|  Google Instant Preview is a new feature  following the last September’s introduction of Google Instant which completes  searches while they're being typed into Google's search field, with the goal of  considerably reducing time spent searching.
 Google's own research has revealed that  on average searchers using Google Instant Preview are 5% more likely to be  satisfied with the search results they click after seeing a visual preview next  to the organic listing. Google Instant Preview basically gives  users the facility to view a website before they visit it. Google accomplishes  this by taking a screenshot of every webpage in its index and giving users  access to it via a magnifying glass icon that sits to the right of every search  result. When a user clicks on the magnifying  glass icon, a screenshot of the webpage in question will appear to the right of  the search result listing - a snapshot view of the website page without  actually having to visit the webpage. One of the key elements to Instant  Previews is that Google sometimes highlights a section of the page where the  page description occurs. This becomes a useful feature when you're trying to  find information on a specific person on a page that lists dozens or hundreds  of people. Instead of having to scroll through the entire page to find the  person, you can just look at the Instant Preview and see where the information  appears on the page. "We realised early on that this  kind of experience would only make sense if it was lightning fast. Not long ago  simply downloading an image could take 20 or 30 seconds, and even today many  websites take four or five seconds to load," Raj Krishnan, Product Manager  wrote in the Google Blog. "With Google Instant Preview, we match a search  query with an index of the entire web, identify the relevant parts of each  webpage, stitch them together and serve the resulting preview completely customized  to your search--usually in under one-tenth of a second." Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) expert  Peter Bowen says, "while Google Instant Preview is designed to speed up  the searching process what it actually does is to speed up the decision-making  process of choosing whether or not to click on the link by previewing the  visual screenshot of the resulting webpage." "Google currently provides a lot  more data to help the searcher. At one time search engines just displayed the  first two lines from a webpage under a search result, but now they include  information like site links, date, cached content, jump to links and even  Google Places." Instant Previews can be helpful for  many kinds of tasks. For example, say you looked at a page before and need to  find it again - with a preview, you can tell if any of the results look familiar.  Or perhaps you're looking for an official website - look for a logo and formal  style and you'll probably be able to identify it. Or maybe you're looking for a  how-to guide - it's easy to spot a page with clear illustrations and step-by-step  instructions. From an SEO perspective the big  question is how will Google Instant Preview affect our understanding of  traditional SEO, and what changes should we consider making to webpages so that  they can be easily previewed in a tiny screenshot?
 When a searcher performs a search and  sees the search results page displayed, they do have a choice of whether or not  to activate the Google Instant Preview feature by clicking on the magnifying  glass icon.
 "However, clicking on the  magnifying glass icon is less of a commitment than clicking on a link, and you  still need to convince the searcher that it is worth their time to preview a website"  says Peter Bowen. "Therefore it becomes more important than ever to have a  well defined and well written description of what the website page is about and  it has to fit within the 150 character limit. So the Meta  content description is what you will have to change and be aware of here." Flash is not SEO friendly because it  cannot be read by search engines and is even worse for Instant Preview as it  shows as a black rectangle and cannot be rendered. The same is true for video  files that also display a black rectangle in the preview, so consideration of  this is important too. It should be pointed out that because  the image size of the screenshot is so small, unless the text in headings is  large enough, it will be impossible to read. So what does all this mean? Well, we  have to start thinking about the overall page layout and if it looks good at  postage stamp size or if it is just a blur of text with no images to make it  look appealing. This means creating pages that pay more attention to  navigation, titles and headers, spacing, colours and objects, such as “click  here” buttons. Now, having a page that looks good with relevant titles now may  count as much as the content on the page itself. It is likely that we will begin to see  a lot more webpages with well defined graphics and other visual aids designed  to get a searcher's attention. This makes SEO even more important than ever –  you should check your website to make sure that your images are named with  keywords and have descriptive and accurate alt text (the text that appears when  you run your mouse over an image on the page) Google Instant Preview is  here to stay and designed to make the search selection process easier and  according to Google faster, but in the end, good SEO practices are what is  going make the difference of whether or not you get discovered on the search engine  results pages.  If your website has been  online for sometime and is not regularly updated, it’s probably time for an SEO  check-up – talk to us about what is involved. |