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Official statement

Statements made by Google employees can evolve over time with updates in technology and algorithms.
28:10
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:11 💬 EN 📅 09/04/2020 ✂ 10 statements
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📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Martin Splitt reminds us that Google employees' public statements evolve alongside technological and algorithmic updates. Specifically, a statement made two years ago may be outdated today without any official retraction published. For an SEO professional, this means mentally dating each Google piece of advice and systematically cross-referencing with recent field tests.

What you need to understand

Why doesn't Google guarantee the longevity of its statements?

Google's algorithm undergoes hundreds of changes each year, some of which challenge established principles. When a Googler states that a factor matters or not, they describe the current state of the system — not a truth etched in stone.

The issue? Google does not publish a comprehensive changelog of algorithm changes. A statement by John Mueller in 2020 about the weight of backlinks may be outdated by 2023 without any official announcement. This ambiguity creates a gray area that Google sometimes benefits from, allowing it to adjust its narrative without having to acknowledge inconsistencies.

Does this evolution apply to all types of statements?

No. Some statements pertain to stable architectural principles (the importance of unique content, the necessity of crawling), while others focus on technical details that constantly shift (the weight of UX signals, the treatment of internal links).

The most volatile claims generally concern ranking factors and their relative weighting. Google continuously adjusts the balance between semantic signals, authority signals, behavioral signals — and rarely communicates on these adjustments.

How can one identify a potentially outdated statement?

Three clues: publication date (more than two years = suspicious), technological context (pre-MUM, pre-SGE, pre-Helpful Content), and most importantly, contradictory field observations. When a claim from Google massively contradicts what you observe in production, it's often a sign that it is no longer current.

The pro reflex: when quoting a Google source, always check if a more recent statement exists on the same topic. Googlers frequently contradict each other over time — this is not a fault, it reflects a dynamic system.

  • Date every Google source you use as a reference — a claim from 2019 does not hold the same value as one from yesterday
  • Always cross-check with recent tests or up-to-date correlation studies before building a strategy
  • Favor recurring statements over several years — they are more likely to reflect a stable principle
  • Be wary of overly precise claims regarding the weighting of factors — these are the ones that shift the fastest
  • Monitor official updates (Core Updates, Product Reviews Update, etc.) that often invalidate earlier advice

SEO Expert opinion

Is this warning consistent with what we observe in the field?

Absolutely. Any SEO professional with five years in the field can cite at least ten Google statements that have become false over time. A classic example: the discourse around mobile-first indexing, the weight of Core Web Vitals, or the treatment of nofollow links — all have evolved without Google formally acknowledging a change in position.

The real problem is that Google does not maintain any versioned knowledge base. When information becomes outdated, it remains online without any mention of expiration. As a result, thousands of professionals make strategic decisions based on outdated advice found in YouTube videos from 2018.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Splitt mentions evolution "with updates in technology and algorithms", but omits a crucial point: some statements are deliberately vague from the outset. It's not always a matter of obsolescence — sometimes, it's about maintaining strategic ambiguity over time.

[To be verified] The statement implies that Google communicates in good faith at a given moment, and then technology evolves. However, we know that some answers are deliberately imprecise to avoid abuse (think about statements regarding negative SEO, disavow, manual vs. algorithmic penalties). Distinguishing between technical obsolescence and controlled narratives isn't always straightforward.

In what cases does this rule apply the least?

Fundamental principles of editorial quality remain surprisingly stable. Google has been repeating for fifteen years that it is necessary to "create content for users, not for engines" — and this line has never truly changed, even as the metrics have evolved.

Conversely, anything related to technical signals (speed, data structure, JavaScript processing, mobile indexing) evolves rapidly. A statement about crawl budget in 2019 likely does not reflect the current reality of Googlebot and its distributed architecture.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should you take to avoid basing your strategy on outdated information?

First reflex: systematically date every Google citation in your monitoring, audits, and client recommendations. If you cite Mueller or Splitt, add the date of the statement — this forces you to question the freshness of the information.

Then, test. Always. A Google statement is never a substitute for field testing. If Google claims that X is not a ranking factor but you consistently observe a correlation, dig deeper — either the statement is outdated, or it is imprecise, or your interpretation is biased.

What mistakes should be avoided when consulting official Google sources?

Never assume an older statement remains valid by default. The opposite is safer: assume that information over two years old warrants verification, especially if it pertains to a technical subject or a specific ranking factor.

Another trap: relying solely on secondary sources (SEO blog articles that cite Google without a link or date). Always trace back to the primary source, check the context, the question posed, the exact wording — a truncated citation can completely alter the meaning of an answer.

How can you verify that your SEO strategy is not based on outdated data?

Regularly confront your working hypotheses with the latest correlation studies (Semrush, Ahrefs, etc.) and recent feedback from the community. If no one confirms on the ground what Google claimed three years ago, that's a warning sign.

Organize quarterly review sessions: revisit the Google statements you rely on, check if there have been any official updates that contradict them, and adjust your roadmap accordingly. This work is tedious but prevents wasting six months on an obsolete tactic.

  • Date all Google sources used in audits and strategic recommendations
  • Set up monitoring on official Google accounts (Search Central, Mueller, Splitt, Illyes) to detect changes in messaging
  • Systematically cross-check Google claims with A/B tests or recent case studies
  • Document contradictions observed between official statements and field observations
  • Conduct a relevance audit of sources every six months, especially after a major Core Update
  • Train teams to distinguish stable principles (E-E-A-T, content quality) from volatile tactics (technical signals, weighting)
Basing your SEO strategy on Google statements without verifying their current relevance is like driving with an outdated roadmap. The solution? Date, test, cross-check — and accept that Google itself doesn't always know what will be true in six months. This critical and iterative approach requires time, resources, and sharp expertise to differentiate signal from noise in the constant stream of official statements. If your team lacks the bandwidth to maintain this monitoring and ongoing testing, enlisting a specialized SEO agency may be wise — provided they share this methodological rigor and testing culture rather than repeating Google mantras without perspective.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

À quelle fréquence les déclarations Google sur le SEO deviennent-elles obsolètes ?
Il n'y a pas de règle fixe, mais les déclarations sur les facteurs de ranking et les signaux techniques ont tendance à vieillir plus vite — souvent en 12-24 mois après un Core Update majeur. Les principes éditoriaux généraux restent stables plus longtemps.
Peut-on faire confiance aux anciennes vidéos YouTube de Googlers comme Mueller ou Splitt ?
Avec prudence. Vérifie toujours la date de publication et croise avec des sources plus récentes. Une vidéo de 2019 peut contenir des infos obsolètes, surtout si elle porte sur des aspects techniques ou des pondérations de signaux.
Google publie-t-il des mises à jour ou des corrections quand une déclaration devient fausse ?
Rarement de manière explicite. Google publie des docs officielles (Search Central) mais ne maintient pas de changelog détaillé des évolutions de discours. C'est au praticien de repérer les incohérences et les changements de cap.
Comment distinguer une déclaration obsolète d'une déclaration volontairement floue ?
L'obsolescence se détecte souvent par contradiction avec des observations terrain récentes ou avec des déclarations ultérieures. Le flou volontaire, lui, reste cohérent dans le temps mais manque de précision — Google évite sciemment de donner trop de détails pour ne pas favoriser la manipulation.
Faut-il complètement ignorer les anciennes déclarations Google ?
Non, mais il faut les contextualiser : date, sujet, formulation exacte. Une déclaration ancienne peut rester vraie si elle porte sur un principe stable. L'erreur est de l'appliquer aveuglément sans vérifier qu'elle colle encore à la réalité actuelle de l'algo.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms Content Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO

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