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Google’s March 2026 Core Update: What It Means for Your SEO Strategy

1st April 2026

Google has begun rolling out its March 2026 core update, and as with every major algorithm shift, we are already seeing movement across rankings, visibility and traffic.

From a digital strategy perspective, this is not just another update to observe. It is a moment that reveals where Google is heading and, more importantly, whether your current SEO approach is aligned with that direction.

What We Know So Far

The update started rolling out at the end of March and is expected to take up to two weeks to complete. As with all core updates, Google’s messaging remains consistent: this is a broad change designed to improve how it surfaces helpful, relevant content.

That may sound familiar, but it is worth paying attention. Google rarely changes its language, but it continually refines how it interprets “helpful” and “relevant”.

In practice, that is where the real impact lies.

What We Are Seeing Across Client Accounts

Within the first few days of the rollout, we are already seeing typical early signals:

  • Ranking volatility across competitive keywords
  • Some sites experiencing sharp gains in visibility
  • Others seeing gradual or sudden declines
  • Increased movement in long-tail and informational queries

This is entirely normal during a core update. However, what is more interesting is the pattern behind the movement.

Content that is clearly aligned to user intent, well-structured and genuinely useful appears to be gaining ground. Thin, overly optimised or generic content is struggling to hold its position.

This Is Not About Penalties

One of the biggest misconceptions around core updates is that they are punitive. They are not.

Google is not targeting your site. It is reassessing the entire search landscape and reordering results based on what it now considers the most valuable content.

If your rankings drop, it is not because you have been penalised. It is because other content is being deemed more relevant.

That distinction is critical when deciding how to respond.

The Strategic Shift We Continue to See

From an agency perspective, this update reinforces a trend we have been advising clients on for some time.

SEO is no longer about optimisation in isolation. It is about content quality, authority and experience working together.

Specifically, we are seeing increased emphasis on:

Intent-first content

Pages that directly answer user queries in a clear and meaningful way are outperforming those built primarily around keywords.

Depth over volume

A smaller number of high-quality pages is outperforming large volumes of shallow content.

Trust and credibility

Signals of expertise, authorship and brand authority are becoming more influential.

User experience

Engagement metrics, readability and overall page experience continue to play a role in how content performs.

What You Should Be Doing Right Now

At this stage, the most important thing is not to react too quickly.

Instead, we advise a measured, strategic approach.

1. Let the rollout complete

Performance during a core update can fluctuate daily. Making changes too early can do more harm than good.

2. Analyse, do not assume

Look beyond rankings. Review:

  • Which pages have gained or lost visibility
  • What type of content is being rewarded
  • How competitors have shifted

3. Audit your content properly

This is the time to ask difficult questions:

  • Is this page genuinely useful?
  • Does it demonstrate expertise?
  • Would a user choose this result over others?

If the answer is unclear, that is where the opportunity lies.

4. Refocus on quality, not tactics

There is no technical fix for a core update. Improvements need to be strategic and content-led.

What This Means for SEO in 2026

If there is one clear takeaway from this update, it is this:

Google is getting better at identifying value.

That means the gap between good and average content is widening. Websites that invest in quality, clarity and expertise will continue to see long-term gains. Those relying on shortcuts will find it increasingly difficult to compete.

Our View at Innermedia

At Innermedia, we welcome updates like this.

They validate the direction we have been taking with our clients, focusing on sustainable SEO strategies built around:

  • High-quality, intent-driven content
  • Strong technical foundations
  • Clear brand positioning and authority

Core updates are not disruptions. They are recalibrations.

And for businesses willing to adapt, they present a significant opportunity to outperform competitors who are still relying on outdated approaches.

The March 2026 core update is still rolling out, and the full impact will take time to settle.

But one thing is already clear.

SEO success in 2026 will not come from chasing algorithms. It will come from understanding users, creating better content and building stronger digital experiences.

If your performance has shifted, now is the time to step back, reassess and move forward with a clearer, more strategic approach.

author avatar
Sophie Marston Digital Strategist
Sophie Marston is a Digital Strategist at Innermedia, specialising in SEO, PPC and AI driven visibility to help organisations strengthen their online performance.
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