Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 1:47 Pourquoi Google modifie-t-il les données Discover dans Search Console ?
- 2:09 Votre site perd-il du trafic parce que votre version mobile cache du contenu ?
- 2:09 L'indexation mobile-first exclut-elle vraiment tout contenu absent de votre version mobile ?
- 3:42 Faut-il vraiment migrer data-vocabulary.org vers schema.org pour éviter une pénalité ?
- 3:42 Pourquoi Google abandonne-t-il définitivement le balisage data-vocabulary.org pour les fils d'Ariane ?
- 4:46 BERT change-t-il vraiment la façon dont Google comprend vos pages ?
- 4:46 Comment BERT transforme-t-il réellement la manière dont Google évalue vos contenus ?
- 5:49 Faut-il vraiment viser les Featured Snippets si Google supprime le résultat classique ?
- 6:20 Le contenu mixte HTTPS/HTTP peut-il vraiment tuer votre référencement ?
- 6:45 Le contenu mixte HTTPS menace-t-il vos positions Google ?
- 7:23 Faut-il modifier votre détection de Googlebot suite à la mise à jour du user agent ?
Google has modified the display of featured snippets: a page can no longer appear simultaneously in position zero AND in traditional organic results. This ‘de-duplication’ rule forces a strategic choice. If you secure the snippet, you disappear from the other first-page results. The question is no longer just 'how do I get the snippet', but 'is it really beneficial for my traffic'?
What you need to understand
What is the reasoning behind this display change?
Google justifies this modification by the desire to reduce duplication in SERPs. Before this change, a single URL could occupy two visible placements: the featured snippet at the top of the page and a traditional organic result a few positions lower.
The engine now considers that showing the same page twice in the visible area constitutes an unnecessary redundancy for the user. If your content is deemed relevant enough to deserve the snippet, it no longer needs to appear elsewhere in traditional results.
What actually happens when you secure the featured snippet?
Your page occupies position zero, displayed prominently with a rich snippet. However, it simultaneously disappears from the list of traditional organic results (positions 1 to 10).
If a competitor held position 1 before your snippet, they retain that spot. You are no longer in direct competition in the organic area — you are playing on a different field. The overall visibility of your domain for this query thus depends solely on the snippet.
Does this rule apply to all types of featured snippets?
Google did not outline any official exceptions at the time of the announcement. The rule seems to apply to paragraphs, lists, and tables extracted as snippets. Rich videos, carousels, or other special formats may follow a different logic — but Mueller does not clarify this.
In practice, some field observers have reported occasional inconsistencies, especially on multi-intent queries where Google displays several types of rich results. However, the general rule remains: one snippet = one visible presence.
- A page can no longer appear simultaneously in position zero and in traditional organic results
- If you lose the snippet, you automatically re-enter the organic results according to your natural ranking
- This rule aims to provide more diversity in SERPs by multiplying visible sources
- No documented exceptions for paragraph, list, or table snippets
- The change directly impacts the strategy for targeting position zero
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Overall, yes. The majority of sites that secured a featured snippet have indeed disappeared from traditional organic results for the same query. Position tracking tools show a clear pattern: snippet gain = loss of displayed organic position.
Let’s be honest: this isn’t a total surprise. Google has been testing this type of logic for years on other enriched formats (knowledge panels, videos, etc.). The real question is the actual impact on traffic — and there, the data is much more nuanced depending on the type of query.
What points deserve contextualization?
Mueller talks about “reducing duplication,” but he omits a crucial detail: not all featured snippets generate the same click-through rate. For certain informational queries (“what is X”, “how to Y”), the snippet fully meets the intent — result: almost zero clicks to your page.
In this case, losing your organic position to gain a snippet that does not convert to visits turns into a very bad deal. This is especially true for queries where the answer fits in 2-3 lines. [To verify]: Google does not publish any official data on average click rates by type of snippet.
When does this rule work against you?
If your traditional organic position was 1 or 2 before securing the snippet, you risk a noticeable drop in traffic. Why? Because position 1 historically captures between 25 and 35% of clicks, while a “no-click” snippet can drop below 10%.
And that's where it gets tricky: you cannot refuse the snippet. Google decides unilaterally. Some SEOs have tried to manipulate the markup to avoid being extracted (using `data-nosnippet` tags, limiting the length of `
`), but the results are random and can harm other aspects of ranking.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you're targeting featured snippets?
Analyze the real profitability of the snippet before optimizing for it. Ask yourself: does this query generate click-through or just empty visibility? If your content thoroughly answers the question in 3 lines, the snippet might kill your traffic.
For queries where the snippet serves as a gateway (tutorials, guides, detailed comparisons), it’s a different story. The user wants to know more — the snippet becomes a hook. Here, losing the organic position is compensated by high CTR on the snippet itself.
How to measure the actual impact on your traffic?
Use the Search Console to isolate queries where you've gained or lost a snippet. Compare impressions, clicks, and CTR before/after. If the CTR drops sharply after securing the snippet, it's a warning sign.
Cross-reference this data with your Analytics: check if bounce rate or time spent on the page changes. A snippet that attracts clicks but generates an immediate bounce often indicates a user disappointment — the snippet promised more than the actual content delivers.
What mistakes should you avoid in your snippet strategy?
Don’t force snippet optimization on all your priority pages. If you are already in position 1-2 with a good CTR, adding ultra-structured markup to try for the snippet can backfire. You risk sacrificing stable traffic for higher visibility, but less profitable.
A second classic mistake: believing that the snippet protects you from competitors. False. If you lose the snippet, you re-enter the organic results — but at what position? If in the meantime your natural ranking has slipped (because you neglected other signals), you could end up in position 5 or 6, without a snippet and without traffic.
- Audit your current queries with snippets: measure impressions, clicks, CTR in Search Console over the last 3 months
- Identify “no-click” snippets: if CTR < 5% on a position zero, the snippet is useless
- Test selective de-optimization: for queries where the snippet kills traffic, limit the length of paragraphs or restructure the content
- Prioritize “call-to-action” snippets: guides, tutorials, comparisons where the user wants to click for more detail
- Monitor your underlying organic positions: if you lose the snippet, to what position do you fall back?
- Vary response formats: tables and lists often generate better CTR than simple paragraphs
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on refuser qu'une page apparaisse en featured snippet ?
Si je perds le featured snippet, ma page réapparaît-elle immédiatement dans les résultats organiques ?
Les featured snippets génèrent-ils toujours plus de clics que la position 1 organique ?
Cette règle s'applique-t-elle aux vidéos et images en position zéro ?
Comment savoir si un snippet me fait perdre du trafic ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 8 min · published on 30/01/2020
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