How to Read a Google Algorithm Update
Where to find reliable information and how to check your own data.
Every algorithm update triggers a flood of expert analysis. Most of it is guesswork. Here’s how to separate signal from noise and figure out what actually changed for your site.
Google rolls out algorithm updates constantly. Some are minor tweaks. Some are major core updates that reshuffle the rankings for millions of queries overnight.
Every time a big one drops, the same cycle plays out. SEO Twitter erupts. Blog posts appear within hours claiming to explain exactly what changed. Self-appointed experts publish lists of “winners and losers.” Everyone has a theory.
Most of it is speculation. Here’s how to actually make sense of an algorithm update.
Start with Google’s own announcements.
Google pre-announces most major updates on the Google Search Status Dashboard. They also post about updates on the Google Search Central blog. If Google hasn’t announced anything there, whatever you’re seeing in your rankings may not be a confirmed update at all — it could be normal fluctuation, a data refresh, or just noise.
This is your first filter. Before you react to anything, check whether Google has actually confirmed an update is rolling out.
Check your own data, not someone else’s.
The most useful thing you can do during an update is look at your own Google Search Console. Not a third-party tool. Not someone’s Twitter thread about what they’re seeing. Your data.
Go to Search Console > Performance and look at your clicks, impressions, CTR, and average position over the last 28 days. Compare it to the previous period. Are your numbers actually moving, or are you just anxious because you read a scary headline?
If your traffic and rankings are stable, the update may not have affected you at all. Many updates target specific content types or quality issues — if you’re not in the blast radius, there’s nothing to fix.
If you are affected, don’t panic.
Algorithm updates often take two to three weeks to fully roll out. Rankings can fluctuate wildly during a rollout and then settle back down. Knee-jerk reactions — rewriting pages, disavowing links, overhauling your site structure — can make things worse, not better.
Wait for the dust to settle. Look at which specific pages lost visibility, and for which queries. That tells you far more than any generic “the update targeted X” blog post.
Why most expert commentary is noise.
No one outside of Google knows exactly what changed in a core update. Google’s ranking system involves thousands of signals processed by machine learning models that even Google’s own engineers can’t fully explain in simple terms.
When someone publishes a confident analysis 48 hours after an update starts rolling out — before it’s even finished — they’re pattern-matching, not reporting facts. They’re looking at a handful of sites, noticing trends, and building narratives. Sometimes those narratives are useful. Often they’re wrong, or they confuse correlation with causation.
The reliable information comes later: Google’s own documentation of what they’re targeting, your own data showing what actually changed for your sites, and careful analysis over weeks, not hours.
One trend worth watching.
Across the last several core updates, one pattern has held up consistently: Google is placing increasing weight on user engagement signals. How people interact with search results — what they click, how long they stay, whether they come back to the SERP — matters more with each iteration.
This is not surprising. Google has said explicitly, under oath, that click data affects rankings. Each update appears to refine how they use that data. For anyone investing in CTR optimization, this is a trend moving in the right direction.
The practical takeaway.
When the next update hits: check Google’s official channels first, look at your own Search Console data second, ignore the hot takes, and give it time. If your fundamentals are solid — good content, strong engagement signals, a site that users actually want to visit — you’re more likely to benefit from updates than be hurt by them.
SerpClix uses an army of over 400,000 real human clickers to boost your organic CTR. Get started with a free trial or log in to your dashboard to set up your next click order.
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