Top Stories 7-Pack Tops the SERPs

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Back in December of 2021, Google launched a redesigned version of Top Stories on desktop that got relatively little notice. At first glance, it appeared that Google introduced a two-column design, such as this Top Stories pack for โ€œNerfโ€:

Over time, SEOs spotted a rarer but more interesting variety, the 7-pack. Hereโ€™s one for โ€œsnowโ€ (a topic very much on my mind in Chicago as Iโ€™m writing this post):

Beyond the redesign itself, this 7-pack occupies a huge amount of screen real-estate, especially compared to previous Top Stories lists and carousels that were limited to three stories.

Should we panic yet?

Itโ€™s easy to focus on the most extreme examples, but how often is this 7-pack variety actually occurring? Across the MozCast 10,000-keyword daily tracking set on February 3rd, we captured 2,121 page-one SERPs with Top Stories. Hereโ€™s the breakdown by story count:

In our data set, the 7-pack is pretty rare (<1%), with a bit under half (44%) of Top Stories packs containing four stories. Interestingly, there is a design break between three and four stories. Top Stories packs with three or fewer stories are presented in list format, like this one from a search for โ€œdog breedsโ€:

Top Stories packs with four or more stories (on desktop) seem to switch to the newer, two-column format. While we donโ€™t currently have data on the CTR impact, it will be interesting to see how the two formats impact CTRs and other searcher behaviors.

Is news a search intent?

While the 7-pack is still relatively rare, it represents a qualitatively different SERP โ€” one where news is not just a SERP feature but looks more like a dominant intent for that search. Consider the fuller SERP context of my search for โ€œsnowโ€:

Sorry for the vertical scroll, but these are just the features before the #1 organic result. Obviously, weather SERPs have some unique features, but thereโ€™s also a 7-pack of Top Stories, Twitter results, and the new โ€œLocal newsโ€ pack (launched in December), all suggesting time-sensitive, news-style intent. This is a search where even the most evergreen informational content isnโ€™t going to compete.

Note that, because the news itself is always changing, even the presence of Top Stories packs is very dynamic. Their presence across SERPs follows a cycle that peaks around Wednesday or Thursday and falls off into Sunday and Monday. Some searches may shift intent only on special occasions. For example, consider my search for โ€œgroundhogโ€ on February 2nd:

This was not a search for โ€œGroundhog Dayโ€ โ€” simply for โ€œgroundhogโ€ the animal. Outside of the holiday timeline, this SERP is very likely to be informational. While these dramatic shifts are somewhat unusual, itโ€™s important to remember that search intent is not a static concept.

Is Google testing the waters?

As always, Google giveth and Google taketh away. These Top Stories packs could increase, disappear, or evolve into something entirely new. I do think that Google is testing how searchers interact with news results and trying to separate news as a part of a SERP (when multiple types of content are useful) versus news as a primary intent.

For now, itโ€™s worth monitoring your own results to see where news content may be outshining informational content. In 2022, organic SEO is as much about the searches you donโ€™t pursue as the ones you do and putting your time and money where the ROI makes the most sense.