Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 2:02 Peut-on géocibler ses Web Stories dans des sous-dossiers pays sans risque SEO ?
- 15:37 Les Core Web Vitals pénalisent-ils vraiment les sites dont les utilisateurs ont une connexion lente ?
- 16:41 Comment Google segmente-t-il les Core Web Vitals par zone géographique ?
- 17:44 Comment Google classe-t-il un site qui n'a pas encore de données CrUX ?
- 20:25 Faut-il vraiment éviter de toucher à la structure de son site pour plaire à Google ?
- 20:58 Faut-il vraiment bloquer l'indexation de certaines pages pour améliorer son crawl ?
- 22:02 Faut-il optimiser la structure d'URL de son site pour le SEO ?
- 25:12 Faut-il vraiment tester avant de supprimer massivement du contenu ?
- 25:43 Faut-il publier tous les jours pour bien ranker sur Google ?
- 26:46 Combien de temps faut-il vraiment pour qu'un changement de navigation impacte votre SEO ?
- 28:49 Faut-il vraiment renvoyer un 404 sur les catégories e-commerce temporairement vides ?
- 30:25 Faut-il vraiment modifier son site pendant un Core Update ?
- 30:55 Un site peut-il vraiment se rétablir entre deux Core Updates sans intervention SEO ?
- 32:01 Pourquoi mes rankings s'effondrent sans aucune alerte dans Search Console ?
- 37:01 Les Core Updates affectent-elles vraiment tout votre site de manière uniforme ?
- 39:28 Faut-il paniquer si votre site n'est toujours pas passé en mobile-first indexing ?
- 41:22 Faut-il encore corriger les erreurs Search Console d'un ancien domaine migré ?
- 43:37 Faut-il diviser son site en plusieurs domaines pour améliorer son SEO ?
- 45:47 L'accessibilité web booste-t-elle vraiment l'indexation et le référencement ?
- 46:50 Faut-il séparer blog et e-commerce sur deux domaines différents pour le SEO ?
- 48:26 Google Discover impose-t-il un quota minimum d'articles pour y figurer ?
- 56:58 Les données structurées améliorent-elles vraiment le classement dans Google ?
Google claims that a ranking drop does not necessarily indicate a technical issue. Ranking fluctuations are normal and may result from Google’s improved understanding of competing content or difficulty grasping the exact relevance of your page. For an SEO, this means not panicking at the first sign of decline and investigating the competitive and semantic context first before searching for phantom bugs.
What you need to understand
Can Google really demote without any apparent reason?
This statement by John Mueller challenges a persistent belief: that a drop in rankings necessarily indicates a penalty, a bug, or a technical error. The reality is more complex. Google constantly refines its understanding of content and search intentions.
When your competitors publish a better-structured, more recent, or semantically richer article, Google may justifiably prefer them—even if your page remains technically sound. This is not a punishment; it's a comparative reevaluation.
What does it mean when “Google has difficulty grasping relevance”?
Mueller points out a scenario often overlooked: Google does not always understand the exact intention that your content aims to satisfy. Your page may be fast, mobile-friendly, free of 404 errors, but if the semantic field is vague, and if the relevance signals (co-occurrences, entities, context) are ambiguous, the algorithm hesitates.
In practical terms, a technically perfect page but semantically generic will lose out to a competitor who precisely speaks the language of the dominant search intent. Google does not “guess”: it compares contextual signals.
Should you ignore ranking drops if everything is technically sound?
No. The absence of a technical error does not imply the absence of a strategic issue. A drop may reveal a mismatch between your content and evolving user expectations, a rise of a better semantically positioned competitor, or an algorithm change favoring other criteria (freshness, depth, topical authority).
Ignoring these signals simply because Search Console shows green would be a tactical mistake. The question is not “do I have an error?” but “why does Google prefer something else now?”.
- Ranking fluctuations are normal and do not always require immediate corrective action.
- A drop in positions does not equate to a penalty—often, it is a matter of competitive or semantic context.
- Google is constantly comparing: your page may be technically perfect but lose to content that aligns better with search intent.
- The absence of technical errors does not guarantee the stability of positions—the semantic relevance and topical authority play a major role.
- Investigating the “why” of a drop (competition, SERP evolution, semantic signals) is more strategic than searching for a bug.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, 100%. In practice, we often observe technically flawless sites (Core Web Vitals in the green, perfect structure, optimized crawl budget) that lose positions to less “clean” competitors but are more semantically aligned. Google does not rate technical quality as an absolute—it ranks based on comparative relevance.
The issue is that many SEOs focus 80% of their energy on technical aspects (tags, schema, redirects) and 20% on content strategy and topical authority. Mueller's statement repositions the priorities: technical is necessary but not sufficient.
What nuances should be considered?
Be careful: saying “it's normal” does not mean “it's acceptable.” A ranking drop is still a alert signal that needs analyzing, even if it does not indicate an error. Mueller is not saying “do nothing,” he is saying “don’t look for a technical bug where there isn’t one.”
The critical nuance is that Google can “have difficulty grasping the relevance” of your page. [To be verified]: this phrasing is deliberately vague. Mueller does not specify whether this problem arises from a lack of semantic signals, an ambiguity of intent, or a deficit in topical authority. Practically, this means that even with long and well-written content, if the named entities, co-occurrences, and thematic context are weak, Google does not “grasp” it.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
If your ranking drop coincides with a major algorithm update (Core Update, Helpful Content), or if it is accompanied by clearly degraded technical signals (sharp drop in crawl, deindexed pages, 5xx errors), then searching for a technical cause remains legitimate. Mueller refers to “normal” fluctuations, not to structural drops.
Similarly, if a competitor has built a massive backlink profile in a few weeks and rises sharply, the drop is not “normal” in the sense that it may result from manipulation (even if Google takes time to detect it). Context and timing are essential before drawing conclusions.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do in response to a ranking drop?
First, don't panic. Wait 7 to 10 days to distinguish a temporary fluctuation from an established trend. Then, audit the SERP context: who has risen? Why? Analyze the competing pages that have surpassed you—their semantic depth, freshness, structure, and internal and external links.
Ask yourself: Does Google clearly understand what intention your page serves? If your content is generic, if named entities are absent or vague, if the semantic field is poor, enhance those signals. Add targeted sections, concrete examples, and data. Clarify the intent.
What mistakes should be avoided?
Don’t fall into the “technical first” reflex. Many SEOs, in the face of a decline, immediately check Search Console, run a Screaming Frog crawl, inspect canonical tags… while the real problem may be semantic or competitive. If Search Console reports no errors and Lighthouse is green, stop looking for a bug that doesn’t exist.
Another trap: reacting too quickly. A hasty content update can worsen the situation by diluting relevance signals even further. Diagnose first, act later. And most importantly, don’t multiply minor technical adjustments (speed, schema, tags) if the problem lies elsewhere.
How can you check if your content is well “understood” by Google?
Use Search Console to analyze the queries that bring you traffic. If Google positions you on terms distant from your target intent, it’s a signal that it doesn’t grasp your main relevance. Compare your semantic field with that of well-ranked competitors (NLP tools, TF-IDF analysis, entity extraction).
Also test the thematic coherence of your internal linking: do the pages pointing to yours reinforce the semantic context, or do they dilute the signal with generic anchors? Lastly, check the freshness: a page not updated in 18 months may lose out to a competitor who regularly updates, even with slightly less exhaustive content.
- Wait 7-10 days before reacting to a drop in positions to confirm the trend.
- Audit the competitors who have surpassed you: analyze their semantic depth, structure, and authority signals.
- Check Search Console to identify the queries that Google positions you on—any discrepancy reveals a comprehension issue.
- Enhance the semantic signals: named entities, co-occurrences, thematic context, concrete examples, data.
- Don’t multiply minor technical optimizations if Search Console and Lighthouse are clean—look elsewhere.
- Test the coherence of internal linking: anchors and the context of internal links should reinforce the thematic relevance of the target page.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une baisse de ranking indique-t-elle toujours une erreur technique ?
Dois-je réagir immédiatement à une baisse de positions ?
Que signifie « Google a du mal à saisir la pertinence de ma page » ?
Si Search Console ne remonte aucune erreur, dois-je arrêter d'investiguer ?
Comment savoir si Google comprend bien l'intention de ma page ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 18/12/2020
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