SEO Tutorial

Google Algorithm Updates — The Complete SEO Tutorial

Every major Google algorithm explained — what it targets, when it launched, and exactly what SEOs need to do about it. Updated for 2026.

By Sanoop Balan · Digital Marketing Strategist & SEO Expert

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SEO Professionals

Keeping up with algorithm changes and adapting strategies.

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Business Owners

Understand why your rankings changed and how to recover.

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SEO Students

Learning SEO with a structured reference guide.

30+
Algorithms Covered
28
Years of History
May
2026 Updated

Core Updates vs. Named Updates

Before diving into the timeline, it is critical to understand one key distinction that most beginners confuse:

Core Updates: Broad quality assessments that Google runs a few times a year. They don't target specific spam signals; instead, they reassess the overall quality and relevance of web pages based on user intent and E-E-A-T.

Named Algorithm Updates: Specific systems designed to target specific problems. For example, Panda targeted thin content, Penguin targeted spammy backlinks, and Pigeon targeted local search accuracy.

Quick Navigation

What Is a Google Algorithm?

Google uses a complex system of algorithms to retrieve data from its search index and instantly deliver the best possible results for a query. This system looks at 6 critical signals:

1. Meaning of the Query

Identifying intent and understanding what the user is actually looking for (Hummingbird, BERT, MUM).

2. Relevance of Content

Analysing keywords and topics to match queries with relevant pages (Panda, Helpful Content).

3. Quality of Content

Evaluating depth, originality, and trustworthiness (E-E-A-T, Core Updates).

4. Usability of Content

Measuring page speed, mobile-friendliness, and stability (Page Experience, Core Web Vitals).

5. Context of Content

Considering user location, search history, and personalization (RankBrain).

6. Trustworthiness of the Source

Evaluating backlink authority and detecting manipulation (Penguin, SpamBrain).

Note: Google makes 500–600 small changes per year. This tutorial covers only the named, confirmed updates that have had a measurable impact on SEO rankings.

Core Update

March 2024 Core Update

Launched: March 2024 · Status: Fully Rolled Out

Google targeted scaled, AI-generated low-quality content and expired domain abuse. This was one of the largest updates in recent years, leading to significant rank shuffles and de-indexing of pure AI spam sites.

The Algorithm Timeline

A complete chronological timeline of Google's major updates from 1998 to the present.

Era 1 — The Foundation (1998–2010)

PageRank

Core System
Launched: 1998
What It Did

Ranked pages by the number and quality of inbound links. It was the foundation of Google's search engine.

The Problem Solved

Existing search engines relied on simple on-page keyword density, which was easily manipulated.

What SEOs Should Do

Focus on earning high-quality, relevant backlinks from authoritative sites.

Florida

Spam Update
Launched: 2003
What It Did

First major update to fight keyword stuffing, hidden text, and link manipulation.

Who Was Affected

Sites using aggressive on-page spam tactics saw massive ranking drops overnight.

What SEOs Should Do

Write naturally for users, not for search bots. Avoid stuffing keywords.

Jagger

Spam Update
Launched: 2005
What It Did

Targeted link farms, paid links, and reciprocal link schemes.

What SEOs Should Do

Avoid automated link building and participation in link networks.

BigDaddy

Technical Update
Launched: 2006
What It Did

Infrastructure update that improved how Google crawled and indexed large websites.

What SEOs Should Do

Ensure clean URL structures and fast server response times for efficient crawling.

Vince

Core Update
Launched: 2009
What It Did

Started favouring big brand authority in search results for broad queries.

The Problem Solved

Google wanted to prioritize trusted brands over anonymous small sites for generic terms.

What SEOs Should Do

Build real-world brand authority, brand searches, and offline recognition.

Era 2 — The Quality Wars (2011–2013)

Panda

Content Quality
Launched: 2011
What It Did

Penalised thin, duplicate, low-quality content and content farms.

Who Was Affected

Affiliate sites with thin content, scraped content sites, and directories.

What SEOs Should Do

Create in-depth, original content. Consolidate or delete thin pages.

Penguin

Link Spam
Launched: 2012
What It Did

Penalised spammy, manipulative backlinks and exact-match anchor text abuse.

Who Was Affected

Sites that bought links or used automated link networks.

What SEOs Should Do

Audit your backlink profile. Disavow toxic links. Use diverse anchor text.

Venice

Local Search
Launched: 2012
What It Did

Integrated local signals and Google Maps intent directly into localized organic search results.

What SEOs Should Do

Optimize for local intent. Set up and optimize Google Business Profile.

Pirate

Spam Update
Launched: 2012
What It Did

Demoted sites with excessive copyright removal (DMCA) notices.

Hummingbird

Semantic Search
Launched: 2013
What It Did

Shifted Google to semantic search — understanding query intent rather than just matching keywords.

What SEOs Should Do

Answer specific questions. Cover topics in-depth. Use natural language.

Payday Loan

Spam Update
Launched: 2013
What It Did

Targeted high-spam niches like payday loans, pharmaceuticals, and gambling.

Era 3 — Mobile, Local & Semantic (2014–2016)

Pigeon

Local Search
Launched: 2014
What It Did

Improved accuracy and relevance of local search results. Tied local signals closer to traditional web signals.

What SEOs Should Do

Build local citations. Ensure NAP (Name, Address, Phone) consistency.

Mobile Update ("Mobilegeddon")

Mobile & UX
Launched: 2015
What It Did

Boosted mobile-friendly pages in mobile search results. Penalized sites that were unusable on phones.

RankBrain

AI Update
Launched: 2015
What It Did

An AI system used to interpret complex, conversational, and completely novel search queries.

Possum

Local Search
Launched: 2016
What It Did

Filtered duplicate local listings and expanded the search radius for local queries.

Era 4 — Speed, AI & Experience (2017–2020)

Fred

Spam Update
Launched: 2017
What It Did

Targeted low-value content sites created primarily for ad revenue with poor user experience.

Mobile Speed Update

Speed
Launched: 2018
What It Did

Made page speed a direct ranking factor for mobile searches.

Medic

Core Update
Launched: 2018
What It Did

A core update that heavily affected YMYL (Your Money or Your Life) sites, particularly in health and finance.

BERT

AI Update
Launched: 2019
What It Did

A Natural Language Processing (NLP) model used to understand the context and nuance of words in a query.

Core Updates (Ongoing)

Core Update
Launched: 2019–Present
What It Did

Broad quality re-assessments of entire domains based on overall value and user satisfaction.

Era 5 — Helpful Content & SpamBrain (2021–2023)

Page Experience Update

UX & Speed
Launched: 2021
What It Did

Made Core Web Vitals (LCP, FID/INP, CLS) official ranking signals.

MUM

AI Update
Launched: 2021
What It Did

Multimodal AI designed to handle complex, cross-format queries.

Helpful Content Update

Content Quality
Launched: 2022
What It Did

Demoted content written primarily for search engines (SEO-first) rather than for human readers.

SpamBrain

AI Spam Detection
Launched: 2022
What It Did

AI-powered spam detection system that replaced many manual spam signals.

Link Spam Update

Link Spam
Launched: 2022
What It Did

Devalued large-scale unnatural link building schemes.

Product Reviews Update

Content Quality
Launched: 2021–2022
What It Did

Rewarded in-depth, first-hand product review content.

Era 6 — The AI Era (2023–Present)

Core Updates (2023)

Core Update
Launched: March, Aug, Nov 2023
What It Did

Major quality reassessments leading to significant rank shuffles.

Helpful Content Integrated

Core System
Launched: 2023
What It Did

The Helpful Content System was absorbed directly into the core ranking system.

Core Updates (2024)

Core Update
Launched: March, Aug 2024
What It Did

Targeted scaled, AI-generated low-quality content and expired domain abuse.

AI Overviews (SGE Launch)

UI & AI Update
Launched: 2024
What It Did

AI-generated answers began appearing above traditional organic results.

The Algorithms That Matter Most Today

1. Core Updates — The Most Misunderstood Algorithm

Most SEOs panic every time Google announces a core update without understanding what it actually assesses.

Core updates evaluate **overall page and domain quality**. If your rankings change but you haven't changed your pages, it means Google has reassessed pages that were previously ranking too high or too low relative to others. Recovery takes time — often until the next core update rolls out.

2. Helpful Content System

The shift from "is this page keyword-optimised?" to "was this written for a human with genuine intent?"

Google looks for content that provides a satisfying experience. Ask yourself: Would a reader feel they learned enough to achieve their goal? Is the content written from first-hand experience?

3. E-E-A-T (Framework)

Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness underpin how Google evaluates content decisions.

Ensure both **page-level** E-E-A-T (author bios, citations) and **site-level** E-E-A-T (about page, contact details, real-world reviews) are clear and verifiable.

4. Penguin / Link Spam

How Google evaluates links today is vastly different from the early PageRank days.

SpamBrain now devalues manipulative links rather than just penalizing the site. Focus on earned links from real, authoritative sources rather than scale link building.

5. AI Overviews — The Future of Search

AI answers appearing above organic results mean clicks are dropping even when rankings hold.

To optimize for inclusion, answer specific questions directly, use clear structured formats, and build strong entity authority in your niche.

How to Track Algorithm Updates

Official Channels: Monitor the Google Search Status Dashboard, @SearchLiaison on X/Twitter, and the official Google Search Central Blog.

Third-Party Tools: Use Semrush Sensor, Mozcast, or Accuranker to detect unconfirmed volatility spikes.

Penalty Diagnosis: Cross-reference your GSC traffic drops with known update dates. Segment your data by device and country to isolate the cause.

The "Wait Rule": Core updates often take 1–2 weeks to fully roll out. Never make major site changes on Day 1 of an announced update.

Algorithm Impact Table

Algorithm Primary Target Typical Recovery Recovery Action
Panda Thin / duplicate content 3–6 Months Improve depth, remove thin pages
Penguin Spammy backlinks Months (Real-time) Audit profile, disavow toxic links
Hummingbird Keyword stuffing Immediate Rewrite for semantic intent
Pigeon / Possum Local listings Weeks GBP optimization, citation cleanup
Helpful Content SEO-first AI content Months Add first-hand value and depth

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a Core Update and a named update?

Core updates are broad re-assessments of quality. Named updates (like Panda or Penguin) were specific systems targeting specific spam or quality problems.

How do I know if my site was hit by an update?

Compare your Google Search Console traffic data drops with the exact dates Google announced an update. If they correlate, you were likely affected.

Does E-E-A-T directly affect rankings?

E-E-A-T is not a single ranking score, but a framework human evaluators use to grade search quality. It informs the algorithms Google builds.

How long does it take to recover from a penalty?

It depends. Technical fixes take weeks. Quality and Helpful Content recoveries usually take months and often require waiting for the next update to roll out.

Get in Touch

I respond to every enquiry personally. You can expect a reply within 24 hours on working days. For faster response, WhatsApp is the best way to reach me.

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Please remember that in most cases my responses will not be immediate. I do my best to respond within 24 hours. Based in Kozhikode, Kerala — working globally.