Official statement
Other statements from this video 10 ▾
- 3:13 Les redirections 301 maintiennent-elles vraiment votre classement lors d'une migration de domaine ?
- 4:49 Pourquoi Google ne communique-t-il que sur une infime partie de ses mises à jour algorithmiques ?
- 9:59 Les liens d'affiliation Amazon tuent-ils vraiment votre SEO sans valeur ajoutée ?
- 15:15 Google classe-t-il vraiment différemment les smartphones et les feature phones ?
- 15:46 Les partenariats Google influencent-ils réellement le référencement naturel ?
- 17:23 Google peut-il vraiment empêcher le SEO négatif d'affecter votre site ?
- 20:48 Faut-il vraiment créer une propriété Search Console distincte pour chaque sous-domaine ?
- 32:23 Robots.txt ou noindex : quel outil choisir pour contrôler l'indexation ?
- 60:02 Les erreurs de validation CSS sont-elles vraiment sans impact sur votre référencement ?
- 65:27 Le schema markup améliore-t-il vraiment votre classement dans Google ?
Google confirms that ranking losses are not always tied to an algorithm update. Your own changes, shifts in competing sites, or ongoing adjustments by the engine can cause fluctuations. Instead of constantly searching for a Google changelog when your rankings change, first review your change history and monitor the competition.
What you need to understand
What does Google's statement really mean?
Here, Google dismisses a reflex that many SEOs have developed: automatically linking a drop in rankings to an algorithmic penalty. The message is clear: ranking fluctuations are a constant and multifaceted phenomenon.
The search engine processes millions of changes daily - adding competing content, a technical redesign of a third-party site, updating an existing article by a competing editor. Every change in the index can shuffle the deck, even without an official update being deployed.
What are the real causes of fluctuations according to Google?
Google cites two main axes: changes to your own site (technical changes, migrations, page deletions, content redesign) and changes among your competitors (publication of more comprehensive content, improvement of UX, new backlinks).
The third factor, less visible but constant, is crawling and the continuous reassessment of pages. Google regularly recrawls and reanalyzes indexed content. A page can lose rankings simply because the engine has reassessed its relevance in light of other signals, without any external event occurring.
How can you distinguish between a normal fluctuation and a true penalty?
An algorithmic penalty usually affects a consistent set of pages or queries, causes a sudden drop, and occurs within an identifiable time frame. If you lose 30% of traffic in 48 hours across your entire site, it’s likely an update.
A natural fluctuation, on the other hand, affects scattered segments, evolves gradually, and shows no temporal correlation with official announcements. You gain 3 positions on one query, lose 5 on another, then recover 2 the next day — that's noise, not an algorithmic signal.
- Temporal correlation: a real update is confirmed by massive discussions in the SEO community around the same time.
- Scope of impact: a normal fluctuation affects a few queries; a penalty impacts entire segments of the site.
- Magnitude: daily fluctuations typically range between 1 and 5 positions; a drop of 10+ positions indicates a significant event.
- Change history: if you deployed a technical change 48 hours before the loss, first seek an internal cause before blaming Google.
- Competitor behavior: analyze if your direct competitors are gaining positions simultaneously — this is often a sign they have improved their content or authority.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Absolutely. In the field, we observe daily micro-fluctuations of 2 to 5 positions on moderately competitive queries, with no updates being announced. These oscillations are a normal result of ongoing competition in the SERPs.
The issue is that Google maintains some opacity regarding the actual frequency of its algorithmic adjustments. [To be verified] The assertion that "not all fluctuations are related to updates" says nothing about the actual ratio. Is it 20% of fluctuations, 50%, 80%? Impossible to quantify without official data.
What nuances should be added to this official position?
Google likely minimizes the impact of its undocumented continuous adjustments. The engine deploys algorithmic tweaks constantly, without publicly announcing them. These micro-adjustments can cumulatively cause effects comparable to an official update.
Another nuance: the statement completely ignores the role of machine learning and dynamic ranking systems. With RankBrain, BERT, and MUM, SERPs become more contextual and volatile. What worked yesterday may perform worse today simply because the algorithm has a better understanding of the intent behind a query.
In what cases does this explanation not hold?
If you observe a synchronized drop across your entire domain with a clear temporal correlation and massive discussions in the SEO community (forums, Twitter, tracking tools), you are likely facing an unannounced update. Google regularly rolls these out without official communication.
Another case: manual penalties, which are not covered by this statement. A manual action appears in Search Console and causes a sudden drop. Here, there is no ambiguity: it is indeed Google intervening directly, and it is neither a natural fluctuation nor a typical algorithmic update.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do when your rankings fluctuate?
First step: systematically document all your changes (technical deployments, content redesigns, page deletions, internal linking changes). Use an internal changelog or a project management tool. Without this traceability, it's impossible to correlate a loss of rankings with a specific action.
Second instinct: analyze your direct competitors on the impacted queries. Use tools like SEMrush, Ahrefs, or SimilarWeb to identify if a competitor has published new content, gained new backlinks, or improved their load time. If three of your competitors published ultra-comprehensive guides while you haven’t made any changes, that’s likely the explanation.
How can you effectively monitor real algorithmic updates?
Set up automated alerts for your critical KPIs: overall organic traffic, average rankings, impressions in Search Console. Define alert thresholds (e.g., -15% traffic over 48 hours). Coupled with community monitoring (MozCast, SEMrush Sensor, Twitter discussions), you can quickly distinguish between a normal fluctuation and an algorithmic event.
Never rely on a single source. Cross-reference data from Search Console with those from your Analytics tool and a third-party rank tracker. A loss of rankings without a traffic drop may simply mean you lost positions on low-quality queries — that’s not necessarily a problem.
What mistakes should you avoid when faced with fluctuations?
First mistake: panicking and changing your strategy after 48 hours of decline. SERPs naturally oscillate. Wait at least a week before drawing conclusions, unless the drop exceeds 30% and you see a temporal correlation with an announced update.
Second trap: blaming everything on Google. If you have changed your internal link structure, deleted key pages, or slowed down your load time due to a new feature, that’s likely the cause. Audit your site before blaming the algorithm.
- Keep a detailed changelog of all technical and editorial changes to the site.
- Monitor daily positions on a representative sample of strategic queries.
- Analyze competitive developments (content, backlinks, technical performance) on lost queries.
- Set up automated alerts for Search Console metrics (impressions, CTR, average rankings).
- Cross-reference data from multiple tools (Analytics, Search Console, third-party trackers) before concluding.
- Document temporal correlations between your deployments and observed fluctuations.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Comment savoir si une fluctuation est liée à une mise à jour Google ou à un changement concurrent ?
Les fluctuations quotidiennes de 2-3 positions sont-elles normales ?
Faut-il attendre combien de temps avant de réagir à une perte de positions ?
Comment auditer l'impact de mes propres modifications sur les rankings ?
Quels outils utiliser pour distinguer une fluctuation normale d'une mise à jour algorithmique ?
🎥 From the same video 10
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h10 · published on 25/09/2014
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