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Official statement

Google assesses the relevance of content based on what the user is searching for, without bias regarding the article's length. Search results can include both long and short articles, depending on the context.
22:14
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h00 💬 EN 📅 03/06/2016 ✂ 14 statements
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📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims to evaluate relevance without bias towards length: both short and long articles coexist in the SERPs based on context. In practice, size is not an isolated ranking criterion, but longer content can naturally cover more aspects. Takeaway: aim for completeness to fulfill search intent, not an arbitrary word count.

What you need to understand

What does Google really say about the link between length and relevance?

John Mueller lays out a clear principle: Google neither favors nor penalizes content based on word count. The algorithm seeks to meet user intent, not to hit a quota. A 300-word article can outrank a 3000-word piece if the intent is satisfied more quickly.

In search results, we do see this coexistence: a complex informational query will bring forward in-depth guides, while a short definition will value a snippet or concise answer. The context determines the optimal format, not the other way around.

Why is this statement so important for SEOs?

Because it puts to rest a persistent myth: word count as a quality KPI. Many SEOs set arbitrary minimums (1500 words, 2000 words...) based on correlations observed in third-party studies. These benchmarks often measure averages, not causations.

Mueller refocuses the debate on contextual relevance. A 500-word piece that comprehensively addresses a transactional query will perform better than a generic 2000-word article that dilutes information. The risk? Producing volume at the expense of semantic density and UX.

How does Google determine what's 'relevant' without measuring length?

The algorithm relies on user satisfaction signals: dwell time, bounce rate, pogo-sticking, organic CTR. If short content quickly meets intent and avoids a return to the SERPs, it sends positive signals. Conversely, long but poorly structured content generates friction.

The semantic coverage also plays a central role. A long article statistically has a better chance of addressing related entities, long-tail variants, and generating internal linking. But this correlation is not mechanical: highly targeted short content with a dense vocabulary can compete.

  • Search intent always takes precedence: navigational, informational, transactional, or commercial dictates the ideal format.
  • Length is a consequence, not a goal: a complex topic naturally requires more development.
  • Behavioral signals validate relevance: short content that retains users outperforms a long piece that bores.
  • Structure and user experience matter as much as volume: spacing, subheadings, visuals, and loading times impact engagement.
  • The SERP context is telling: analyzing formats in positions 1-5 for a given query informs about Google’s expectations.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement contradict the field observations of SEOs?

Not really, but it simplifies a more nuanced phenomenon. On the ground, we see that long content dominates competitive SERPs for broad informational queries. Studies from Backlinko, SEMrush, and others regularly correlate length with average position. But correlation is not causation.

What really happens: long content on these queries addresses more sub-themes, attracts more backlinks (more citation surface), and offers more opportunities for internal linking. Length is a symptom of depth, not an isolated factor. Short content that thoroughly covers a micro-intent will always outperform a generic long article.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

For YMYL queries (health, finance, legal), Google implicitly favors detailed content with sources and proof of expertise. A short article without citations risks being sidelined, even if it technically meets the intent. E-E-A-T imposes a documentary depth that's hard to achieve in 400 words.

Similarly, in ultra-competitive sectors (digital marketing, tech, finance), top results often accumulate 2000-3000 words because competitors have maxed out exhaustiveness. Ranking with 600 words becomes statistically challenging, not due to algorithmic rules, but due to competitive pressure. [To be checked]: Does Google adjust its depth criteria based on the thematic saturation of a niche?

What misinterpretation errors should be avoided after this statement?

The first pitfall: believing that one can systematically reduce content without analyzing intent. If your competitors rank with 2000 words and you publish 500, you need to compensate with higher semantic density, a better CTR, and superior UX signals. Rarely viable on a large scale.

The second mistake: ignoring that length indirectly influences measurable metrics. Well-structured long content increases session time, generates more scroll depth, and multiplies anchor points for internal linking. These indirect signals weigh in the algorithm, even if raw length does not.

Beware of over-simplifications: Mueller does not say that length is neutral in all contexts, but that it's not a direct ranking criterion. The indirect effects (authority, engagement, semantic coverage) remain real and measurable on large samples.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you determine the optimal length for a given piece of content?

Analyze the SERPs for the target query: extract the word count of the top 10 results using a tool like Screaming Frog or SEMrush. The median gives you a reference range. If positions 1-3 display 1800-2200 words, aim for this area, not 600 or 5000.

Next, map the intent with the People Also Ask and related searches. Each identified question or sub-theme justifies a dedicated paragraph. If you cover 12 sub-intents, and each requires 150 words, you'll naturally reach 1800 words. Length emerges from completeness, not arbitrary goals.

Should you shorten existing content that performs poorly?

Only if the audit shows that length generates friction: low session time, high bounce rate, scroll depth below 50%. In this case, edit to eliminate fluff, tighten paragraphs, and add internal navigation anchors.

But if long content stagnates despite decent engagement, the issue likely lies with internal linking, backlinks, or Hn structure. Shortening without addressing these factors won't improve anything. First, try adding FAQ sections, comparative tables, or visuals to boost UX signals.

What KPIs should you track to validate the impact of length on your performance?

Monitor the average session time and scroll depth in Google Analytics 4 or Hotjar. Long content (2000+ words) with a scroll depth under 40% signals a retention issue. Conversely, short content (600 words) with 90% scroll and high session time validates relevance.

Also compare the conversion or engagement rates (shares, comments, clicks on CTAs) between short and long content on similar topics. If your long guides generate 3x more leads than your short articles, this is an actionable signal to prioritize depth. However, be cautious of confirmation bias: a long article might rank for more long-tail keywords, which can artificially inflate its metrics.

  • Extract the average word count of the top 10 results for each priority target query
  • Map the sub-intents via PAA, related searches, and competitor H2/H3 analysis
  • Audit the scroll depth and session time of underperforming long content
  • Test short versions (800-1000 words) on transactional or navigational queries
  • Monitor ranking changes after adjusting length on a sample of 20-30 pages
  • Prioritize semantic density and Hn structure over keyword stuffing
The length of content should stem from user intent and the depth needed to thoroughly address it. SEOs should abandon fixed word quotas in favor of contextual analysis: SERP benchmarks, semantic coverage, and behavioral signals. Optimizing these parameters simultaneously requires expertise and suitable tools. If this approach seems complex or time-consuming, a specialized SEO agency can audit your content, identify real optimization levers, and deploy a content strategy tailored to your traffic and conversion goals.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un contenu de 500 mots peut-il ranker en première position sur une requête compétitive ?
Oui, si l'intention utilisateur est simple et que le contenu répond mieux que les concurrents longs. Mais sur des requêtes informationnelles larges ou YMYL, la profondeur attendue rend difficile la performance d'un contenu court sans compensation par d'autres signaux (backlinks, autorité, UX).
Google pénalise-t-il le contenu trop long ou bourré de mots inutiles ?
Pas directement via la longueur, mais indirectement via les signaux UX : si un contenu long génère un fort taux de rebond ou un faible scroll depth, il perd en performance. Le sur-optimisation sémantique peut aussi diluer la pertinence topique.
Faut-il viser une longueur spécifique pour chaque type d'intention de recherche ?
Oui, en tendance : les requêtes transactionnelles tolèrent du contenu court (300-800 mots), les informationnelles complexes exigent 1500-3000 mots, les navigationnelles peuvent se limiter à 200-400 mots. Mais l'analyse SERP prime toujours sur les moyennes génériques.
Les outils SEO qui recommandent un nombre de mots sont-ils obsolètes après cette déclaration ?
Non, mais ils doivent être interprétés comme des benchmarks concurrentiels, pas des règles absolues. Un outil qui vous dit « visez 2000 mots » analyse simplement la médiane des concurrents rankés. C'est utile, mais pas suffisant sans analyse de l'intention.
Comment mesurer si mon contenu est trop long ou trop court pour une requête donnée ?
Comparez votre scroll depth, temps de session, et taux de rebond à vos propres benchmarks internes. Si un contenu long affiche 30 % de scroll depth contre 70 % pour vos contenus courts, il est probablement trop verbeux ou mal structuré pour l'intention ciblée.
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