Official statement
Other statements from this video 2 ▾
Google identifies three main causes for a drop in PageRank: the loss of backlinks from authoritative sites, technical issues with canonization or faulty internal linking, and the sale of links that transmit SEO juice. These three factors directly affect the distribution of PageRank within your architecture and link profile. A thorough technical audit is essential to diagnose the exact cause and address it before the impact becomes widespread.
What you need to understand
Is PageRank still a relevant indicator in SEO?
PageRank remains one of Google's fundamental algorithms, even though its public version disappeared years ago. Internally, Google continues to use this system to assess page authority through their incoming links and internal linking structure. A drop in PageRank signals that your site is losing its ability to rank, as each page has less ranking capital.
This official statement confirms that Google actively monitors three dimensions: the quality of the backlink profile, the effectiveness of the technical architecture, and compliance with guidelines against link manipulation. Each of these dimensions impacts the distribution of PageRank differently, but they all converge toward one effect: a gradual erosion of your organic visibility.
What exactly is a canonization issue?
Canonization problems occur when Google identifies multiple URLs for the same content without a clear directive on the main version. This dilutes PageRank across several variants (www/non-www, http/https, UTM parameters, separate mobile versions). Instead of concentrating all the juice on a single URL, you disperse it across 3, 4, or 5 different URLs.
Google then has to choose the canonical version itself, and this choice does not always align with your strategic intentions. The result: the page you want to rank loses link capital to a technically inferior variant without SEO value. This is a classic scenario following a poorly managed migration or a redesign without prior audit.
How can internal linking cause a drop in PageRank?
Internal linking determines how PageRank flows between your pages. A link from your homepage passes more juice than a link from a deep category page. If you reorganize your structure without correctly redirecting, or if you remove key pages that served as distribution hubs, you break the PageRank flow.
Common mistakes include orphans (pages without incoming internal links), excessively long redirect chains, excessive internal nofollow links, or overly airtight silos that prevent juice from flowing. A crawl audit with Screaming Frog or Botify quickly reveals these structural anomalies that undermine SEO capital distribution.
- Loss of authoritative backlinks: Monitor lost links via Search Console and monitoring tools
- Failure of canonization: Audit all URL variants and consolidate with strict canonical tags
- Broken internal linking: Identify orphan pages, chain redirects, and optimize anchors
- Link selling: Google penalizes any paid link schemes that transmit PageRank, risking manual de-ranking
- Continuous monitoring: Set up alerts for variations in incoming links and internal crawl
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement truly reflect on-the-ground observations?
The mention of loss of backlinks aligns with what we see in audits: a site that loses 20-30% of its authoritative links often sees its organic traffic drop within the following 3-6 months. Google does not react instantly, but the cumulative effect eventually impacts positions on competitive queries. This is not a myth; it is measurable.
However, Google remains deliberately vague about thresholds and timelines. How many lost links does it take to trigger a significant drop? What is the weight between a link from a DR90 site versus three links from DR40 sites? There are no precise answers. [To verify] through large-scale testing, but Google will never publish these metrics to avoid manipulation.
Why does Google specifically mention link selling?
The sale of links continues to be a thriving business despite official prohibitions. Google here reminds that transmitting PageRank through paid links violates its guidelines, leading to a manual or algorithmic penalty. This is not new, but including it in a list of technical causes (canonization, linking) suggests that Google wants to address this practice at the same level as a technical bug.
Let's be honest: distinguishing between an editorial link and a purchased link is complex for an algorithm. Google relies on patterns (exact anchors, sites specializing in sales, recurring footprints) but also on manual reporting via spam forms. If your link profile shows suspicious signals, you risk a manual action that abruptly cuts off the transmission of PageRank.
Are canonization issues really that common?
In the technical audits I conduct, canonization errors easily account for 40% of the observed PageRank losses. HTTP to HTTPS migration without proper 301 redirects, duplicate content between www and non-www versions, contradictory or missing canonical tags, unhandled session parameters: the list is long.
The problem is that these bugs can go under the radar for months. You do not see a sudden drop, just a gradual stagnation of positions. Google consolidates signals by itself, but that takes time, and the result is never optimal. An e-commerce site with 10,000 URLs can lose 30-50% of its effective PageRank due to these technical leaks.
Practical impact and recommendations
How do you diagnose the exact cause of the decline?
Start with a backlink audit in Search Console, Ahrefs, or Majestic. Export the history of incoming links over the past 12 months and identify lost domains. If you notice a drop of 15-20% in your referring domains, especially from authoritative sites, you've found the first likely cause. Check if these losses are natural (site closures, redesigns) or suspicious (voluntary removals, disavowals).
Next, audit the canonization: crawl your site with Screaming Frog in "respect robots.txt" mode. Filter URLs by HTTP status, canonical tags, and indexed versions. If you see indexed duplicates or redirect chains, you dilute your PageRank. Prioritize correcting strategic pages (homepage, main categories, top SEO landing pages).
What corrective actions should you implement immediately?
For internal linking, run a full crawl and generate a click depth report. Any strategic page more than 3-4 clicks from the homepage is losing juice. Reorganize your structure to bring these pages closer, add internal links from your high-traffic content, and remove unjustified internal nofollow links (except for login, cart, legal notices).
If you've sold links or participated in link schemes, clean your profile before a manual penalty hits. Remove suspicious links, use the disavow file for links that cannot be removed, and document your actions in Search Console. Google values transparency and proactive cleaning efforts.
How can you prevent these declines in the future?
Set up a continuous monitoring system for your backlinks with weekly alerts on lost links. Configure tools like Ahrefs Alerts or SEMrush Backlink Audit to be notified as soon as a referring domain removes you. The earlier you detect, the more you can react (contact webmaster, replace the link, create alternative content).
Audit your technical configuration at least every quarter: canonical tags, redirects, URL parameters, mobile versions, XML sitemap. A small bug introduced during an update can gradually erode your PageRank without visible signals. Automate these checks with scripts or platforms like OnCrawl or Botify if you're managing a high-volume site.
- Export the backlink history over 12 months and identify losses of authoritative domains
- Crawl the site to detect canonization issues and indexed URL variants
- Generate a click depth report and optimize the internal linking of strategic pages
- Clean up purchased or suspicious links and use the disavow file if necessary
- Set up automatic alerts for variations in backlinks and technical errors
- Plan a quarterly technical audit to prevent PageRank leaks
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le PageRank existe-t-il encore en interne chez Google ?
Comment savoir si je perds des backlinks importants ?
Un problème de canonisation peut-il passer inaperçu pendant des mois ?
Les liens nofollow internes réduisent-ils le PageRank des pages ciblées ?
Google pénalise-t-il automatiquement la vente de liens ou faut-il un signalement manuel ?
🎥 From the same video 2
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 19/08/2011
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