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Official statement

Significant layout changes that emphasize non-informative elements, such as a booking tool, can make it difficult for Google to determine the main content of a page, which can affect its indexing and ranking.
7:05
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h03 💬 EN 📅 31/10/2019 ✂ 11 statements
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Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that layout modifications that highlight non-informative elements (like a booking tool) complicate the identification of the main content. This difficulty can directly impact the indexing and ranking of your pages. In practical terms: a poorly thought-out redesign could sabotage your organic visibility if Google can no longer distinguish what truly matters on the page.

What you need to understand

Why does Google struggle to identify the main content after a layout change?

When you change the visual structure of a page, you potentially move the HTML hierarchies, semantic tags, and the position of text blocks. Google relies on these signals to determine which content deserves to be indexed and ranked. If a booking tool, carousel, or form now occupies 60% of the screen above the fold, the algorithm may rightly wonder if that’s what your page is about.

The search engine analyzes the DOM, text density, <main>, <article> tags, as well as the visual weight of blocks via rendering. A redesign that dilutes these signals—such as transforming an editorial page into a conversion-oriented landing page—can send conflicting signals to Google.

What constitutes a 'non-informative' element for Google?

Google doesn’t clearly define this term, which is problematic. Reasonably, it can include: contact forms, third-party widgets, advertising banners, interactive tools without descriptive text, image carousels without alt tags or captions. In short, anything that takes up space without providing semantic value to the crawler.

The catch? An element might be essential for user experience (like a booking engine or product configurator) while being invisible to Google. Mueller's statement suggests that Google favors indexable text content—not necessarily what converts your visitors best.

How does this analysis difficulty manifest in the SERPs?

If Google cannot isolate the main content, several scenarios can occur. First option: the page is indexed but with a completely off-base snippet, capturing bits from the menu or footer. Second option: Google indexes less content than before, reducing your semantic coverage.

Third scenario, the most painful: the page remains indexed but loses positions, as Google can no longer match it to the queries it targeted. You don’t experience a sudden de-indexing—you slide gradually, making diagnosis even harder.

  • Layout changes can disrupt the semantic signals Google uses to assess the main content
  • ‘Non-informative’ elements (widgets, forms) occupy space without providing indexable context
  • Google may index the page but with a degraded snippet or reduced semantic coverage
  • Position loss is often gradual, not abrupt, complicating diagnosis
  • The problem affects both crawling (budget allocation) and rendering (understanding visible content)

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?

Yes, but with nuances. We regularly see e-commerce sites lose traffic after pushing product pages down in favor of algorithmic recommendations or aggressive pop-ups. Google doesn’t say, 'pop-ups hurt your SEO' (except for invasive interstitials on mobile), it says, 'if your main content becomes hard to identify, we struggle.' It’s more subtle.

Where it gets tricky is in defining ‘non-informative elements.’ A booking engine might be deemed non-informative by Google, yet it is precisely the reason for being of the page for the user. Mueller doesn’t say, 'remove your conversion tools,' he says, 'make sure Google still understands what the page is about.' That’s not the same. [To be verified]: Google has never published precise guidelines on what constitutes an ‘informative element’—we interpret.

When does this rule not really apply?

If your page targets a pure navigational query (brand, domain name), Google will index and rank it even if the layout is terrible. Search intent and brand signals (direct queries, incoming links) compensate. The same goes for very authoritative pages: a site like Booking.com can afford a layout packed with non-textual elements; its domain authority cushions the impact.

Another case: pages where the main content is the interactive tool—think of a currency converter, BMI calculator, or configurator. Google indexes these pages differently, often relying on the title, meta tags, and a few lines of introductory text. But beware: if you transform an editorial page into a tool page without adapting the HTML structure, you risk big.

What data is missing to effectively leverage this statement?

Mueller doesn’t specify at what ratio of non-informative elements Google starts to disengage. Does 30% of the visible area pose a problem? 50%? 70%? We’re navigating in the dark. He also doesn’t clarify whether the issue pertains only to content above the fold or the entire DOM.

Another gray area: the impact of JavaScript rendering. If your booking engine loads in JS after the initial render, does Google take it into account in its evaluation of the 'main content'? Probably yes, but how? The statement remains vague on how Google weighs visible elements versus raw source code.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do before modifying the layout of a strategic page?

Before any redesign, map your content blocks in the DOM. Identify what is currently indexed (using the site: operator and Search Console), and check which HTML elements Google considers as main. An audit with Screaming Frog + Google Cache shows what the crawler actually sees. If your editorial content drops 400px down in the viewport after the redesign, anticipate an impact.

Second step: test in a staging environment with the Search Console (live URL inspection). Compare the rendering before/after and check if Google still identifies the correct main content block. If the inspection tool flags rendering errors or a misaligned snippet, it’s a red flag even before pushing live.

How to structure a page with conversion elements without harming SEO?

Use HTML5 semantic tags (<main>, <article>, <aside>) to explicitly signal to Google what matters. Your booking engine or contact form? In an <aside> or a dedicated <div>, not in the <main>. Editorial content, product specs, service descriptions: in <main> or <article>.

Avoid diluting text density. If you add a 600px high widget at the top of the page, compensate by enriching the textual content below—FAQ, use cases, comparisons. Google needs indexable material to understand the topic. A low text-to-code ratio sends an alert signal.

What to check after a layout change to detect a problem?

Monitor your positions on your strategic queries in the 7 to 14 days following deployment. Google can quickly recrawl and rerender important pages, but the impact on ranking takes a few days. If you see a sudden drop, compare snippets before/after in the SERPs—a snippet that now captures footer or menu content is a clear sign.

Also, check the coverage report in Search Console. Pages that transition from 'Indexed' to 'Discovered but not indexed' or 'Crawled but not indexed' after a redesign are exactly the scenario described by Mueller. Finally, analyze your Core Web Vitals: a redesign can degrade the CLS or LCP, adding an indirect SEO handicap.

  • Audit the HTML structure before any redesign (identifying the main blocks)
  • Use semantic tags (<main>, <article>) to guide Google
  • Test the rendering with the inspection tool in staging
  • Maintain a sufficient indexable text to visual elements ratio
  • Monitor positions and snippets in the 14 days post-deployment
  • Watch the Search Console coverage report for partial de-indexing detection
Layout changes that dilute semantic signals can seriously impact your visibility. The key: structure the HTML so that Google easily identifies the main content, even when conversion elements take up space. If these trade-offs between UX, conversion, and SEO seem complex for you to balance alone, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and guide you in a redesign that preserves—even enhances—your organic performance.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Est-ce qu'ajouter un formulaire de contact en haut de page peut nuire au SEO ?
Oui, si ce formulaire occupe une part importante de l'espace visible et que Google peine à identifier le contenu principal en dessous. Utilisez des balises sémantiques pour isoler le formulaire dans un <aside> et gardez le contenu éditorial dans un <main>.
Les carrousels d'images sont-ils considérés comme des éléments non informatifs ?
Probablement oui, sauf si chaque image dispose d'attributs alt détaillés et de légendes textuelles indexables. Un carrousel sans contexte textuel n'apporte aucune valeur sémantique à Google.
Faut-il éviter complètement les widgets tiers sur les pages stratégiques ?
Pas nécessairement, mais limitez leur présence above the fold et assurez-vous qu'ils ne diluent pas le contenu principal. Placez-les en sidebar ou en bas de page si possible.
Comment savoir si Google a du mal à identifier le contenu principal de ma page ?
Vérifiez le snippet affiché dans les SERPs : s'il capture du contenu de menu, footer ou widget plutôt que votre texte éditorial, c'est un signal d'alerte. L'outil d'inspection de la Search Console peut aussi révéler des problèmes de rendering.
Un redesign peut-il provoquer une désindexation partielle même si les URLs restent identiques ?
Oui. Si Google ne parvient plus à déterminer le contenu principal après le redesign, certaines pages peuvent passer de « Indexée » à « Explorée mais non indexée » dans la Search Console, même sans changement d'URL.
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