Select Page

We spent the past few weeks busy hosting
events in Singapore and Tel Aviv. In this post we look back and discuss the highlights from the events
and some ideas for future events.

​Google Search Central Blog  

Search Central Live 2022 Highlights Google Developers

Stay organized with collections

Save and categorize content based on your preferences.

We spent the past few weeks busy (and excited!) hosting Search Central Live
events in Singapore and Tel Aviv! We’ve missed you since our last Webmaster Conference in early 2020 and it’s so great to see
you again in person.

Search Central Live (formerly known as Webmaster Conference) is the flagship event series created by the Google Search Central team.
Our goal is to bring Search talks to your locations in your languages and to provide a venue for you to meet with the Search team,
other Google teams, industry experts, and others in the Search and SEO community.

The highlights

One of the best ways for us to decide where to focus our efforts is by interacting with you, and in our events we usually get loads
of questions from the audience. We’ve heard people asking about Search Console
specific features or issues, crawling for big sites
or getting pages indexed quickly, and Javascript SEO.
We take these questions and improve our documentation to clarify them, and we try to create new content based on what you’re
struggling with.

Fortunately, we had lots of Googlers mingling with the attendees and taking questions at the panel discussion. Many of our coworkers
don’t get a chance to learn directly from users, they’re busy writing code! These events are also an opportunity for them to get
to know you and learn first-hand how you use our products and what are your challenges.

In Tel Aviv, for example, we had around 20 engineers from the Search Console team in the room listening to the attendees’ feedback
and taking notes; they also hosted a booth to answer questions from SEOs and website owners. We’re really excited to see what
they’re going to do with those notes!

It’s hard to put this in raw numbers, especially with hundreds of attendees across two locations, but our post event surveys
show a very high satisfaction. In addition, we’ve seen social media posts suggesting that folks enjoyed themselves. Here
are a few examples:

Singapore Fur’s tweet
Kenichi Suzuki’s tweet
Alvin Lim’s post on LinkedIn
Valerie Ooi’s post on LinkedInTel Aviv Naomi Gallula’s tweet
Mordy Oberstein’s tweet
Daragh Nener-Lally’s post on LinkedIn
Nati Elimelech’s post on LinkedIn

And we especially love the post from the Singaporean team Impossible with 22 takeaways! We are extremely happy to have hosted and spent time with the attendees.

The learnings

The Search Central Live events are popular, but that popularity also means that we can’t accommodate each and every one of those
who want to join. We are thinking about ways to solve this challenge, either by expanding the size of the events, by increasing
the number of locations, or by repeating locations. However, we love seeing that folks want even more.

We also heard our attendees’ feedback: more topics. This one is easier to solve and we’re already thinking about the new topics
we want in our bags. Thank you for leaving feedback; it helps us shape future events.

The future

The idea behind these events is to bring search conferences to places that don’t get as much conference love. We can’t promise
anything yet, but we’re definitely thinking about what the next year holds for Search Central Live and we’re already exploring
which regions and languages we can cover.

Follow us on Twitter or subscribe to the
Search Central blog to stay up-to-date about future events! Meanwhile, if you have any questions
or suggestions, drop us a note on our Search Central Help community.
If you’re hungry for more Search Central Talks, check out our lightning talk playlist.

Except as otherwise noted, the content of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, and code samples are licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. For details, see the Google Developers Site Policies. Java is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.

[
“type”: “thumb-down”,
“id”: “missingTheInformationINeed”,
“label”:”Missing the information I need”
,
“type”: “thumb-down”,
“id”: “tooComplicatedTooManySteps”,
“label”:”Too complicated / too many steps”
,
“type”: “thumb-down”,
“id”: “outOfDate”,
“label”:”Out of date”
,
“type”: “thumb-down”,
“id”: “samplesCodeIssue”,
“label”:”Samples / code issue”
,
“type”: “thumb-down”,
“id”: “otherDown”,
“label”:”Other”
]

[
“type”: “thumb-up”,
“id”: “easyToUnderstand”,
“label”:”Easy to understand”
,
“type”: “thumb-up”,
“id”: “solvedMyProblem”,
“label”:”Solved my problem”
,
“type”: “thumb-up”,
“id”: “otherUp”,
“label”:”Other”
]