Official statement
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- 9:43 Faut-il vraiment équilibrer liens internes et liens externes pour le SEO ?
- 11:16 Les sites Q&A doivent-ils sacrifier la quantité pour maintenir leur qualité ?
- 17:44 L'automatisation des URL générées par base de données tue-t-elle votre SEO ?
- 22:07 Web Light de Google va-t-il transformer vos pages sans votre accord ?
- 26:20 Le retrait temporaire d'URL préserve-t-il vraiment vos positions Google ?
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- 41:40 Pourquoi les volumes de recherche mensuels ne reflètent-ils pas la réalité de vos impressions ?
- 50:20 Quelle structure d'URL privilégier pour un site multilingue performant en SEO ?
John Mueller has made it clear: producing content that is merely equivalent to the top twenty results is no longer enough to rank. Google demands significantly better, unique, and compelling information. For an SEO practitioner, this means moving beyond cosmetic rewrites and investing in new angles, exclusive data, or real expertise that the competition does not provide.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by 'significantly better'?
Mueller's statement is clear: rewriting what the top ten or twenty are doing creates no value in the eyes of the algorithm. Google seeks content that brings something new, whether it’s a different angle, exclusive data, superior depth of analysis, or verifiable expertise.
In practical terms, this means that originality isn't just about wording. An article that synthesizes the same points as the competition, even with different words, remains a functional duplicate. Google wants content that better addresses user needs or approaches it through a lens ignored by others.
Why this demand now?
The web is overflowing with redundant content, and automated generation tools have aggravated the problem. Google is now filtering out derivative content on a massive scale to avoid serving the same reformulated information twenty times.
This approach aligns with the Helpful Content Updates: favoring sites that create for users, not just to rank. If your content didn’t exist, would the user miss something? If the answer is no, you’re in the red zone.
How does this change the game for SEOs?
Many editorial strategies still rely on SERP analysis and replicating common themes. It was viable five years ago. Today, it’s a baseline, not a ceiling.
Mueller is pushing SEOs to break free from competitive mimicry and ask: what can my client or my expertise offer that others don’t? This often involves heavier editorial investments: interviews, studies, field tests, proprietary data.
- Uniqueness ≠ rewriting: rewriting with ChatGPT does not create originality in Google's eyes.
- Better = better addresses the need: depth, freshness, new angle, exclusive data.
- The SERP is a starting point, not a model: analyze competitors to identify gaps, not to copy.
- Expertise becomes a direct SEO lever: Google favors content authored by credible authors or recognized brands.
- Publication volume loses to quality: publishing 50 average articles ranks worse than 10 excellent articles.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, and it’s one of the few statements from Mueller that perfectly aligns with what we observe in practice. Since the Helpful Content updates, sites that duplicate the SERP angle without added value either stagnate or decline. Exceptions are rare and mainly involve authoritative domains that offset with other signals.
On the other hand, content that provides case studies, original figures, exclusive testimonials, or in-depth analyses performs better, even on sites with weaker backlink profiles. The 'significantly better' is not just a wishful thinking from Google, it’s an active filter in the algorithm.
What nuances should we consider regarding this rule?
The definition of 'better' remains vague, and Google does not provide any clear metrics to measure it. Is it length? Freshness? The author’s expertise? The presence of original media? Probably a mix, but without known weighting. [To verify]: how does Google measure the originality of an editorial angle without access to the author's intent?
Another nuance: in certain highly technical or regulated niches, there is a consensus of factual information that is difficult to surpass. An article on 'how to declare VAT' will necessarily have structural similarities with others. Originality will then depend on clarity, examples, supplementary tools, or user support.
When does this rule not apply?
For purely informational queries where the answer is binary or factual, originality weighs less. For example: 'validity duration of a French passport'. Google will favor a government site or a trusted source, even if the content is minimalistic.
Similarly, on queries with very high domain authority (health, finance), the site’s expertise sometimes takes precedence over the content’s originality. An average article on Ameli.fr will rank better than an excellent article on an unknown blog. Originality matters, but E-E-A-T remains a prior filter.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to make content ‘significantly better’?
Start by auditing your existing content: for each page, ask yourself whether it provides something that the top ten results don’t have. If the answer is no, you have three options: enrich, merge, or delete. Google no longer rewards mass; it penalizes mediocrity.
Next, invest in exclusive formats or data. A quantified benchmark, a client case study, a documented product test, an interview with a recognized expert, an infographic based on proprietary data: all of these elements create real differentiation. Originality is built before writing, during the research and information gathering phase.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Don’t confuse length with quality. A 3000-word article that meanders will perform worse than a dense, focused 800-word article. Google measures user satisfaction, not character count.
Avoid also copying the SERP structure thinking that’s what Google wants. If all results are 'top 10' lists, it doesn’t mean Google is looking for an eleventh top 10. Perhaps a detailed guide, a thorough comparison, or a critical analysis might perform better by providing a missing angle.
How can I verify that my content meets this originality requirement?
Try this simple method: read your article, then read the top three Google results. Would the user miss any unique information, angle, or format if your content disappeared? If not, you haven’t achieved the 'significantly better'.
Use tools like Copyscape or semantic similarity checkers to detect redundancies with the SERP. But most importantly, trust your expert judgment: would this content teach you something if you weren’t the author?
- Audit existing content to identify those redundant with the SERP.
- Enrich each article with at least one exclusive element: data, case study, interview, new angle.
- Prioritize depth and relevance over raw length.
- Avoid structuring systematically like competitors: look for missing angles.
- Test differentiation by asking what the user would lose if the content disappeared.
- Train writers in expertise and field research, not just SERP rewriting.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que reformuler un article concurrent avec mes propres mots suffit pour être considéré comme original ?
Comment Google détecte-t-il qu'un contenu est équivalent aux dix premiers résultats ?
Un article plus long est-il automatiquement considéré comme meilleur par Google ?
Est-ce que cette règle s'applique aussi aux contenus e-commerce (fiches produits, catégories) ?
Si tous les concurrents disent la même chose, comment faire pour être original ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 15/06/2018
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