The timing raised eyebrows in the SEO community, as the November update had just finished its 24-day rollout on December 5. When questioned about the unusually quick succession, Google explained they have “different core systems we’re always improving.”
The search giant’s core updates reshape how Google ranks websites across the board. Think of it like a restaurant critic updating their top 20 list—new places open, old favorites might slip, and rating criteria evolve. A drop in ranking doesn’t necessarily mean a restaurant got worse; sometimes others just stepped up their game.
For site owners seeing traffic changes, Google recommends:
- Give it a week after the update finishes before diving into Search Console data
- Look at your numbers before and after the update hit
- Watch for any major ranking drops, especially falls from top spots to page three or four
- Check how you’re doing across different search types – web, images, video, and news
If your site takes a hit, don’t panic. Google stresses there’s no quick fix, and a rankings drop doesn’t always mean something’s wrong.
While some recovery might happen between updates, the biggest bouncebacks typically come with the next core update.
“Keep making good content for real people—that’s all creators need to focus on,” Google stressed in their announcement.
For anyone looking to learn more, Google’s got detailed documentation waiting in their Search Console help center.