Official statement
Other statements from this video 39 ▾
- □ 301 Redirect or Canonical for Merging Two Sites: What's the SEO Difference?
- □ How can you feature in Top Stories without being a news site?
- □ How does Google really determine the publication date of an article?
- □ Are orphan pages really invisible to Google?
- □ Are Core Web Vitals really going to change your SEO ranking?
- □ Why do your local performance tests never match Search Console data?
- □ Should you really use rel="sponsored" instead of nofollow for your affiliate links?
- □ Can one website really dominate the entire first page of Google?
- □ Should you really optimize your pages for the terms 'best' and 'top'?
- □ Why does Google take 3 to 6 months to crawl your complete redesign?
- □ Does article length really impact Google rankings?
- □ Is Google indexing really instantaneous, or are there hidden delays?
- □ Do you really need to choose between a 301 redirect and a canonical tag to merge two sites?
- □ Does Top Stories really use a different algorithm than conventional search?
- □ Why doesn't the Google News tab always display your articles in chronological order?
- □ Can orphan pages really harm your site's SEO performance?
- □ Will Core Web Vitals Really Transform Ranking in the SERPs?
- □ Is there really a difference between rel=nofollow and rel=sponsored for affiliate links?
- □ Does Google really restrict how many times a domain can appear in search results?
- □ Should you really stop using exact match keywords in your content?
- □ Why is content specificity more important than keyword stuffing?
- □ Does the length of an article really influence its ranking on Google?
- □ Why does it take Google 3 to 6 months to refresh an entire large site?
- □ Should you stop manually submitting URLs to Google?
- □ Do you really need to include 'best' and 'top' in your content to rank for these queries?
- □ Should you really choose between 301 redirect and canonical for merging two sites?
- □ Can your site really appear in Top Stories and the News tab without being a news outlet?
- □ Should you really align visible dates and structured data for chronological ranking?
- □ Do orphan pages really harm your SEO?
- □ Have Core Web Vitals really become a crucial ranking factor?
- □ Should you really prioritize rel=sponsored for affiliate links, or is nofollow enough?
- □ Do you really need to mark your affiliate links to avoid a Google penalty?
- □ Can the same site really appear 7 times on the same SERP?
- □ Should you really optimize your pages for 'best', 'top', or 'near me'?
- □ Why does it take Google 3 to 6 months to refresh large websites?
- □ Does the length of an article really influence its Google ranking?
- □ Is it really necessary to match exact keywords in your SEO content?
- □ Does Google really impose an indexing delay based on the quality of your pages?
- □ Why does Google still show the old domain in site: queries after a 301 redirect?
Google claims that exact match keywords are no longer necessary: its machine learning algorithms recognize synonyms, spelling variants, and plurals. This tolerance does not exempt you from being precise in writing: proper names, places, and factual details remain essential quality signals. The real challenge shifts from strict lexical optimization to the semantic richness of the content.
What you need to understand
What does Google really mean by 'synonym recognition'?
Google's natural language understanding systems, including BERT and MUM, analyze the context of a word within its sentence, paragraph, and even the entirety of the page. Rather than looking for an exact occurrence of 'digital marketing agency', the algorithm understands that 'consulting firm digital transformation' can fulfill the same search intent.
This ability relies on vector models that position terms in a multidimensional semantic space. Two words close in this space are considered semantically related, even if their spellings differ entirely. In practical terms, Google can associate 'automobile' and 'car', 'SEO' and 'natural referencing', 'buy' and 'acquire' without these terms sharing a common root.
Does this flexibility render keyword research obsolete?
No — and this is a frequent misconception among practitioners who skim this statement. Keyword research remains highly relevant for identifying search intents, understanding the vocabulary of your audience, and structuring your content architecture.
What changes is the execution rigidity. You are no longer required to repeat 'best CRM software for SMEs' exactly three times in your text. You can write naturally with variations: 'client management solution tailored for small businesses', 'efficient CRM tool', etc. The system understands that you are discussing the same topic.
Why does Mueller emphasize the specificity of details?
Because named entities — names of people, businesses, places, products — remain essential anchors of understanding. Content that mentions '15th arrondissement of Paris' rather than 'large French city' sends a much stronger accuracy signal to Google.
This recommendation also addresses a growing quality issue: the explosion of generic content produced en masse, often by AI, which carefully avoids any verifiable references. Mentioning names, figures, dates, and specific locations distinguishes expertly written content from generic text assembled to fill a page.
- Exact match is no longer a mechanical ranking criterion since the advent of natural language models
- Synonyms and variants are understood in their semantic context thanks to vector embeddings
- Factual specificity (names, places, numerical data) remains a strong signal of quality and expertise
- Search intent now takes precedence over the literal presence of a sequence of words in the content
- Keyword research maintains its strategic usefulness for understanding the audience and structuring content
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement truly reflect field observations?
Yes and no. For broad informational queries, Google does indeed tolerate a wide variety of formulations. An article on 'how to choose a mattress' will rank just as well as text targeting 'selection criteria for bedding' if the substance is relevant.
In contrast, for transactional or local queries, exact lexical matching still holds observable weight. Search for 'plumber Paris 11': pages that literally contain these three words in their title tags, H1, and first paragraphs consistently dominate the SERPs. [To be verified]: Mueller does not specify whether this flexibility applies uniformly across all types of queries — this is a gap in his statement.
Can we really do without the strategic repetition of keywords?
The old-school keyword density (2-3% exact occurrences) is indeed dead. But the concept of 'topical authority' that has replaced it still relies on the presence of a recurring specialized vocabulary. An article on technical SEO that never mentions 'crawl', 'indexing', 'robots.txt', or 'XML sitemap' will struggle to rank, even with approximate synonyms.
What Mueller does not explicitly state: one must distinguish between mechanical repetition (over-optimization) and natural recurrence of industry vocabulary. An expert discussing their field inherently uses established terms multiple times — this is the pattern Google seeks to identify.
What risks arise if we apply this rule too literally?
The main danger: producing too vague content under the pretext that 'Google understands synonyms'. I've seen clients replace 'labor lawyer Marseille' with 'legal professional specialized in southern France' thinking they're doing modern SEO. Result: plummeting positions.
Another pitfall: neglecting exact long-tail queries. If your audience searches for '404 error after WordPress migration', writing 'technical issues following CMS change' won't always suffice. Very specific queries still benefit from precise lexical matching, especially when few pages address exactly that topic.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you write content without focusing on exact match?
Start by identifying the complete semantic field of your topic, not just a main keyword. Use tools like AnswerThePublic, AlsoAsked, or Google’s 'related searches' to map out the actual phrasing variants from your audience.
Then, write in expert mode: naturally use technical vocabulary, established synonyms, and regional variants where relevant. Never force a repetition that sounds artificial — if your sentence would be clearer with a synonym, use it without hesitation.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Don’t fall into the trap of intentionally vague generic content. 'Company specialized in innovative digital solutions' is worthless compared to 'technical SEO agency based in Lyon'. Specificity remains your best ally, even if you don't need to repeat word for word.
Also avoid over-interpreting this flexibility on commercial or local pages. A service page 'Urgent boiler repair Paris 17' must contain these exact terms in the hot areas (title, H1, first paragraphs) — synonyms can enrich the body text, but not replace the targeted terms.
How can you verify that your content remains optimized without over-optimization?
Use semantic analysis tools like Semji, Yourtext.Guru, or 1.fr to ensure that your text covers the expected lexical field on your topic. These platforms identify the terms and concepts that Google expects to find in quality content for a given query.
Test for natural readability: have someone who doesn’t know SEO read your text. If this person detects weird repetitions or awkward phrasing, you are still stuck in the old keyword stuffing logic. Good modern SEO content should read like a trade publication, not a catalog of queries.
- Map the complete semantic field of your topic, not just a main keyword
- Use technical terms and variants naturally without forcing exact repetition
- Maintain factual specificity: proper names, places, figures, verifiable references
- Keep exact matches in strategic areas (title, H1) for commercial and local queries
- Check semantic coverage with dedicated content analysis tools
- Test readability with a non-SEO reader to detect over-optimizations
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je continuer à inclure mon mot-clé principal dans le title et le H1 ?
Les outils de densité de mots-clés sont-ils devenus inutiles ?
Google comprend-il vraiment toutes les fautes d'orthographe ?
Cette évolution favorise-t-elle les contenus générés par IA ?
Les ancres de backlinks doivent-elles toujours matcher exactement la requête cible ?
🎥 From the same video 39
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 13/11/2020
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