Specifically, we wanted to see if
Posted: Thu Feb 13, 2025 10:16 am
"Search" links don't display the same snippets on the new SERP.
Since bubble snippets are technically providing answers to different queries than the original search term, we looked at کیا ظاہر ہوتا ہے جب ببل استفسار کلیدی لفظ تلاش کیا جاتا ہے۔
A when we clicked on the “Search” link in the bubble brazil number data , the subsequent SERP 1) had a featured snippet and 2) had a featured snippet that matched the snippet in the bubble it came from.
To do this, we re-tracked our 40,977 SERPs and then tracked their 224,508 bubble “search for” terms to make sure everything was happening at the same time.
The answers to our two main questions were as follows:
Strange, but true, although the bubble query was previously snippet-worthy on the relevant SERP, it wasn’t always snippet-worthy on its own SERP. 18.72 percent of “Search” links didn’t generate a featured snippet on the new SERP.
Stranger still, 78.11 percent of the time, the bubble snippet and its snippet on the subsequent SERP didn’t match — Google returned two different answers to the same query. In fact, the bubble URL appeared in just 20 results of the new SERP 31.68 percent of the time.
If we’re being honest, we’re not exactly sure what to make of all this. If you have a bubble snippet but not a subsequent SERP snippet, you’re clearly on Google’s radar for that keyword — but does that mean you’re next in line for full snippet status?
And if the roles are reversed, you own the keyword fragments but not when it's in the bubble, is your fragment at risk? Let us know what you think!
Since bubble snippets are technically providing answers to different queries than the original search term, we looked at کیا ظاہر ہوتا ہے جب ببل استفسار کلیدی لفظ تلاش کیا جاتا ہے۔
A when we clicked on the “Search” link in the bubble brazil number data , the subsequent SERP 1) had a featured snippet and 2) had a featured snippet that matched the snippet in the bubble it came from.
To do this, we re-tracked our 40,977 SERPs and then tracked their 224,508 bubble “search for” terms to make sure everything was happening at the same time.
The answers to our two main questions were as follows:
Strange, but true, although the bubble query was previously snippet-worthy on the relevant SERP, it wasn’t always snippet-worthy on its own SERP. 18.72 percent of “Search” links didn’t generate a featured snippet on the new SERP.
Stranger still, 78.11 percent of the time, the bubble snippet and its snippet on the subsequent SERP didn’t match — Google returned two different answers to the same query. In fact, the bubble URL appeared in just 20 results of the new SERP 31.68 percent of the time.
If we’re being honest, we’re not exactly sure what to make of all this. If you have a bubble snippet but not a subsequent SERP snippet, you’re clearly on Google’s radar for that keyword — but does that mean you’re next in line for full snippet status?
And if the roles are reversed, you own the keyword fragments but not when it's in the bubble, is your fragment at risk? Let us know what you think!