Official statement
Other statements from this video 8 ▾
- 10:02 Pourquoi vos données Search Console peuvent fausser votre analyse après un passage en HTTPS ?
- 17:56 Le PageRank est-il vraiment encore utile pour ranker en SEO ?
- 40:00 Faut-il vraiment mettre les liens internes en nofollow pour sculpter le PageRank ?
- 52:02 Faut-il vraiment éviter de modifier la structure de ses URLs produits ?
- 55:11 Le contenu généré par les utilisateurs est-il vraiment valorisé par Google ?
- 55:30 Fetch as Google est-il vraiment le moyen le plus rapide de faire indexer ses pages ?
- 56:32 Les liens cassés internes impactent-ils vraiment le classement Google ?
- 57:55 Pourquoi la combinaison de canonical et hreflang est-elle un piège fréquent pour les sites multilingues ?
Mueller states that a website must become a reference in its niche to improve its ranking. Specifically, Google favors sites that demonstrate deep expertise and excellent user experience. The catch? This statement remains vague about the specific criteria that define such reference status and how to achieve it without a colossal marketing budget.
What you need to understand
Does Google expect the impossible from small websites?
Mueller's statement is based on seemingly simple logic: higher quality websites should naturally rank better. The problem arises when trying to define what constitutes a 'reference site'. Google speaks of user experience and quality, but these terms encompass dozens of different signals.
In practice, becoming a reference in a niche often involves a combination of comprehensive content, demonstrated authority, and peer recognition. Sites that achieve this naturally accumulate editorial backlinks, brand mentions, and increasing direct traffic. However, this process takes time and requires resources.
What criteria truly define a 'reference site'?
Google has never published an exhaustive list, leaving room for interpretation. The Quality Raters Guidelines mention E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) as an evaluation framework. A reference site should evidently demonstrate these four pillars.
Specifically, this translates to having content authored by identifiable experts, cited and verifiable sources, and transparency about the organization behind the site. Technical signals also matter: strong Core Web Vitals, logical architecture, and absence of intrusive elements. However, there is no guarantee that by ticking these boxes, you will mechanically rise in the SERPs.
Is this approach compatible with actual budget constraints?
Let’s be honest: producing reference content takes time and money. A comprehensive article requires hours of research, writing, and revising. Multiply by hundreds of pages, add original visuals, and keep everything updated... budgets can balloon quickly.
Sites with small teams face a difficult choice: prioritize quantity to cover their semantic spectrum or focus on in-depth quality on fewer topics. Google leans towards the second option, but algorithms also reward freshness and broad thematic coverage. This tension creates a stalemate for many projects.
- Quality and user experience remain the foundations for ranking according to Google
- Becoming a reference requires demonstrated expertise, recognized authority, and positive engagement signals
- E-E-A-T is the main evaluation framework, even though Google does not list it as a direct ranking factor
- The necessary resources to achieve this level automatically exclude certain web projects
- No precise threshold is communicated to define when a site reaches reference status
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with real-world observations?
Yes and no. Sites that dominate competitive SERPs do share common characteristics: depth of content, high domain authority, and refined user experience. However, correlation does not always imply causation. Some of these sites benefit from a long-standing history, a strong brand, or massive marketing investments that amplify their SEO performance.
I have seen technically flawless sites, with expert content, stagnate for months. Conversely, average sites that are well marketed progress rapidly. Google measures behavioral signals that are difficult to simulate without a genuine audience. Mueller's advice is sound but incomplete: quality is not enough if no one knows you exist.
What nuances should be added to this generic advice?
First, not all niches are equal. In certain sectors (finance, health, legal), Google applies drastic YMYL (Your Money Your Life) standards. Becoming the reference in these areas requires near-institutional authority evidence. In lighter fields, the bar is notably more accessible.
Next, the concept of 'higher quality' remains subjective. Higher than what? Than direct competitors in the top 10? Than the historical leaders in the industry? Google never specifies the benchmark. This ambiguity allows the algorithm to adjust its criteria based on the context, but it complicates strategic planning for SEOs.
[To be verified] Mueller suggests that enhancing quality alone is sufficient to improve ranking. This assertion overlooks the dimensions of popularity and distribution that significantly influence performance. Exceptional content that is invisible will not rank. Algorithms integrate social signals, traffic, and brand indicators that fall outside the simple framework of 'website quality'.
In what cases does this rule not apply directly?
High-intent transactional queries follow a different logic. Google favors established e-commerce sites, well-known comparison sites, and recognized brands in these instances. A new site, even one that is excellent, will struggle to break through against Amazon or dominant players. Quality matters, but commercial authority and transaction trust weigh more heavily.
Ultra-specialized niches with low volume also operate differently. When there are only three sites addressing a specific topic, becoming 'the reference' loses its meaning. Google will rank according to more basic criteria: direct semantic relevance, freshness, and simply having the information present. User experience matters less when there is no real competition.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete steps should you take to elevate your site?
Start with a competitive positioning audit. Identify the three sites that dominate your target queries and dissect what makes them 'the reference': depth of content, number of authors, frequency of updates, types of media used, navigation structure. Map the gaps between their level and yours.
Next, prioritize quick wins that visibly enhance user experience. Fix any failing Core Web Vitals, simplify navigation paths, remove aggressive pop-ups, and improve mobile readability. These changes yield measurable effects on the behavioral metrics Google monitors.
Invest in distinctive content rather than generic content. A 10,000-word guide with original research, expert interviews, and exclusive data is worth more than ten 1,000-word articles recycling the same information available everywhere. Depth and uniqueness create authority.
What mistakes should you avoid in this pursuit of quality?
Don't fall into paralytic perfectionism. Some SEOs indefinitely postpone publication while striving for impeccable quality. It’s better to publish good content now and improve it progressively than to wait six months for 'perfect' content that arrives too late in a fast-evolving sector.
Avoid neglecting promotion and distribution. Exceptional content without a dissemination strategy will remain invisible. Plan from the outset how you will make it known: targeted outreach, sharing on professional networks, partnerships with complementary sites, newsletters to your existing base.
Another frequent mistake: uniformly optimizing the entire site. Focus your resources first on the strategic pages that generate traffic and conversions. Transforming these pages into absolute references for their topics will yield more results than marginally improving hundreds of secondary pages.
How can you measure progress towards reference status?
Behavioral metrics offer valuable insights. Track changes in bounce rate, time spent on page, and pages viewed per session. If these indicators improve sustainably, you are headed in the right direction. Google Search Console also provides data on impressions and CTR that reflect your growing attractiveness in the SERPs.
Monitor external authority signals: brand mentions without links, citations in third-party content, invitations to industry events, interview requests. These qualitative markers indicate that your expertise is recognized beyond your own ecosystem. They often precede significant ranking gains.
- Conduct a detailed benchmark of reference sites in your niche
- Fix all technical issues impacting Core Web Vitals
- Produce at least three pillar pieces with original research and demonstrated expertise
- Establish a content distribution and promotion strategy
- Identify and develop your E-E-A-T: authors, sources, organizational transparency
- Monthly measure behavioral metrics and adjust accordingly
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google définit-il précisément ce qu'est un site de référence ?
La qualité du contenu suffit-elle à améliorer le ranking ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour devenir une référence dans sa niche ?
Les petits sites peuvent-ils vraiment concurrencer les acteurs établis ?
Faut-il privilégier la quantité ou la qualité de contenu ?
🎥 From the same video 8
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 02/06/2015
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