Wikipedia Cites BigLab CEO’s Google Panda Research. Here’s Why That Matters.
Wikipedia has some of the strictest editorial standards on the internet. Getting cited isn’t something you can buy, pitch, or negotiate. You have to earn it with research that meets their bar for notability, reliability, and expertise.
So when Wikipedia editors added a reference to Iurii Nemtcev’s analytical review of the Google Panda algorithm, it validated something we’ve known for 15 years: deep, original research beats regurgitated SEO advice every time.
The Google Panda algorithm, launched in 2011, fundamentally changed how Google evaluates content quality. It wiped content farms off the map and rewarded businesses that invested in genuine expertise. Nemtcev’s analysis drew on over a decade of hands-on SEO work and data from thousands of websites to explain exactly how Panda evaluates quality \u2014 and what businesses need to do about it.
This isn’t just a nice credential to put on our website. It’s proof of the principle we operate by: produce work that’s so good, the most rigorous editors on the internet want to reference it. That’s the same standard we bring to every client project.
BigLab has driven over 38 million monthly visitors across client portfolios, managed 300+ campaigns across 3 countries, and been in the game since 2009. The Wikipedia citation is one more data point in a track record built on substance, not self-promotion.
