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Official statement

The official blog for webmasters now has a new URL, making it more secure through its transition to HTTPS. Users can now safely access information.
2:08
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 39:24 💬 EN 📅 13/10/2016 ✂ 6 statements
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Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google has migrated its official blog for webmasters to an HTTPS URL, publicly demonstrating its commitment to the secure protocol. This symbolic gesture reinforces the message that has been sent for years: HTTPS is no longer optional but becomes the expected standard for any website. For SEO practitioners, this serves as a concrete reminder that migrating to HTTPS remains a technical priority and an essential factor for user trust.

What you need to understand

Is Google leading by example with this HTTPS migration?

When Google migrates its own official blog to HTTPS, the message is clear: the secure protocol is not an abstract recommendation reserved for e-commerce sites. It is a universal requirement that Google applies to itself.

This migration of the webmaster blog, in particular, is symbolic. Google chooses to secure the channel it uses to communicate with web professionals. The implicit message? If we, Google, take the time to migrate this institutional blog, you should have completed yours a long time ago.

Was HTTPS already a ranking factor at that time?

Yes. Google had already officially recognized HTTPS as a slight but real ranking signal. The migration of its own blog therefore comes after the public announcement, not before. This is consistent with Google's deployment timeline.

The secure protocol acts as a tiebreaker between two equivalent contents. Alone, HTTPS will never push mediocre content to the front page. But at equal quality, the HTTPS site gains the advantage. It is a marginal factor that becomes decisive in ultra-competitive queries.

What implications are there for sites still on HTTP?

Browsers have gradually strengthened their security alerts for HTTP sites. Chrome, Firefox, and Safari now display explicit warnings on unsecured pages, especially if they contain forms.

These warnings create a major psychological friction for the user. Even if your content is excellent, the visitor sees an alert message before reading the first line. The impact on the bounce rate and session duration is measurable.

  • HTTPS has become the default standard: over 95% of pages loaded on Chrome now use the secure protocol
  • Browsers actively penalize HTTP: visual alerts, functional limitations (geolocation, push notifications, etc.)
  • The ranking signal remains slight but cumulative: HTTPS does not compensate for weak content, but optimizes an already strong site
  • User trust is a major indirect benefit: fewer drop-offs, better engagement, improved conversion rates on transactional paths
  • The HTTPS migration is irreversible: once started, a rollback would create duplicate content and break accumulated trust signals

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with the observed practical applications?

Absolutely. Google has always practiced a gradual deployment: announcing publicly, then applying to its own properties, and then reinforcing the signal in the algorithm. The migration of this blog aligns with this logic of consistency between discourse and practice.

What is interesting is the timing. Google does not urgently migrate its blog before announcing HTTPS as a ranking factor. It does so afterward, suggesting that the signal was already active and tested internally before public communication. This is typical of Google's approach: validate internally, communicate, then generalize.

What nuances should be considered regarding the real impact of HTTPS?

Let's be honest: HTTPS alone does not save a mediocre site. I have seen sites migrate to HTTPS and lose traffic in the following weeks, not due to the migration, but because their SEO fundamentals were catastrophic. The migration simply revealed pre-existing weaknesses.

The real benefit of HTTPS is not the micro-boost in ranking. It is the reduction of negative signals: no more browser alerts, better user perception, elimination of psychological barriers to conversion. On an e-commerce site, the difference in conversion rates between HTTP and HTTPS can reach 5 to 15% depending on the sectors. [To be verified] for each specific niche, but general trends are consistent.

In which cases does this rule not apply or pose a problem?

Poorly executed HTTPS migrations create more damage than benefits. 302 redirections instead of 301, poorly configured certificates, mixed content (HTTP resources loaded on an HTTPS page), canonical tags still pointing to HTTP: these are critical errors frequently observed.

Watch out for multi-domain sites or complex architectures with CDNs. A HTTPS migration requires a rigorous technical coordination: redirections, updating configuration files, checking external resources, adjusting hreflang tags if you are international. One weak link breaks the SSL trust chain.

Migration Alert: Never migrate to HTTPS on a Friday night or during peak business periods. A configuration error can make the site inaccessible. Plan a rollback window and test extensively in a staging environment before going live.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should be taken to migrate to HTTPS without issues?

The first step: obtain a valid SSL certificate. Let's Encrypt offers free and automated certificates, perfect for most sites. For e-commerce platforms or large accounts, an EV (Extended Validation) certificate boosts trust but provides no additional SEO advantage.

Next, configure your permanent 301 redirections of all HTTP URLs to their HTTPS equivalents. This redirection should be at the server level (Apache, Nginx) to ensure performance and reliability. Verify that each old HTTP URL redirects to the exact new HTTPS version, not to a generic page.

What mistakes must absolutely be avoided during migration?

Mixed content is the number one mistake. Your page is HTTPS, but it loads images, scripts, or CSS from HTTP URLs. Result: the browser displays an alert, the green padlock disappears, and you lose all the benefits of the migration. Scan your site with Screaming Frog or tools like Why No Padlock before deployment.

Another pitfall: forgetting to update your canonical tags and hreflang. If your canonical tags still point to old HTTP URLs, Google receives conflicting signals. The same goes for XML sitemaps: generate a new version with HTTPS URLs and submit it via Search Console.

How can you verify that the migration was successful?

Use Google Search Console to add the new HTTPS property and monitor crawl errors, redirections, and any certificate issues. In the days following the migration, check daily that Google is correctly indexing the new HTTPS URLs.

Test performance with tools like SSL Labs to achieve an A+ score on the SSL configuration. Ensure that a minimum of TLS 1.2 is enabled, weak ciphers are disabled, and that HTTP/2 is operational to maximize loading speed.

These technical optimizations may seem simple on paper, but reality on the ground is often more complex. Legacy architectures, poorly documented CMSs, external dependencies: obstacles multiply quickly. Hiring a specialized SEO agency can secure the migration with a proven protocol, advanced monitoring tools, and expertise that avoids classic pitfalls. The cost of a failed migration far exceeds the investment in professional assistance.

  • Obtain a valid SSL certificate and configure it correctly on the server
  • Implement permanent 301 redirections from HTTP to HTTPS for all URLs
  • Scan and correct any mixed content (HTTP resources on HTTPS pages)
  • Update canonical tags, hreflang, and XML sitemaps with HTTPS URLs
  • Add the HTTPS property in Search Console and monitor crawl errors
  • Check SSL configuration with SSL Labs (aim for an A or A+ score)
Migrating to HTTPS is no longer an option but a fundamental requirement for any professional website. The ranking signal remains modest, but the indirect benefits (user trust, absence of browser alerts, compatibility with modern web features) make it an absolute priority. A well-executed migration is seamless for the user and neutral for SEO. A poorly executed migration can cause traffic drops of 20 to 40% within days. Take the time to prepare, test thoroughly, and deploy cautiously.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

HTTPS améliore-t-il directement mon positionnement dans Google ?
HTTPS est un signal de ranking léger. Seul, il ne propulsera pas un contenu médiocre en première page, mais à qualité égale, il donne un avantage marginal. Son vrai bénéfice est indirect : meilleure confiance utilisateur, absence d'alertes navigateur, amélioration des métriques d'engagement.
Puis-je perdre du trafic en migrant vers HTTPS ?
Oui, si la migration est mal exécutée. Redirections incorrectes, mixed content, canonical tags non mis à jour, ou certificat mal configuré peuvent casser l'indexation et faire chuter le trafic. Une migration bien préparée doit être neutre ou légèrement positive.
Let's Encrypt est-il suffisant ou faut-il un certificat payant ?
Let's Encrypt est techniquement aussi sécurisé qu'un certificat payant pour le SEO. Les certificats EV (Extended Validation) affichent le nom de l'entreprise dans la barre d'adresse, ce qui renforce la confiance utilisateur sur les sites e-commerce, mais n'offrent aucun avantage SEO supplémentaire.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google indexe les URLs HTTPS après migration ?
Google commence généralement à crawler et indexer les nouvelles URLs HTTPS dans les 48 à 72 heures si les redirections 301 sont correctes et le sitemap mis à jour. La migration complète peut prendre 2 à 4 semaines selon la taille du site.
Dois-je conserver les redirections HTTP vers HTTPS indéfiniment ?
Oui, les redirections 301 doivent rester permanentes. Même des années après la migration, des backlinks anciens ou des bookmarks utilisateurs peuvent pointer vers les anciennes URLs HTTP. Supprimer les redirections créerait des erreurs 404 et perdrait du PageRank.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History HTTPS & Security AI & SEO Domain Name

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