Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 1:49 Le balisage Schema de l'objet principal décide-t-il vraiment de l'affichage des rich snippets ?
- 3:15 Pourquoi votre site n'apparaît-il que dans les résultats omis de Google ?
- 4:57 Faut-il s'inquiéter d'un grand nombre de statuts HTTP 410 sur son site ?
- 7:02 Pourquoi Search Console signale-t-elle des erreurs mobiles sur des pages pourtant compatibles ?
- 10:37 Le contenu masqué dans les onglets et accordéons est-il vraiment pris en compte par Google ?
- 17:01 Suffit-il vraiment d'avoir un bon contenu et une technique solide pour ranker sur Google ?
- 36:17 Les redirections 301 peuvent-elles vraiment faire chuter votre classement après une mise à jour d'algorithme ?
- 42:34 Pourquoi Google ne récompense-t-il pas toujours le meilleur contenu ?
- 47:04 Faut-il vraiment utiliser l'outil de suppression d'URL pour gérer les redirections ?
Google claims not to use social signals (likes, Facebook shares, etc.) as a ranking factor. The reasoning provided: the massive volume and volatility of social content make its technical integration too complex. In practical terms, there’s no need to buy likes or chase social metrics to improve your SEO — focus on levers that actually work.
What you need to understand
Why does Google ignore social signals in its algorithm?
The statement from John Mueller comes down hard on a persistent belief: no, Facebook likes, retweets, or LinkedIn shares do not boost your rankings in the SERPs. The technical reason given is clear: the volume of social data is enormous and their lifespan too short for Googlebot to reliably crawl and index them.
Let’s take a concrete example. A viral post on Twitter can generate thousands of interactions in a few hours, then disappear from feeds within 24 hours. Meanwhile, Googlebot might visit your page once a week — how do you capture such volatile data? It’s technically unmanageable at the scale of billions of pages.
Do social networks have any indirect effect on SEO?
Hold on, let’s not throw the baby out with the bathwater. What Google is saying is that social signals are not a direct ranking factor. An important nuance: they can have measurable indirect effects.
Content that is massively shared on LinkedIn generates traffic, boosts your brand awareness, and can trigger natural backlinks when bloggers or journalists come across it. These backlinks, in turn, are indeed ranking factors. Social acts as a visibility accelerator that can lead to real SEO signals — but it’s not the like itself that matters.
What social data can Google index after all?
Google does index certain social content — notably public tweets and public profiles. You can check this by typing site:twitter.com your_brand: tweets appear in the results. However, these pages are treated as standard web content, not social signals.
The difference is crucial: Google sees the text of the tweet, the links it contains, but does not use the number of likes or retweets as a quality metric. It’s the textual content that matters, not the social engagement.
- Social signals are not direct ranking factors according to Google.
- The volume and volatility of social data make their algorithmic integration too complex.
- Social networks can generate measurable indirect effects: traffic, backlinks, brand awareness.
- Google indexes some public social content but treats it as standard web content.
- Focus your SEO efforts on proven and controllable levers rather than on social metrics.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes and no. On paper, Google’s position is technically defensible. Any SEO who has analyzed correlations between social signals and SERP positions will tell you that the correlations are weak or even non-existent. Controlled tests — publishing identical content with and without social push — have consistently shown that the direct impact is null.
But — and this is a big but — we regularly observe content going viral on social media that simultaneously climbs in Google. The confusion arises here: correlation does not imply causation. What boosts the ranking is the avalanche of backlinks generated by social virality, not the likes themselves. Google is not lying, but its communication creates a blur around indirect mechanisms.
What nuances should be added to this rule?
The first nuance: Google cannot easily crawl protected social content. Facebook locked its access post-2015, Twitter drastically limits its API. Even if Google wanted to use these signals, it simply would not have access to the data at scale. What looks like an algorithmic choice is also a technical constraint imposed from outside. [To be verified]: to what extent does Google negotiate privileged access with certain platforms?
The second nuance: social networks influence content discovery. An article that performs well on Reddit or Hacker News will get crawled faster by Googlebot because third-party sites will link to it. So indirectly, social accelerates indexing and triggers freshness and relevance signals that Google picks up on.
In which cases could this logic evolve?
Google integrated Twitter into its real-time search results in 2015, then removed this feature. There is nothing preventing a partial return of social signals in certain contexts — hot news, live events, celebrity-related queries. We can actually see Google displaying more and more social carousels in the SERPs for well-known entities.
If tomorrow Google signs an exclusive partnership with Meta or X to access their social graphs, everything could change. But for now, nothing in patents or tests suggests imminent evolution. So proceed with caution: do not base your SEO strategy on a hypothetical turnaround.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you abandon social networks to focus solely on technical SEO?
No, that would be a strategic mistake. Social networks remain essential traffic acquisition channels and visibility amplifiers. What this statement changes is your resource allocation: stop chasing hollow social metrics (likes, purchased followers) thinking it will boost your SEO.
Instead, focus on truly engaging content that will generate qualified traffic and natural backlinks. A viral article on LinkedIn that attracts 500 visitors and 5 backlinks from industry blogs is worth infinitely more than 10,000 Instagram likes with no measurable impact on your organic visibility.
How can you smartly integrate social into an SEO strategy?
Social should serve as a discovery catalyst, not a ranking lever. Use it to push your pillar content, case studies, and exclusive data to audiences likely to cite them. Identify the influencers and media in your industry present on social networks and engage with them.
A concrete example: you publish a data-driven study on your blog. Push it on Twitter by mentioning tech journalists covering your topic. If the study is solid, you could land an article in TechCrunch or Le Monde with a quality backlink. That’s intelligent use of social for SEO — not buying 5,000 likes on Fiverr.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in allocating your SEO budget?
Stop pouring massive budgets into paid social campaigns thinking it will impact your ranking. Facebook Ads or LinkedIn Sponsored Posts generate traffic, sure, but that traffic does not transmit any direct ranking signals. If your goal is SEO, invest instead in quality content, clean link building, technical optimization.
Another common mistake: completely neglecting social under the pretext that Google ignores it. Social profiles often rank on the first page for brand queries. A well-optimized LinkedIn or Twitter profile, with a clear bio and links to your site, captures traffic and improves your e-reputation. That’s SEO in the broad sense.
- Stop buying likes, shares, or followers thinking it will improve your SEO
- Use social networks as distribution channels for your pillar content
- Target influencers and journalists likely to generate natural backlinks
- Optimize your social profiles to rank for brand queries
- Allocate your SEO budget primarily to content, technique, and link building
- Measure the impact of social through referral traffic and backlinks generated, not via engagement metrics
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les signaux sociaux peuvent-ils indirectement impacter mon SEO ?
Google indexe-t-il les contenus publiés sur les réseaux sociaux ?
Faut-il arrêter complètement d'investir dans le social si ça n'améliore pas mon SEO ?
Pourquoi certains contenus viraux sur les réseaux montent-ils rapidement dans Google ?
Les boutons de partage social sur mon site ont-ils un intérêt SEO ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 01/11/2019
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