Official statement
Other statements from this video 5 ▾
- 1:04 Comment les moteurs de recherche cataloguent-ils vraiment le contenu web ?
- 1:36 Comment Google explore-t-il vraiment vos pages pour les indexer ?
- 2:51 Faut-il vraiment optimiser les 200+ facteurs de classement Google ?
- 5:21 Les meta tags et titres de page sont-ils vraiment cruciaux pour le référencement ?
- 6:21 La performance web est-elle vraiment un levier SEO ou juste un mythe confortable ?
Martin Splitt emphasizes that content must serve a specific purpose for the user, meet their real needs, and integrate the natural vocabulary of your audience. In practical terms, this means that a technically optimized text without added value will not rank sustainably. The nuance: Google never precisely defines what a 'clear objective' is, leaving a wide margin for interpretation for practitioners.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize user intent over pure technique?
Splitt's statement marks a shift in focus from traditional on-page signals to the actual intent behind each page. Google wants each URL on your site to answer a question or solve a specific problem.
The engine now knows how to identify — through user behavior, reading time, and pogo-sticking patterns — if content truly delivers on its promise. A page that gathers keywords but disappoints the user in 15 seconds will be penalized, even if it ticks all the technical boxes.
What exactly do we mean by ‘meeting the user’s needs’?
This is the most ambiguous part of this statement. Google provides no quantifiable metrics to define a 'need satisfied'. We must infer from indirect signals: adjusted bounce rates, scroll depth, post-click interactions.
In practice, this means that a blog post should provide the answer within the first paragraphs, a product page should clarify technical specs without forcing the user to seek, and a service page should explain concretely what is delivered. The rest is rhetoric — and Google knows it.
Why is user vocabulary now a ranking criterion?
Splitt explicitly mentions 'the words used by your users'. This is a direct semantic signal: Google values pages that speak the language of their audience, not corporate jargon or keyword stuffing.
The engine now analyzes co-occurring terms in searches, forums, and questions posed on Reddit or Quora. If your users say 'how to unlock an iPhone' while your page titles 'iOS unlocking procedure', you’re creating unnecessary semantic friction.
- Each page should have a unique and measurable objective — no general catch-all trying to cover everything
- Useful content takes precedence over long content — 400 words that answer are worth more than 2000 words of filler
- Natural vocabulary beats SEO jargon — use the actual terms of your users, even if they have lower search volume
- Google measures satisfaction through behavioral signals — not by how many times 'SEO' appears in your text
- Technical optimization remains necessary but insufficient — it no longer compensates for empty content
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement aligned with what we observe in the field?
Yes and no. For informational queries, we clearly see that pages that respond quickly and well rank better, even with fewer backlinks. A concrete 600-word guide can outperform a 3000-word generic tome.
However, for competitive commercial queries, the 'clear objective' is not enough — domain authority, clean backlinks, and a flawless technical structure are also required. Splitt’s statement implies that content is the main lever, but this is a dangerous simplification.
[To be confirmed]: Google never specifies how it measures whether a 'need is met'. It is assumed to be behavioral signals (CTR, dwell time, return rate to SERP), but no official confirmation exists.
What nuances should be added to this idealized vision?
Splitt speaks of an SEO world where the best content wins. The reality is less binary. A site with good content but poor architecture will never rank — wasted crawl budget, internal PageRank dilution, cannibalization.
Similarly, a site with excellent content but zero backlinks will take months to emerge on competitive queries. 'Quality content' is a necessary condition, not sufficient. And this is where the statement becomes frustrating: it deliberately omits all other levers.
In what cases does this rule not apply or become insufficient?
In YMYL niches (health, finance, legal), useful content is not enough — Google demands massive E-E-A-T signals: identified authors, certifications, external citations, institutional backlinks. A perfect article written by an anonymous author will never rank against WebMD.
For transactional queries ('buy X'), the user objective is clear (to buy), but what makes it rank is the commercial strength of the domain: age, customer reviews, historical conversion rates. Amazon doesn't rank because its product listings are literary masterpieces — they rank because Amazon converts.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should be taken to align content with this directive?
Start by auditing each strategic page with this brutal question: 'If I were the user, does this page answer my question within the first 10 seconds?' If the answer is no, rewrite or merge with another page.
Next, analyze the real language of your audience — not Google Keyword Planner suggestions, but the terms used on Reddit, in forums, or support tickets. Integrate these natural expressions into your titles, subtitles, and first paragraphs.
Finally, segment your content by intent: one page = one intent = one objective. Stop creating 'Swiss army knife' pages that try to cover everything. Prefer 5 laser-focused pages over 1 general one.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided to not contradict this logic?
Do not confuse length with usefulness. A 2500-word article that drowns information in unnecessary context is counterproductive. Google values informational density, not volume.
Avoid disguised keyword stuffing — repeating 'best CRM software' 30 times in an article doesn't replace a concrete demonstration of value. If your text sounds robotic, it won't rank sustainably.
Never publish content 'just to exist' on a query. If you have nothing new or useful to say, it's better not to publish. Google now detects zombie pages that exist just to capture traffic without adding value.
How can I verify that my site adheres to these principles without self-deception?
Use real user testing — not your internal opinion. Show your key pages to 5-10 target users and ask: 'Did you find what you were looking for? How long did it take you?'
Analyze your behavioral metrics in GA4 or your analytics tool: average time on page, scroll depth, exit rate. A strategic page with 80% immediate exits is a red flag.
Compare your content to that of the top 3 positions for your target query — not to copy but to identify what they provide that you omit. Often, it's a concrete detail (a comparison table, a numerical example) that makes the difference.
- Audit each strategic page to ensure it answers ONE specific question
- Extract the real vocabulary from your users (forums, support, social media) and integrate it naturally
- Remove or merge 'catch-all' pages that try to cover everything without focus
- Test your content with real users before publication to validate clarity
- Monitor behavioral metrics (time on page, scroll depth) to detect underperforming content
- Compare your content to the top 3 to identify specific informational gaps
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un contenu optimisé techniquement mais sans valeur ajoutée peut-il encore ranker ?
Comment identifier le vocabulaire réel de mes utilisateurs pour l'intégrer au contenu ?
Quelle longueur de contenu faut-il viser pour « répondre aux besoins utilisateur » ?
Le contenu de qualité compense-t-il un mauvais profil de backlinks ?
Comment mesurer si mon contenu « sert un objectif clair » aux yeux de Google ?
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