Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:08 Comment Google réindexe-t-il réellement votre site lors du passage en Mobile First ?
- 6:25 Les tirets dans les noms de fichiers impactent-ils vraiment votre référencement ?
- 9:57 Le PageRank est-il vraiment mort ou Google l'utilise-t-il encore en coulisses ?
- 21:04 Comment Google choisit-il vraiment l'URL canonique entre vos doublons ?
- 32:03 Plusieurs balises H1 nuisent-elles vraiment au référencement de votre site ?
- 33:56 Pourquoi robots.txt ne suffit-il pas à protéger vos environnements de test ?
- 39:44 L'outil de changement d'adresse dans la Search Console est-il vraiment indispensable pour une migration de domaine ?
- 47:01 Pourquoi Google indexe-t-il votre contenu JavaScript en différé et comment l'anticiper ?
- 50:00 Le noindex empêche-t-il réellement le passage de jus de lien et le crawl des liens internes ?
Google allows keywords in link anchors as long as relevance is maintained. However, excessive repetition of optimized anchors triggers anti-manipulation filters. Essentially, a natural anchor profile mixes branded anchors, generic ones, and a few occurrences of targeted keywords, without being forced.
What you need to understand
What does 'acceptable if relevant' really mean?
Google sets a fuzzy limit. An anchor containing an exact keyword is not penalizing in itself if it accurately describes the content of the target page. If you publish an article on trail shoes and a link points to your page with the anchor 'trail shoes', it's coherent.
The problem arises when this type of anchor becomes dominant in your backlink profile. A site receiving 70% of its links with the anchor 'cheap car insurance' looks like an amateur link-building campaign. Google's systems spot these mechanical patterns from a distance.
How does Google detect excessive optimization?
The algorithms analyze the statistical distribution of anchors across a site. A natural profile shows a variety of anchors: brand name, naked URL, 'click here', long-tail phrases, generic anchors. Uniformity betrays manipulation.
Google also cross-references this data with other signals: link acquisition speed, quality of referring domains, semantic context surrounding the anchor. A link with an optimized anchor from a poor directory raises more suspicion than an editorial link from a niche media outlet.
What is the real margin for maneuver?
No official figures exist. Field reports suggest that a profile with 10-20% optimized anchors remains under the radar, provided other signals are healthy. Beyond 30%, you enter the red zone.
The real question is: why take the risk? A link with a branded or generic anchor still passes PageRank, even without an exact keyword. The marginal gain from an over-optimized anchor does not justify exposure to the Penguin filter or a manual action.
- Contextual relevance: the anchor must describe the target content, not just place a keyword
- Mandatory diversification: a natural profile mixes branded anchors, generics, URLs, and a few keywords
- Empirical tolerance threshold: beyond 30% of optimized anchors, the risk of filtering skyrockets
- Editorial context is key: a link with an optimized anchor from rich content performs better than an isolated link
- Monitored temporal evolution: a sudden acquisition of identical anchors alerts the systems
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, but it conceals part of the picture. In practice, sites ranking at the top for competitive queries rarely display ultra-optimized anchor profiles. Leaders heavily use branded and generic anchors, with a handful of targeted anchors scattered throughout.
Historical Penguin penalties targeted sites with 50-80% exact-match anchors. Since then, SEOs have learned to dilute optimized anchors in a varied background noise. Google has won: self-censorship does the job instead of penalties.
What nuances should be applied depending on the context?
An e-commerce site with 10,000 products and optimized internal links suffers no filter, as Google distinguishes internal linking from external backlinks. This statement clearly targets incoming links, not on-site structure.
Links from UGC platforms (forums, comments) with optimized anchors are also less scrutinized if rel="ugc" is present. Google knows that the site editor does not control these anchors. However, a guest post with an optimized anchor in the author bio remains a strong signal.
[To be verified]: Google never specifies at what exact threshold optimization becomes 'excessive.' This ambiguity creates a gray area where everyone tests their luck. Empirical feedback varies by niche, domain authority, and penalty history.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
News sites and media naturally receive descriptive anchors that resemble optimized keywords. A news article citing 'annual climate report' with a link to said report triggers no filters because the editorial context validates relevance.
Strong brands also benefit from increased tolerance. If Nike receives links with the anchor 'Nike running shoes', it’s perceived as natural. An ordinary site forcing the same anchor without brand legitimacy gets flagged quicker.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely with your current backlinks?
Conduct an audit of your anchor profile using Ahrefs, Majestic, or SEMrush. Calculate the proportion of anchors containing your target keywords. If you exceed 25-30%, you are in a risk zone.
To correct, there are two levers: either dilute with new links with varied anchors, or disavow the most toxic links. Disavowing remains the nuclear option; first prefer to contact webmasters to modify existing anchors, even if the response rate often hovers around 10%.
How to plan a healthy link-building campaign?
Define an anchor matrix before launching any campaign. For example: 40% branded, 30% generic ('see here', 'this site', naked URL), 20% natural long-tail, 10% targeted keywords. Adjust according to your sector and history.
Never give in to the temptation to place an exact keyword on every link opportunity. A link with a generic anchor from a trusted domain is worth more than a link with an optimized anchor from a dubious site. PageRank flows independently of the anchor.
Which tools and metrics should you continuously monitor?
Enable backlink alerts in Google Search Console. A sudden spike in links with identical anchors may indicate a negative SEO attack or a poorly calibrated campaign. React quickly.
Track the evolution of your positions on queries where you have concentrated optimized anchors. A sharp drop without an algorithm update can indicate a local filter related to anchors. Cross-reference with the evolution of your overall organic traffic to confirm.
- Audit the distribution of anchors every quarter with a specialized tool
- Aim for a varied distribution: 40% brand, 30% generic, 20% long-tail, 10% keywords
- Systematically prefer the quality of referring domains over anchor optimization
- Document each acquired link: source, anchor, date, editorial context
- Set up Search Console alerts to detect acquisition anomalies
- Test the impact of anchors through A/B testing on similar pages if volume allows
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Quelle proportion d'ancres optimisées est sans danger ?
Les ancres optimisées en maillage interne posent-elles problème ?
Faut-il désavouer les vieux liens avec ancres suroptimisées ?
Un lien avec ancre générique transmet-il autant de PageRank qu'un lien optimisé ?
Les ancres brandées comptent-elles dans le quota d'optimisation ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 26/09/2018
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.