Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 2:09 Faut-il attendre un rafraîchissement Penguin pour corriger ses problèmes de liens ?
- 5:09 Une migration de domaine fait-elle perdre tous les signaux SEO si on republie du contenu sur l'ancien site ?
- 24:05 Faut-il vraiment abandonner le noindex au profit du canonical pour préserver vos signaux SEO ?
- 24:18 Pourquoi Google fragmente-t-il les métriques mobile et desktop dans Search Console ?
- 24:40 Faut-il vraiment soumettre un sitemap XML vide à Google ?
- 25:25 Le budget de crawl booste-t-il vraiment votre performance organique ?
- 25:44 Comment canonical et noindex boostent-ils vraiment votre budget de crawl ?
- 29:43 Faut-il vraiment arrêter de surveiller chaque mise à jour algorithmique de Google ?
- 37:40 Le contenu masqué derrière des onglets compte-t-il vraiment pour le référencement ?
- 38:02 Faut-il attendre une mise à jour Penguin pour que le désaveu de liens produise ses effets ?
- 50:38 Les annuaires web sont-ils vraiment à bannir de votre stratégie de liens ?
- 61:58 Google réécrit-il systématiquement les titres bourrés de mots-clés ?
Mueller confirms that mobile optimization has become critical since the introduction of mobile-first indexing. Important pages are indexed quickly, but this speed varies significantly depending on each site's architecture and technical optimization. The mobile crawl budget is not uniform: Google allocates its resources differently based on the perceived quality of your mobile version.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize the mobile version of your site so much?
Since the shift to mobile-first indexing, Google no longer considers your desktop version as the primary reference. It is your mobile version that determines your ranking, even for searches conducted from a computer. This switch has created a major paradigm shift.
Many sites have experienced steep ranking drops because their mobile content was lacking or their mobile technical structure had weaknesses. Google now primarily crawls with a mobile user-agent, and if this version has issues, your overall visibility will suffer.
What truly determines the speed of indexing?
Mueller asserts that important pages are indexed quickly, but remains deliberately vague on the criteria. In reality, several factors come into play: the depth of the page in the site structure, the number of internal links pointing to it, its update frequency, and especially the overall crawl budget allocated to your domain.
A site with a clean technical architecture and fast server response times will benefit from more frequent crawling. Conversely, a slow site with frequent 5xx errors or chained redirects will have its crawl budget rationed. Google optimizes its resources: if your mobile is difficult to crawl, you will be penalized.
What exactly does the mobile ranking factor that Mueller discusses entail?
Mueller refers to Core Web Vitals and more broadly to the mobile user experience measured by Google. LCP, FID, and CLS have become official ranking signals. A mobile site that loads in 6 seconds or displays unstable content will be objectively disadvantaged.
However, beyond pure metrics, it is the entire mobile usability that matters: button sizes, touch spacing, absence of intrusive pop-ups, readability of text without zooming. A degraded mobile site sends a negative signal to Google, which will naturally reduce its crawl frequency and deprioritize your pages in the SERPs.
- Mobile-first indexing is now the norm: your desktop version no longer serves as the primary reference
- Crawl speed depends on your technical architecture, server speed, and the perceived quality of your mobile
- Important pages are prioritized, but Google does not publicly detail all the criteria that define this importance
- Core Web Vitals and mobile UX are direct ranking factors, not just recommendations
- A poorly optimized mobile site has its crawl budget rationed, delaying the indexing of new pages or updates
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?
Yes, broadly speaking. Sites that have neglected their mobile optimization have indeed suffered measurable downgrades after the full deployment of mobile-first. The audits we regularly conduct show a clear correlation between the technical quality of mobile and the crawl frequency observed in Search Console.
However, Mueller remains vague on a crucial point: what constitutes an important page in Google's eyes? Internal PageRank plays a role, that is certain. But we also observe that pages with few internal links, yet high direct organic traffic, are crawled frequently. [To be verified] Google likely uses behavioral signals to adjust its crawl, even if officially they do not explicitly admit it.
What nuances should be added to this assertion?
Mueller says that important pages are normally indexed quickly, but this
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize checking on your mobile version?
Start with a content parity audit between desktop and mobile. Many sites have historically degraded their mobile version for speed or readability reasons. Ensure all structural elements (titles, paragraphs, images, internal links) are identical on both versions. Google must find the same relevance signals.
Then, test your Core Web Vitals using PageSpeed Insights and Search Console. An LCP over 2.5 seconds or a CLS over 0.1 indicates a problem. Use a real smartphone to test the touch experience: are the buttons large enough, do forms work without zooming, are pop-ups manageable on a small screen?
How can you effectively optimize your mobile crawl budget?
First, identify unnecessary pages consuming crawl: non-strategic tag pages, infinite facet filters, outdated URLs. Block them via robots.txt or noindex. Analyze your server logs to see which URLs Googlebot mobile is actually crawling: you will often be surprised by the time wasted.
Then, strengthen the internal linking to your strategic pages. The more a page receives internal links from frequently crawled pages, the quicker it will be visited. Update your XML sitemap to include only indexable URLs and add the lastmod tag to signal recently modified pages. Google will use these cues to prioritize its crawl.
What technical errors most often block mobile crawling?
Server response times exceeding 600-800 ms are a major hindrance. On mobile, Googlebot is even more sensitive to latency. Check your TTFB in Search Console, under the
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le mobile-first indexing s'applique-t-il à 100 % des sites maintenant ?
Un site desktop-only peut-il encore se classer correctement ?
Comment savoir si mon crawl budget est suffisant ?
Les Core Web Vitals pèsent-ils vraiment dans le classement ?
Faut-il privilégier le responsive design ou un site mobile dédié ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h04 · published on 10/04/2015
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.