Quality Raters are given query results via Google’s rating
Posted: Sun Jan 19, 2025 10:12 am
Mobile Matters: UI Difference and Perceived Quality Above, we’d touched upon mobile UI responsiveness. This tends to be lower on Google’s priority list when its Quality Raters get to business, but it does indeed matter. Google does, of course, pay full attention to every metric and mobile design, usability, navigability, and responsiveness are given an ample serving of scrutiny from the Internet titan. Google moved to mobile-first indexing back in March 2018.
This means that it began giving mobile pages priority over desktop pages, when index analysis enters the benin phone number data mix. But why so? It’s because mobile search frequency has officially overtaken desktop search frequency — and then some. In the past, mobile accessibility was considered to be more of a “glitz and glam” metric. Now, this is anything but the case, and the Quality Raters’ Guidelines does this paradigm shift justice in its depth of metrics to look out for.
toolkit on desktop, first. Then, they’re told to double down on their analysis via mobile. For now, this seems to remain a constant: Despite Google’s primary focus on mobile accessibility, it seemingly still considers desktop accessibility to be an underlying primary standard of comparison. It’s uncertain when this, too, will change but it’s fairly assumed that it will.
This means that it began giving mobile pages priority over desktop pages, when index analysis enters the benin phone number data mix. But why so? It’s because mobile search frequency has officially overtaken desktop search frequency — and then some. In the past, mobile accessibility was considered to be more of a “glitz and glam” metric. Now, this is anything but the case, and the Quality Raters’ Guidelines does this paradigm shift justice in its depth of metrics to look out for.
toolkit on desktop, first. Then, they’re told to double down on their analysis via mobile. For now, this seems to remain a constant: Despite Google’s primary focus on mobile accessibility, it seemingly still considers desktop accessibility to be an underlying primary standard of comparison. It’s uncertain when this, too, will change but it’s fairly assumed that it will.