What does Google say about SEO? /
Domain names represent a foundational element of any SEO strategy, and Google's official statements on this topic provide essential clarifications for search engine optimization professionals. This category compiles all of Google's positions regarding the impact of domain choices on rankings: the influence of extensions (generic vs geographic TLDs), the use of subdomains versus subdirectories, the relevance of exact match domains (EMD), and technical questions related to URL structures. Google has regularly clarified its stance on these aspects, particularly concerning the relative importance of domain names in the ranking algorithm. Understanding these declarations helps dispel persistent misconceptions, such as overvaluing keywords in domains or myths surrounding certain extensions. Official recommendations also cover domain migrations, the use of the www prefix, trailing slash management, and optimal URL architecture. For SEO experts, this information proves crucial when launching new projects, undertaking redesigns, or developing international strategies, enabling informed decisions based on verified facts rather than assumptions. These insights directly impact technical SEO implementation and help align domain strategy with Google's actual ranking factors and best practices for sustainable organic visibility.
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★★★ What happens when you block the Googlebot mobile and risk losing your indexed pages?
If the Googlebot mobile cannot crawl your site, the already indexed URLs may be removed from the index. Check and adjust your server settings to ensure proper mobile crawling....
Google Mar 25, 2021
★★ Does lending a subdomain really affect your main domain?
Lending a subdomain to a third party carries risks. Any additional content might impact the reputation of your main domain if quality standards are not maintained....
Google Mar 25, 2021
★★★ Does Googlebot really click on the JavaScript buttons and links on your site?
Googlebot does not click on any elements on the page (buttons, onclick links, etc.). Clicking is too costly in terms of CPU power for the Web Rendering Service. URLs must be discovered via standard hr...
Martin Splitt Mar 24, 2021
★★ Should You Remove Links That Are Only Present in the Initial HTML?
Google extracts URLs for crawling from both the initial HTML and the rendered HTML. Links that are only present in the initial HTML but absent from the rendered HTML may work, but consistency is prefe...
Martin Splitt Mar 24, 2021
★★★ Why Do You Have to Wait 28 Days to See Your Core Web Vitals Scores?
John Mueller explained in a webmaster hangout that Google tools used to "score" Core Web Vitals metrics (LCP, FID, CLS) need, for any given web page, to collect data (from the Chrome User Experience R...
John Mueller Mar 22, 2021
★★★ Should You Really Optimize Keywords in Your URLs for SEO?
John Mueller explained, also in a hangout, that the presence of keywords in a URL has very little weight for the user, and even less weight once the content is indexed: We use the words in a URL as a ...
John Mueller Mar 22, 2021
★★★ Do Domain Authority and Alexa Rank Really Influence Your Google Ranking?
Google does not use Alexa Rank for ranking. Similarly, Domain Authority is a metric created by a third party (Moz) and has no effect on Google SEO. These external metrics are not taken into account by...
John Mueller Mar 19, 2021
★★★ Do cookie banners really block your pages from being indexed?
Displaying a cookie banner or pop-up isn't a problem as long as the actual content remains in the HTML. If the banner replaces content or blocks access to the full HTML (interstitial), it becomes prob...
John Mueller Mar 19, 2021
★★★ Does Google really have a single index for all countries?
Google does not have different indexes based on countries. There is no content indexed differently according to location. Rankings may differ between countries, and with hreflang, Google can swap URLs...
John Mueller Mar 19, 2021
★★★ How can an inaccessible video thumbnail undermine your visibility in search results?
You must provide a high-quality thumbnail at a URL accessible to Google. If a thumbnail is not accessible, your page may not appear in video features. For instance, if the thumbnail URL is blocked by ...
Danielle Marshak Mar 17, 2021
★★★ Is VideoObject markup really enough to get your videos indexed in Google?
To help Google find your videos and understand their content, you can provide structured data using schema.org VideoObject markup. This markup can include the title, description, duration, URLs for th...
Danielle Marshak Mar 17, 2021
★★★ Is it really necessary to make video files accessible to Google for ranking in rich video searches?
To further optimize your videos, ensure that Google can access your video content files. Google's developer documentation lists the supported video file formats and provides tips to ensure that Google...
Danielle Marshak Mar 17, 2021
★★★ Why does Google refuse to index your videos if they're not publicly accessible on the web?
To be indexed by Google, videos must be publicly available on the web. If your videos are part of an app, make sure that each video also has a corresponding web page with a URL accessible by Google....
Danielle Marshak Mar 17, 2021
★★★ Can Similar URL Patterns Trigger a Duplicate Content Penalty?
John Mueller explained in a webmaster hangout that when two pages have URLs that are too similar, it can generate a duplicate content phenomenon. Indeed, the search engine relies partly, at this level...
John Mueller Mar 15, 2021
★★★ Do 301 redirects really transfer 100% of PageRank and SEO signals?
When you redirect one URL to another with a 301 redirect, Google transfers all signals and links from the old URL to the new URL, including links with parameters....
John Mueller Mar 12, 2021
★★★ How does Google actually segment your Core Web Vitals by page groups?
Google uses data from the Chrome User Experience Report and segments the site into groups. For specific URLs, Google finds the most appropriate group. If AMP pages are in a separate group, their metri...
John Mueller Mar 12, 2021
★★ Are keywords in the URL a ranking factor or just a temporary crutch?
Words in the URL are used as a very light factor. Google takes them into account mainly when it hasn't yet accessed the content for the first time. Once the content is crawled and indexed, the languag...
John Mueller Mar 12, 2021
★★★ How does Google actually segment your Core Web Vitals by groups of pages?
For Core Web Vitals, Google uses data from the Chrome User Experience Report and segments the site into groups. For specific URLs, Google finds the most appropriate group. If AMP pages have a separate...
John Mueller Mar 12, 2021
★★ Should you really redirect your old AMP URLs to the new ones?
Redirecting old AMP URLs to the new ones is ideally recommended, but it's less critical than for normal pages. Google refreshes the AMP cache quickly and notices URL changes within a few days....
John Mueller Mar 12, 2021
★★★ How many redirects does Google really follow before it splits the crawl?
Google follows about five consecutive redirects immediately and treats them as a single request. If a URL has more than five redirects, they are treated as separate requests....
John Mueller Mar 12, 2021
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