Official statement
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- 10:53 Why does Google refuse to answer your SEO questions in private?
- 10:53 Does Google really treat all websites equally, regardless of their size or ad budget?
- 10:53 Why does Google refuse to answer your SEO questions privately?
- 13:29 Can private messages to Google really influence the detection of SEO bugs?
- 13:29 Can DMs to Google really trigger fixes?
- 19:57 Does spending more on Google Ads really improve your organic SEO?
- 20:17 Does spending more on Google Ads really boost your SEO?
- 20:17 Who really decides on exceptions to Google's Honest Results policy?
- 20:17 Can Google really intervene manually on your site for exceptional reasons?
- 21:51 Should you still report spam to Google if reports are never handled individually?
- 22:23 Is it true that reporting spam to Google is almost pointless?
- 22:54 Does Search Console really provide an SEO advantage to its users?
- 23:14 Does Search Console really lack privileged support from Google?
- 24:29 Does escalating a request with Google really impact your SEO?
- 24:29 Should you escalate your SEO issues to Google's management?
- 26:47 Are Office Hours truly the best channel to ask your SEO questions to Google?
- 27:05 Should you really rely on Google’s public channels to solve your SEO issues?
- 28:01 Is it true that Google refuses to give direct SEO answers?
- 29:15 How does Google handle systemic search bugs internally?
- 31:21 Does the Google feedback form in the SERPs really work?
- 31:21 Does the Google feedback form really help correct search results?
Google claims to implement the Honest Results policy: all websites are treated equally in search results, whether they are small or large, whether they spend on Google Ads or not, and whether they have connections with Google employees or not. For SEOs, this means that ranking depends solely on content quality and user experience. The real question is whether this principle holds up under real-world scrutiny, especially for YMYL (Your Money Your Life) and competitive sectors.
What you need to understand
What is the origin of this statement on equal treatment?
The Honest Results policy is not new. Google regularly touts it to counter the recurring accusation that some sites receive preferential treatment. The idea: the engine promises absolute neutrality in its ranking algorithm.
This statement targets several groups. First, small publishers who suspect that giants have an advantage. Next, advertisers who believe that a substantial Google Ads budget could influence natural ranking. Finally, sites that think having a friend at Google opens doors in SEO — spoiler alert: it doesn't.
What does an equal playing field really mean for everyone?
In practical terms, Google states that its organic ranking algorithm completely ignores whether you spend $1 or $1 million on Google Ads. Your advertising budget does not boost your natural positions. The same goes for your status: being a multinational or a personal blog doesn’t change anything — in theory.
The algorithm only evaluates relevance signals: content quality, inbound links, user experience, topical authority, freshness, etc. It doesn’t matter who you are or how influential you are; only these criteria count. That’s the official narrative.
Why does Google emphasize this neutrality so much?
Because trust is Google’s fuel. If users suspect that results are biased by money or relationships, they will look elsewhere. Thus, Google has a vital interest in maintaining this perception of fairness.
But let’s be honest: this communication also serves to defuse criticism from regulators, competitors, and publishers who feel aggrieved. By repeating this mantra, Google legally and media-wise shields itself.
- No connection between Google Ads and organic ranking — the two systems are compartmentalized
- No favoritism for sites that work with Google or know employees
- Theoretical equality of treatment between small and large publishers — only relevance matters
- Honest Results policy is regularly touted to reassure and counter claims of bias
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Theoretically, yes. In practice, it’s more nuanced. Google’s algorithms do not directly discriminate based on size or advertising budget — that’s true. However, large sites have structural advantages in reality: budgets for creating massive content, strong technical teams, powerful netlinking, long histories, accumulated trust.
The result: a small site can theoretically compete with a giant, but it must compensate with exceptional quality across all fronts. Formal equality does not mean equality of opportunity — and Google doesn’t really hide this. It merely states that the algorithm doesn’t cheat. Which is different from saying everyone starts on the same starting line.
What are the gray areas where this rule seems less true?
First gray area: YMYL sectors (Your Money Your Life). In these topics, Google explicitly favors sites with established strong authority — recognized media, institutions, certified experts. A personal blog can produce impeccable content but will struggle to rank against historic players. Is that favoritism? No, but the algorithm prioritizes signals (E-E-A-T, trust) that only some profiles easily accumulate. [To be verified]
Second gray area: featured snippets and Google Discover. Some observe that trusted big media appear more frequently there. Coincidence or indirect algorithmic bias? Hard to determine without internal data. Google will say it’s related to quality and freshness. Maybe. But doubt remains.
Should we take this statement literally?
Take it as a guiding principle, not as an absolute truth. Google is probably not lying about the fact that Google Ads does not influence organic ranking — it’s too legally risky and easy to verify. However, the notion of a perfectly level playing field for all is a simplification.
In real SEO life, some sites start with structural disadvantages (recent domain, low authority, limited budget) while others have boosts (long history, massive backlinks, known brands). The algorithm does not discriminate, but it rewards signals that not everyone can accumulate at the same speed. Nuance.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to maximize your chances in this context?
If Google neither favors big ad budgets nor relationships, then focus your energy on what really matters: content quality, user experience, and topical authority. No shortcut magic, just thorough work.
Specifically: invest in expert, sourced, high value-added content. Optimize your Core Web Vitals. Build a clean netlinking strategy through editorial partnerships, linkbaiting, or sector collaborations. Enhance your E-E-A-T by clearly displaying your authors, their expertise, and your sources. In short, play the game that Google says it rewards.
What mistakes should you avoid to avoid shooting yourself in the foot?
First mistake: believing that a large Google Ads budget will compensate for mediocre SEO. That won’t happen. The two levers are totally distinct. If your site is poorly optimized, no amount of advertising will save it in organic.
Second mistake: thinking that networking with Google employees will give you a boost. That’s a waste of time. Third mistake: getting discouraged in the face of giants. Yes, they have structural advantages, but niches exist where an expert and agile site can outperform them on specific queries. Find your angle.
How can I verify that my site is indeed benefiting from this fair treatment?
Analyze your direct competitors on your target keywords. If you notice that only large players are ranking, check why: do they have better content, more backlinks, better UX, longer history? Identify the gaps and fill them.
Use tools like Ahrefs, SEMrush, or Screaming Frog to compare your link profile, domain authority, technical structure. If your content is objectively better but you’re not ranking, it’s likely an issue of authority, trust, or technique — not algorithmic bias.
- Invest in expert, sourced, and high value-added content
- Optimize user experience (Core Web Vitals, loading times, mobile-first)
- Create a clean netlinking strategy through editorial strategies and sector partnerships
- Clearly display the expertise of authors and sources to strengthen E-E-A-T
- Never rely on Google Ads to boost organic ranking
- Analyze competitors to identify real gaps (links, content, technique)
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google Ads influence-t-il réellement le référencement naturel ?
Un petit site peut-il vraiment concurrencer un gros média en SEO ?
Connaître des employés Google donne-t-il un avantage en SEO ?
Pourquoi certains gros sites semblent-ils toujours ranker en premier ?
La politique Honest Results s'applique-t-elle vraiment aux secteurs YMYL ?
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