchover. Postponing the final switch to a mobile-first index was done to accommodate the remaining websites that have not yet been updated to a mobile-friendly version.

The mobile-first index was intended to be an index of web pages that are mobile-friendly to be used for ranking purposes and for search-related features like the snippets.

Google Cancels Mobile-First Switchover

Delay in Date For Mobile-First Switchover
The reason for moving to a mobile-first index was to better serve the majority of Google search users who primarily used mobile devices to access Google. The problem Google was solving was the one of showing search results from websites whose desktop version that was indexed varied significantly from the mobile versions shown to searchers on mobile devices.

Google noted in 2016:

“…our ranking systems still typically look at the desktop version of a page’s content to evaluate its relevance to the user.

This can cause issues when the mobile page has less content than the desktop page because our algorithms are not evaluating the actual page that is seen by a mobile searcher.”

The original idea was to completely move website indexing and web page ranking to 100% mobile-friendly documents and not use the content from the desktop versions for ranking and indexing.

However that goal has been set aside for the time being and the timeline, according to Google, is being left open-ended. The date for the switchover to a fully mobile-first index was March 2021. However, that date came and went.

A new blog post from Google (written by John Mueller) announced that the final date for a switch to a 100% mobile-first search index has been set aside, essentially cancelling a launch target date for a switchover.

The announcement stated:

“..after analyzing the sites that are not yet indexed mobile-first, we’ve determined that some of these sites are still not ready to be shifted over due to various, unexpected challenges that they’re facing.

Because of these difficulties, we’ve decided to leave the timeline open for the last steps of mobile-first indexing.

…we thought that we could complete the move to mobile-first indexing by March 2021. However, we found that some sites were facing unexpectedly difficult challenges and we wanted to accommodate their timelines.

We currently don’t have a specific final date for the move to mobile-first indexing and want to be thoughtful about the remaining bigger steps in that direction.”

Google’s indexing in the News
Google’s indexing has been in the news lately and is a topic of concern and discussion on social media, with the perception being that Google’s indexing has changed.

The search marketing community has been concerned about search indexing for the past month, with many sharing that it has become increasingly difficult to have content indexed by Google, with search marketers from around the world sharing data that seemingly proves that Google is indexing less content.

Bing announced a new crawling protocol called IndexNow that promises major changes to how web pages are discovered and indexed. Google subsequently announced that they will study if there are any benefits to adopting the new IndexNow crawling and indexing protocol.

It appears that for now, Google does not currently have firm plans for switching over to a fully mobile-first search index. Google did not share statistics for how many sites have failed to develop a mobile-friendly web presence but it must be a significant number for Google to resist leaving those websites behind in a move to a mobile-first index.

Source: Search Engine Journal

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