Google dumps ‘+’ operator

You will either have read about this on other blogs or found out yourself when searching that Google has dumped the ‘+’ operator. This was a useful way to stop Google automatically searching for variations and synonyms of your terms. The theory was that by prefixing your term with a plus sign Google would be forced to look for an exact match. Try it now and Google tells you to use double quotation marks around the term instead. To be honest, the + sign has not worked reliably for several months but I often have the same problems with the double quotation marks. If I search on St. “Laurence” or “St. Laurence” Google still includes page on St Lawrence in my results.

Search Engine Land has covered the news and the reason why + has been dumped in “Google Removes The + Search Command” http://searchengineland.com/google-sunsets-search-operator-98189. It suggests + has been dumped because of Google+, their social network, and Google now suggests auto completing your friend’s names when you use the operator. As Danny Sullivan comments “it seems to have been tossed out and replaced by quotes because of a problem Google created for itself, by picking stupid names for its social network.

I’ve noticed anther worrying trend – Google does not always look for all of my terms in the page. Viewing the cached copies of some of my results I see that not only are some of my terms missing from the page itself but they are not even in links to the page. So is Google now deciding when to ‘OR’ our search terms?

4 thoughts on “Google dumps ‘+’ operator”

  1. Great post. The double quotation marks issue drives me mad, it forces results to appear that I’m trying to exclude when I know *exactly* the terms I’m looking for.

    I didn’t use + much, but changing how operators like this work only lets down the people who actually use them in the first place.

  2. I’m glad I’m not the only one being driven bonkers by this. What irritates me even further is that I often have to actively exclude terms that Google has so kindly decided are what I really meant.The trouble is that Bing is going in the same direction.

  3. Thanks for this, I thought it was just me. I used to use + all the time. They have also made it a lot more tricky to get to advanced search for things like creative commons images. I’m increasingly using duckduck and Blekko.

  4. Hi John,

    Some of us are concerned that after hiding the advanced search screens, or at least making them more difficult to get to, Google could turn round and say “We’re dumping them because nobody uses them”. I tend to use the commands directly but if one is new to them it is easier to learn them via the advanced search screen. I am using DuckDuck a lot now (about to do a blog posting on it) and am trying out Blekko.

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