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Official statement

A good site structure makes crawling and indexing easier, but it doesn’t guarantee high rankings; overall content quality remains essential.
27:00
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 57:05 💬 EN 📅 07/09/2017 ✂ 29 statements
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  10. 11:28 Do GSC impressions truly reflect what your users see?
  11. 12:00 What is a real impression in Search Console, and how does the viewport change everything?
  12. 14:03 Does lazy loading of images really block Googlebot?
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  14. 17:21 Should you really avoid modifying the content of a recent page?
  15. 19:30 Can bad backlinks really sink your Google ranking?
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  18. 24:05 Why do partial site migrations lead to longer SEO fluctuations compared to complete migrations?
  19. 30:41 Why should you choose a 301 over a 307 when migrating to HTTPS?
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  24. 50:12 Is it really necessary to reindex the entire site after a URL change?
  25. 50:34 Should you really avoid changing the structure of your URLs?
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  28. 54:12 Is the new Search Console really going to change your SEO diagnosis?
📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that an optimized architecture facilitates crawling and indexing, but it’s not enough to climb the SERPs. For an SEO practitioner, this means treating structure as a necessary technical foundation, not as a direct ranking lever. The key is to combine this solid base with relevant content and measurable quality signals.

What you need to understand

What does it really mean to

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Absolutely. We often see sites with a flawless architecture stagnating on pages 3-4 because their content is generic or their link profile is non-existent. Conversely, sites with an average structure but expert content and strong backlinks often perform better.

The real correlation we measure in audits is that sites combining clean structure AND strong content maximize their visibility. The structure then becomes a multiplier: it effectively distributes internal link juice, exposes the right content at the right times, and reduces negative signals such as soft 404s or zombie pages.

What nuances need to be added to this statement?

Google remains vague about the threshold where structure becomes a real handicap. In practice, a catastrophic structure (10-click depth, chaotic linking, massive orphan pages) can completely block the indexing of entire sections of a site, even with good content.

The other nuance relates to sites with a large inventory: e-commerce, real estate, classified ads. Here, a poor structure directly impacts crawl budget and can leave thousands of pages under the radar. For these sites, structure becomes an indirect but measurable ranking lever. [To verify]: Google never quantifies the relative impact of structure vs. other signals in its algorithm.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

On sites with very low competition or ultra-niche queries, an average structure with minimal content may be enough to rank. The lack of competitors means Google doesn’t have the luxury to favor only perfect sites.

Conversely, for hyper-competitive queries (finance, health, insurance), even an optimal structure won't save a site without strong domain authority and quality backlinks. The relative weight of structure decreases when the entry bar for other signals is very high.

Caution: do not fall into the trap of purely technical optimization. Sites that spend months fine-tuning their architecture without producing differentiating content waste time against competitors who publish quickly. Balance is key.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to optimize your structure?

Start with a crawl depth audit. Use Screaming Frog or Oncrawl to identify pages more than 3-4 clicks from the homepage. If strategic content is buried, raise it through the main menu, contextual links, or hub landing pages.

Next, work on your semantic internal linking. Don’t just rely on footer or sidebar links: insert contextual links within the body of the articles, with descriptive anchors. This helps Googlebot understand thematic relationships and distribute PageRank wisely.

What mistakes to avoid in restructuring?

Never abruptly break an existing architecture without a solid 301 redirect plan. We still see sites losing 50% of their organic traffic after a poorly managed redesign: orphan URLs, chained redirects, loss of crawl depth on old ranking pages.

Another classic mistake: creating sealed silos without bridges. A structure that is too rigid prevents Google from understanding the cross-relations between topics. Maintain flexibility with relevant cross-links among related silos.

How to measure the real impact of these optimizations?

Monitor two key metrics in Search Console: the number of indexed pages (Coverage tab) and the crawl rate (Crawl Statistics). If your structural redesign is effective, you should see an increase in discovered and indexed pages within 2-4 weeks.

Also compare the average ranking of redesigned pages before/after. If the structure was indeed a barrier, you should notice a gradual improvement in ranking, especially on pages that were indexed but invisible (positions 20-50). Otherwise, the issue lies elsewhere.

  • Map the current crawl depth and identify strategic pages with more than 3 clicks
  • Audit for orphan pages (no internal incoming links) and reintegrate them into the linking structure
  • Create hub landing pages for major categories and inject contextual linking
  • Implement an automated related links system between thematically close contents
  • Set up clean 301 redirects if URLs are redesigned, test in pre-production
  • Monitor indexing and crawl budget via Search Console for 8 weeks post-redesign
Site structure is an essential technical foundation, not a shortcut to the top 10. It maximizes crawl efficiency, better exposes strategic content, and distributes internal PageRank intelligently. However, without quality content and authority signals, it remains sterile. The winning approach combines clean architecture, expert content, and a link strategy. These cross-optimizations can be complex to orchestrate alone, especially on sites with large inventories or heavy technical histories. Engaging a specialized SEO agency allows for a comprehensive structural diagnosis, a prioritized roadmap, and tailored support to avoid redesign pitfalls and maximize the impact of each technical project.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une bonne structure peut-elle compenser un contenu moyen ?
Non. La structure facilite l'indexation mais ne crée pas de pertinence éditoriale. Un site bien structuré avec du contenu faible reste un mauvais candidat au ranking face à des concurrents avec du contenu fort.
À partir de quelle profondeur de clic faut-il s'inquiéter ?
Au-delà de 3-4 clics depuis la home, les pages stratégiques risquent d'être sous-crawlées, surtout sur des sites à gros inventaire. Remonte-les via le maillage interne ou des landing pages hub.
Le maillage interne influence-t-il vraiment le ranking ?
Indirectement, oui. Il distribue le PageRank interne, aide Google à comprendre les relations thématiques et expose mieux les contenus profonds. Mais il ne compense pas un manque de backlinks ou de qualité éditoriale.
Faut-il privilégier les silos étanches ou les liens croisés ?
Une structure en silos aide à clarifier la thématique, mais des liens croisés pertinents entre silos connexes enrichissent la compréhension sémantique. L'équilibre est clé : structure claire sans rigidité excessive.
Comment savoir si ma structure bloque l'indexation ?
Vérifie dans Search Console si des pages stratégiques sont "Découvertes, non indexées" ou si le taux d'exploration stagne. Un audit de profondeur de crawl avec Screaming Frog révèle souvent les impasses techniques.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Pagination & Structure

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 07/09/2017

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