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age, helping SEO specialists make informed strategic decisions based on verified information rather than speculation or outdated assumptions about temporal ranking factors.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 really be using canonicals on your filtered internal search pages?
For internal search results pages with different sorts and filters, it is recommended to define a main sort order and use rel=canonical on filtered or sorted variants to point to the main version. Thi...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Why is one x-default enough for your entire multi-domain hreflang configuration?
In an hreflang configuration, even across multiple domains, there must be only one x-default. For each page, all hreflang annotations must match and clearly indicate which version to show based on cou...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Does improving page speed really boost your rankings as fast as everyone claims?
A rapid ranking improvement after boosting page speed (from 30 to 45-50 on PageSpeed Insights) within a few days is probably not due to speed. Speed metrics are measured via the Chrome User Experience...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Should you really rely on the schema.org validator to optimize your structured data?
The schema.org validator verifies general markup compliance according to schema.org requirements. Google Search Console's validator focuses specifically on what Google can extract and use in search re...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Should you stop using the manual submission tool in Google Search Console?
Regularly using the 'Request indexing' function in Search Console is almost a sign that Google isn't yet convinced by your site. Even if you force indexation, there's no guarantee the page will appear...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Does the shift from 'Bad' to 'Medium' on Core Web Vitals really transform your Google rankings?
Google uses Core Web Vitals (not the 0-100 PageSpeed score) as a ranking factor, based on what real users actually experience. Google primarily focuses on the gap between 'reasonably OK' and 'very slo...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Can Core Web Vitals Really Tank Your Rankings by 48 Positions?
Page Experience, including Core Web Vitals, is a subtle ranking signal that helps differentiate between content of similar quality. It should not cause drastic changes in positioning. A page should no...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Why does Google refuse to index some of your pages?
Google doesn't automatically index all pages from every website. The 'Discovered, not crawled' or 'Crawled, not indexed' status lasting several weeks doesn't necessarily indicate a technical problem, ...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★ Can you host your XML sitemap on a different domain than your main website?
It is entirely possible to host sitemap files on a different domain. Two methods work: having both domains verified in Search Console, or submitting the sitemap via robots.txt with 'sitemap:' followed...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★ Do H2 tags in your footer actually hurt your SEO rankings?
Google can recognize common elements that repeat across all pages (like footers) and automatically de-emphasizes them for ranking purposes. Using H2 tags in the footer is not problematic. Google will ...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★ Is Google really cutting back on FAQ rich snippets in search results, and what does that mean for your SEO strategy?
Google has observed that many websites are adding FAQ markup to every page purely to occupy more space in search results. Google is therefore reducing the number of FAQ entries displayed in search res...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★ Can a handful of untagged affiliate links really escape Google penalties?
If the majority of affiliate links correctly use the rel='sponsored' or nofollow attribute, a few exceptions without these attributes won't cause problems. Google won't penalize a site having 900 well...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★ Should you isolate your FAQs on separate pages to rank better?
Separating FAQs from main recipe pages into dedicated pages is a perfectly acceptable strategy for Google. This allows you to concentrate ranking power on the main recipe page. If the FAQ page is only...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Is hidden text still a problem for SEO in 2024?
Hidden text is problematic only when it serves to deceive search engines about the true content of a page. Using hidden text for internal identifiers, accessibility, or legitimate technical needs is p...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Can structured data really replace traditional internal linking strategy?
Internal linking is one of the most important SEO actions you can take on a site to guide Google and visitors toward important pages. Structured data does not replace normal HTML links. URLs in hrefla...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Why do your images never appear in Google Images despite solid SEO performance?
For an image to be indexed in Google Images, it must have a stable URL. If the URL changes with each crawl (for example with session IDs), Google will never be able to properly index these images beca...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Do you really need to pick one primary language per page if you're targeting multiple markets?
Google tries to understand a page's primary language to determine which search queries should display it. Pages intentionally mixing multiple languages make it harder for Google to rank the page corre...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★ Can an invalid AMP page still be indexed by Google?
A page built entirely in AMP is treated as a normal HTML page. If it's AMP-valid, Google can use the AMP cache and AMP features in search. But even if it's AMP-invalid, it will still be indexed normal...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Is Google really refusing to index your pages even though they're crawled regularly and have no technical issues?
When a page is crawled multiple times but not indexed (excluding technical errors, noindex, or duplications), it's generally related to the perceived quality of the entire site or that specific sectio...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
★★★ Is Google really ignoring 95% of your submitted URLs—and what does that say about your content?
When Google indexes only a tiny fraction of submitted URLs (86 out of 4,500), beyond basic technical checks, you need to seriously evaluate the site's overall quality with external people who aren't i...
John Mueller Mar 05, 2022
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