Official statement
Other statements from this video 39 ▾
- □ Can Removing Links Trigger a Google Penalty?
- □ Should you really clean up your artificial links if Google already ignores them?
- □ Are links really losing their ranking power on Google?
- □ Do backlinks lose their significance once a website is established?
- □ Should we really ban all exchanges of value for links?
- □ Are editorial collaborations with backlinks really risk-free according to Google?
- □ Should you really stop all large-scale repetitive link tactics?
- □ Are Google’s manual actions always visible in Search Console?
- □ Does an inactive spam domain automatically regain its reputation after a decade?
- □ Should AMP pages really adhere to the same Core Web Vitals thresholds as standard HTML pages?
- □ Should you really update the publication date after every small change on a page?
- □ Do News sitemaps really accelerate the indexing of your news articles?
- □ Can self-referential canonical tags really safeguard your site from URL duplications?
- □ Should you really let go of rel=next and rel=prev tags for pagination?
- □ Is it true that the number of words isn't a Google ranking factor?
- □ Can database-generated sites still rank by automatically cross-referencing data?
- □ Are long-term 302 redirects really equivalent to 301s for SEO?
- □ How long can a 503 error last without risking deindexation?
- □ Why does it really take 3 to 4 months for a revamp to be recognized by Google?
- □ Are separate mobile URLs (m.example.com) still a viable SEO option?
- □ Should you be worried about massively removing backlinks after a manual penalty?
- □ Are Backlinks Becoming a Secondary Ranking Factor?
- □ What exactly constitutes a natural link according to Google, and how can you avoid risky practices?
- □ Should you nofollow all editorial links that come from collaborations with experts?
- □ Are you truly confident that you don't have any Google manual penalties?
- □ Does a spammy past really erase its SEO footprint after a decade?
- □ Do AMP pages still hold a competitive edge against Core Web Vitals?
- □ Should you really update a page's publication date to improve its ranking?
- □ Do News sitemaps really speed up the indexing of your content?
- □ Why does your site fluctuate between page 1 and page 5 of Google's results?
- □ Does fact-check markup really enhance your page rankings?
- □ Is it true that you can ditch AMP to appear in Google Discover?
- □ Should you really add a self-referencing canonical tag on every page?
- □ Should we still use rel=next and rel=previous tags for pagination?
- □ Is it true that the number of words doesn’t really matter for Google rankings?
- □ Can database-generated sites really rank on Google?
- □ Should you really abandon separate mobile URLs (m.example.com)?
- □ Should you really worry about the difference between 301 and 302 redirects?
- □ How long can you keep a 503 code without risking deindexation?
Google recommends creating exceptional content that will attract links over time, but immediately adds: be proactive. Advertising, press relations, active promotion—everything goes as long as the content deserves those links. In practical terms, this position formalizes what many are already practicing: creating quality content is not enough; it needs to be actively promoted to speed up the acquisition of backlinks.
What you need to understand
What does 'will naturally attract links' really mean? (What does it involve?)
The term 'naturally' can be confusing. Google is not referring to total passivity here. A 'natural' link refers to a link earned through the quality of the content, as opposed to artificial link schemes (mass purchase, PBNs, automated link exchanges). This distinction is crucial.
What Google wants to avoid is pure manipulation: buying 500 links from spammy directories or setting up a network of satellite sites. However, actively promoting a comprehensive guide to specialized journalists is within the guidelines. The resulting link is 'natural' in the sense that the publisher chooses freely to include it because the content adds value.
Why does Google encourage active promotion?
Because the engine knows perfectly well that excellent content published without promotion will never be seen by anyone. And invisible content does not generate links. Passively waiting for backlinks to fall from the sky is naive—or merely blind luck.
Google prefers an ecosystem where quality content creators take the initiative to expose it. Paid advertising, outreach to local press, sharing on social media—all of this helps provide initial visibility. The resultant links remain editorial—no one is forcing publishers' hands.
Where is the line between promotion and manipulation?
The red line is the editorial nature of the link. If you pay a journalist to insert a dofollow link without disclosure, you are manipulating. If you buy a sponsored ad that generates visibility and a blogger then decides to naturally cite you, that’s legitimate.
Similarly, sending a press release to 50 local publications, alerting them to your latest practical guide, is classic outreach. As long as you don’t explicitly ask, ‘please include a dofollow link to my category page,’ it’s acceptable. The journalist or blogger remains free to judge whether your content deserves a link.
- Natural link: free editorial choice, motivated by content quality
- Allowed promotion: advertising, PR, outreach to press/bloggers, social sharing
- Prohibited manipulation: purchase of dofollow links, PBNs, mass automated exchanges, abusive guest-posting
- Gray area: moderate guest-posting, sponsorship with 'sponsored link' mention, occasional exchanges among peers
- Key criterion: does the publisher maintain their free choice to place the link or not?
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with observed practices in the field?
Yes and no. Google is formalizing what seasoned SEOs have been doing for years: proactive link building is not prohibited, as long as you follow the rules of the game. Many successful sites combine premium content with a systematic outreach strategy. Mueller’s statements validate this approach.
But—and this is where it gets tricky—the boundary remains fuzzy. How many follow-ups to a journalist before it becomes spam? What level of sponsorship is acceptable before a sponsored link is considered manipulative if it's not nofollow? Google does not provide figures or thresholds. [To verify]: does the algorithm know how to distinguish between intelligent outreach and a disguised spam campaign? Probably in clear-cut cases, but the gray area remains vast.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
First, ‘exceptional content’ is a marketing term. Exceptional for whom? A 5,000-word guide packed with data might be exceptional for a niche B2B audience but completely ignored by the general public. Exceptional quality guarantees nothing—you also need to target the right audience, at the right time, with the right promotion channel.
Secondly, active promotion requires budget. Advertising, press relations, outreach tools—all of these cost money. Smaller sites cannot compete on equal footing with brands that can spend €10k/month on PR. Google says ‘be proactive’ but doesn’t acknowledge that this proactivity mechanically favors those with cash. The supposed meritocracy of ‘the best content wins’ takes a hit.
In what situations doesn’t this recommendation apply?
If your market is ultra-competitive (finance, insurance, health), waiting for links to arrive 'naturally'—even with promotion—can take years. In the meantime, your competitors are discreetly buying links on authority sites or engaging in aggressive guest-posting. Google condemns these practices, to be sure, but in reality, many are doing very well.
Another case involves technical niche sectors. A manufacturer of industrial bearings may produce the ultimate guide on tribology, but no one is going to share it spontaneously. The potential for virality is nonexistent. Here, active promotion hits a wall: no specialized press, ultra-limited audience, no influential bloggers. The 'content + promotion' strategy shows its limits.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely to promote your content without crossing the red line?
First, identify the influencers relevant to your sector: specialized journalists, recognized bloggers, LinkedIn influencers, technical forums. Establish a qualitative, not quantitative, list. Better to have 10 ultra-targeted contacts than 500 generic emails sent en masse.
Next, personalize your outreach. A standardized email saying, ‘Hello, I wrote an article, can you share it?’ goes straight to the trash. Explain how your content addresses a specific need for the journalist or blogger's audience. Reference a recent article they published, show that you’ve done your homework. A handcrafted approach pays off.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in an active promotion strategy?
Avoid link stuffing in press releases. Sending a press release with 5 dofollow links to your product pages is disguised spam. A press release must inform, not promote overtly. If a journalist decides to cite you, they will choose where to place the link themselves.
Never pay for a dofollow link in an editorial article without disclosing it as 'sponsored' or 'partnership.' That’s the most blatant manipulation. If you sponsor content, insist that the link be nofollow or sponsored. Yes, this diminishes immediate SEO value, but it protects your site long-term. Google knows how to detect patterns of mass buying.
How can I check that my strategy remains compliant with Google's guidelines?
Ask yourself this simple question: if Google read all my outreach emails, would I be embarrassed? If the answer is yes, you’re probably in the gray area. A good test: reread your messages imagining they will be published on Twitter. If you wouldn’t want that to come to light, it’s suspicious.
Also monitor the diversity of your link profile. If 80% of your backlinks come from sites contacted via paid outreach, that’s a red flag. A healthy profile mixes spontaneous links (rare but valuable), links from active promotion (the majority), and a few 'happy accidents' (social shares, spontaneous citations).
- Create content that addresses a documented need (data, case study, practical guide)
- Identify 10-20 relevant influencers in your sector (journalists, bloggers, influencers)
- Personalize each outreach email: show that you know the recipient and their audience
- Never explicitly ask for a dofollow link—offer the content, let the publisher decide
- If sponsorship: require a nofollow or sponsored attribute on the link
- Diversify promotion channels: PR, social media, paid advertising, specialized forums
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je payer pour qu'un journaliste écrive un article sur mon entreprise avec un lien ?
Le guest-posting est-il encore une stratégie viable en SEO ?
Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant qu'un contenu attire des liens naturellement ?
Envoyer un communiqué de presse avec des liens dofollow est-il risqué ?
Quelle différence entre promotion active et manipulation de liens selon Google ?
🎥 From the same video 39
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 01/04/2021
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