 I'm John Mueller, a search advocate at Google. Part of my job is to help folks like you grow their web presence through the help of Google Search. In this session, we'll talk briefly about Google Images, other places where images are shown, and go through best practices for images. Let's start by taking a look at Google Images. Google Images helps users to visually find web pages for a wide range of tasks. Whether it's kicking off a do-it-yourself project, cooking a meal, styling an outfit, or, as we've recently seen, learning how to cut your own hair at home during the quarantine, Google Images shows users the relevant images and web pages from across the web, so it's as easy as possible to find what you're looking for. In the Google Images results, we show a preview image, attribution, and a headline from the page. Users can expand the preview to find out more about the image and the page's content. If a result is deemed to be a product, a recipe, or a video, which you can specify with structured data, we show that information to the user. Where appropriate, we give users information about an image licensing opportunity. And, of course, there's a big button to visit the page directly. There's more than just Google Images, though. Image previews can also be shown for traditional web search results. They may be relevant to a user's query or representative of a web page. For example, an image of a recipe might be shown. Additionally, there's Google Discover, a neat way for users to explore content about topics they're interested in. In Discover, a relevant preview image may be shown for your pages. In some, preview images can be shown directly in Google Images, they can be shown as relevant results, or as additional context for additional pages in Google Search, and as previews in Discover. Before we get too far, I'd like to encourage you to take a step back and think about what you'd like to achieve with your images. Getting the images index is rarely the goal. For example, consider these questions. Do users try to search visually for your content? And if so, how might they be searching? What preview of your site's content would they find compelling? And do your pages have an image that's particularly relevant for that page? It's useful to consider these questions from the start. They can help guide you to including your images in a way that's relevant to your site's goals. For example, if you publish your poetry and decorate it with generic floral clipart, it's unlikely that users would be searching for flower clipart in order to read your poetry. On the other hand, if you created those graphics and you want to provide them to others, then that might be a legitimate search query. In the end, it's up to you to determine if and how you'd like content from your website to be shown in Google. You know your audience and your site's goals best. Alright, let's take a look at our recommendations for images. Start by providing good context. Make sure that visual content is relevant to the topic of the page. We suggest using images where they add value to the page. Use appropriate page titles and headings to provide context. Remember your users and how they might be searching for your content visually. What are the words and phrases they might use and are you using them on the right pages? Next, optimize image placement. Whenever possible, place images near relevant text and ideally provide a caption close to the image. Consider placing the most important image near the top of the page. Don't embed important text inside of images. In particular, avoid doing that for page headings and menu items. Not all users and search engines can access text in images, translation tools won't work on images, and often these images don't make particularly useful previews for your site. Use alt attributes. These alt attributes are a way to provide information about the image to users who can't see the images. This is good for accessibility as well as for search engines. Use high-quality images. High-quality images appeal to users more than blurry, unclear, low-resolution images. Sharp images are often more appealing in the result thumbnail and increase the likelihood of getting traffic from users. Create informative and high-quality sites. Good content on your pages is just as important as visual content for Google Images. It provides context and makes the results more actionable for users. Page content may be used to generate a text snippet for the image and Google considers page content quality when ranking images. Create mobile and desktop-friendly sites. Users search on Google Images more from mobile than on desktop. It's important that you design your site for all device types and sizes. Use a mobile-friendly testing tool to test how well your pages work on mobile devices. Then use a good URL structure for your image files. Google uses the URL path as well as a file name to help it understand your images. Consider organizing your image's content so that URLs are constructed logically. Avoid changing your image URLs and use 301 redirects when they do need to be changed. Images tend not to be crawled as frequently as webpages, so it's important to use persistent URLs for them. And when it comes to URLs, make sure they're not blocked by RobotsText if you'd like them used as previews on Google. Let's briefly talk about RobotsText. If you don't want images from your pages to be shown in search, a good way to do that is to disallow their crawling in the RobotsText file. This file needs to be in a specific machine-readable format, so it's good to double-check that you're blocking the appropriate URLs properly and not blocking too much. While we feel it's often useful to allow users to search visually for your content, this is ultimately your decision as a site owner. That's a lot. Following these general best practices will definitely help search engines to better understand your site's images already. If you want to go further, we also have some advanced techniques to consider. Add appropriate structured data markup. Structured data is a way of providing machine-readable information about your pages and their content. Depending on the type of page, you might use different kinds of structured data. For example, a recipe page may use recipe structured data. A news article might use news article structured data, and an e-commerce site might use product structured data. We have information about all kinds of structured data in our developer documentation. Consider allowing large image previews, including compelling high-quality images in your content is more likely to generate visits from Discover. For large image previews, the images need to be appropriately sized and the feature needs to be enabled, either with the max image preview large robots meta tag or by using AMP. When providing images, add licensing information. This helps users to understand the opportunity to license images, shows appropriate image credits, and makes it easier for them to acquire a license for the image. This can be done with structured data on the page or metadata within the image. Consider speed. Images are often the largest contributor to the overall page size. We recommend applying image optimization using lazy loading and responsive image techniques to provide high-quality and fast user experiences. Depending on your website, AMP pages may also be an option for making fast loading pages. That's quite a bit to keep in mind, but how do you get started? A good general approach when reviewing and improving a website is to pick a sample of pages from various parts of your website and to work on those first. Checking those pages regularly helps to double check your progress. This will help you determine which changes to make and how to best make them. Once you've worked it out for a few pages, it's often relatively easy to apply that to the rest of your website. Google Search Console can help you to recognize potential problems and opportunities as well as giving you insights into how your pages are showing in search. For example, you can confirm that your structured data is recognized properly, check the site speed, and track how its images are performing. Check out the videos on Search Console to find out more. The information from this talk is also available in our developer documentation. I'll add a link to the description below if you'd like to follow up there. Thanks for watching! I hope you found this lightning talk useful and insightful. If you have any comments regarding this session or would like to help us to make these videos even better, please leave a comment here with the video. And as always, if you have any questions, feel free to drop by our help forums to discuss with the experts, contact us on Twitter, or join us in one of our events. Bye everyone!