Google tests showing full recipes right in search results
Google is testinganother feature aimed at keepingusers on its search results pages,this timetargeting thepopularrecipe blogging industry.The company is testing a new feature called "Quick View" that appears on some cooking recipes. For example, searching for “chocolate chip cookie recipe” reveals a “quick view” button on a recipe from the Preppy Kitchen blog. Clicking it opens thefull recipe,complete with ingredients, photos, and step-by-step instructions allwithout leaving Google Search.
The new feature was previously reported by industry blog Search Engine Roundtable: "We're constantly trying different ways to provide our users with high-quality, useful information. "We'repartnering with a limited number of creators tobegin exploringnew recipes in search that benefitourusers and add value to the web ecosystem.We have nothing to announce at this time," Google spokesperson Brianna Duff told in an email.
Duff added that the feature is a limited initial experiment and that the company has agreements with participating recipe bloggers. Preppy Kitchen did not respond to a request for comment. If you want to confirm the effects of Google in the network format, see the recipe blog -see the site that provides a fairly simple service. Because the blogger wants to do that, he is not stuck in front of the intimate type of personal story or the text filled with dispersion. Therefore, this text exists.
Google algorithms include the contents of the page, and the search is evaluated by searching. The possibility of visualizing recipes in research is still at the start of the test period, which corresponds to changes in research. Google wants users to stay on the service and platform if possible. Extract the details ofdthe web page so that the researchers do not need to scroll and access the actual web page, even if the AI's answer is strange or inaccurate, and synthesize the answers using artificial intelligence. Check that. The new recipe function can have the same effect. If Google has a unique response, what are the points of comparing the two different recipes?