What does Google say about SEO? /
Domain age and historical factors remain hotly debated topics in the SEO community. This category compiles Google's official statements regarding how domain age, history, and accumulated reputation influence search rankings. SEO professionals frequently question whether the sandbox effect truly exists for new websites, whether older domains hold inherent advantages, and how a site's history impacts current performance—including previous ownership changes, past penalties, and archived content. Google representatives have consistently addressed these concerns, particularly regarding the concept of trust built over time. Understanding these official positions helps practitioners separate persistent myths from actual ranking factors recognized by Google's algorithms. This knowledge proves invaluable when acquiring expired domains, conducting site migrations, or implementing rebranding strategies where historical signals can significantly impact future SEO performance. These declarations provide clarity on what truly matters: quality content and user experience rather than mere domain age, helping SEO specialists make informed strategic decisions based on verified information rather than speculation or outdated assumptions about temporal ranking factors.
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★★★ Should you show the same number of products on mobile and desktop for mobile-first indexing?
On e-commerce category pages, if the desktop version displays 50 products and the mobile version only 10, this can pose a problem for mobile-first indexing. Google addressed this point in its latest b...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Does domain age and the choice of CMS really influence Google rankings?
Website age is not a factor: Google does not favor either old or new sites systemically. The CMS used (WordPress, Wix, Blogger, etc.) does not matter: Google looks at the generated HTML pages. All mod...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Are URLs with # really invisible for Google SEO?
Fragment identifiers (URLs with #) are completely ignored for indexing. Google treats them as links to the same page. They do not affect rankings or featured snippets. Google may sometimes use them to...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★ Do URL fragments really disrupt the indexing of JavaScript sites?
On JavaScript sites, if content is only loaded when the fragment is present, Google will likely not be able to index that content because fragments are removed during indexing. Only a very small numbe...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Why do your Search Console data only tell part of the story?
To analyze changes in the Search Console performance report, you need to dig deeper to find specific examples: identify pages or queries that have changed in ranking, impressions, or clicks. This help...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Do intermittent server errors really affect your Google indexing?
Temporarily unavailable resource issues are extremely rare in production due to Google's aggressive caching. Even if your server only serves a script once and then fails for a month, you shouldn't see...
Martin Splitt Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Paired AMP: Is it really the regular HTML that matters for indexing?
In a paired AMP configuration (normal HTML page + linked AMP page), Google uses the normal HTML page for indexing. The AMP page is additional and can be displayed on mobile and appropriate devices, bu...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Does structured breadcrumb really enhance your SEO ranking?
The structured data for breadcrumbs does not change anything for SEO or ranking. It merely allows search results to display differently as a rich result. The homepage and final page in the schema are ...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★ Can a minor redesign really trigger a Page Layout penalty?
A minor redesign would not trigger a reevaluation of the layout (page layout). If a video with an ad is at the top of the page, Google should recognize it as a video landing page rather than assuming ...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★ Do words in the URL really still have a true impact on Google rankings?
Google uses some signals from the words in the URL, but it's very, very weak. If Google can analyze the page content, it can essentially ignore the words in the URL. Having a word in a different langu...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ How does Google reassess a site's overall quality when the top pages remain well-ranked?
When the top queries continue to be well-ranked but there is an overall decline, it suggests that algorithms are reassessing the general quality of the site downwards. Highly relevant pages continue t...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Should you really ignore the live test in Search Console to diagnose your indexing issues?
To verify how Googlebot really sees your page, examine the 'crawled page' version in the URL Inspection Tool instead of the 'live test'. The crawled version better reflects actual indexing because it ...
Martin Splitt Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Why do some pages take months to be reindexed after changes?
Google does not guarantee any specific timeframe for crawling and indexing. It can take minutes, hours, days, or months depending on the website and modified pages. A critical page that is updated fre...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★ Why does Google ignore your images during rendering for indexing?
Google often skips loading images during rendering because they are not necessary for most of the indexing process. The image index is a separate entity. This is why some images may appear as unavaila...
Martin Splitt Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Do HTML breadcrumbs really enhance crawling and internal linking?
HTML breadcrumbs (not structured data) have an SEO effect because they create links between pages. On a site with multiple category levels, this connects products, subcategories, and main categories, ...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Is it really necessary to list every keyword variation for Google to understand your content?
Google tries to understand synonyms, equivalents, acronyms, and singular/plural forms to determine if a page is relevant for different versions of a keyword. It is not necessary to include every varia...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★★ Can an incomplete or outdated sitemap really harm your SEO?
An incomplete or outdated sitemap likely does not affect search performance. The sitemap only helps with crawling slightly better; it does not change ranking. Google crawls the site normally even with...
John Mueller Oct 15, 2020
★★ Can JavaScript really manage the entire lifecycle of a Single Page App for SEO?
Single-page applications use JavaScript to control the lifecycle of the page. JavaScript is used to create the HTML that makes up the page and to load additional content as users navigate to different...
Martin Splitt Oct 14, 2020
★★★ How should you properly handle HTTP error codes in a single-page app?
To properly manage errors in a single-page app, the server must be configured to respond with an appropriate error code for specific URLs (for example, /not-found returns a 404, /maintenance returns a...
Martin Splitt Oct 14, 2020
★★★ What happens when Googlebot consistently misses your pages if the URL never changes?
Googlebot uses URLs to locate different pages or views. If the application does not change the URL during navigation between views, Googlebot will only see the homepage and nothing else....
Martin Splitt Oct 14, 2020
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