What does Google say about SEO? /

Official statement

If your ranking is fluctuating, waiting won't automatically improve the situation. You need to convince Google's algorithms that your site is clearly the best result, otherwise you're leaving it to chance and your competitors' actions.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 28/03/2022 ✂ 23 statements
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Other statements from this video 22
  1. Why doesn't Google Search Console's average position reflect a theoretical ranking but actual display results instead?
  2. Does boosting your SEO really require producing more content?
  3. Does the location of your XML sitemap really affect crawl efficiency?
  4. Should you really use the URL inspection tool to index a brand new website?
  5. How long does it really take to see your new backlinks in Google Search Console?
  6. Why do Search Console and Analytics data never really match up?
  7. Is Google Search Console really collecting all the data from your massive e-commerce site?
  8. Should you really prefer noindex over disallow to control indexation in Google?
  9. Can out-of-stock product pages really trigger soft 404 errors in Google's eyes?
  10. Do Google's testing tools really crawl in real-time or do they rely on cached data?
  11. Does Google really use different ranking algorithms depending on your industry?
  12. Why does Google deprioritize crawling low-effort aggregator sites?
  13. Does Google really count clicks on rich results the same way as organic clicks?
  14. Does the order of links in your HTML code really affect Google's crawl priority?
  15. Should you really avoid URLs with parameters for SEO?
  16. Why does robots.txt prevent Google from crawling your pages but still allow them to be indexed?
  17. Are out-of-stock products hurting your e-commerce site's overall search rankings?
  18. Does partial duplicate content really hurt your search rankings?
  19. Does Google really ignore your canonical tags when it decides pages are too similar?
  20. Does Google really use just one signal to choose which URL to canonicalize among your duplicate content?
  21. Do brand mentions without backlinks actually help your SEO rankings?
  22. Why does a link without an indexed URL essentially do nothing for your SEO?
📅
Official statement from (4 years ago)
TL;DR

Google won't reward your patience in the face of ranking fluctuations. If you don't act proactively to prove to the algorithms that your site deserves its position, you're leaving the door wide open for your competitors. Inaction is equivalent to falling behind.

What you need to understand

Why does Google insist on the "proactive" dimension of SEO?

Because algorithms don't re-evaluate your site out of charity. They're constantly looking to refine their results based on fresh signals — updated content, new links, evolving topical authority, engagement signals.

If your site stagnates while your competitors move forward, Google has no objective reason to give you back ground. Waiting amounts to letting others play alone — and they won't do you any favors.

What does "convincing the algorithms" mean in concrete terms?

Google doesn't operate on the basis of promises or glorious history. Algorithms constantly evaluate comparative relevance: is your page still the best answer to the search intent, compared to available alternatives?

Convincing means producing tangible proof — content enrichment, improved user experience, reinforced authority signals, editorial freshness. No declarations of intent: measurable facts.

What's the real margin of maneuver against organic fluctuations?

This is where it gets interesting. Google claims you can "convince" its algorithms, but it never specifies which levers work for sure. Some fluctuations are due to algo adjustments you can't control.

However, one thing is clear: doing nothing guarantees you'll be swept along. Acting at least gives you a chance to influence the outcome. The question remains: what exactly should you do? — and there, Google deliberately stays vague.

  • Algorithms don't automatically stabilize fluctuating rankings — inaction solves nothing.
  • You're in permanent competition, even if you stand still, your competitors are moving forward.
  • "Convincing" requires concrete signals: freshness, increased authority, greater relevance.
  • Google doesn't provide a magic formula — you have to test, measure, adjust based on your context.

SEO Expert opinion

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

Yes, and that's even an understatement. Sites that stagnate almost always lose ground in the medium term — because their competitors don't stagnate. Search is a zero-sum game: if you're not moving forward, you're mechanically falling back.

However, saying that you just need to "convince the algorithms" is marketing oversimplification. Some signals carry more weight than others — but Google will never say which ones. And some fluctuations completely escape your control, especially during Core Updates.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

First nuance: not all fluctuations are created equal. If your site oscillates 2-3 positions, that's often statistical noise — frantic action can do more harm than good. If you lose 20 positions at once, then yes, you need to investigate.

Second nuance: "being clearly the best result" is a fuzzy notion. Best according to what criteria? Domain authority? Content freshness? Depth of coverage? User experience? Google mixes all of this in a black box that we can only interpret. [To verify]: no official document details how to "prove" you're the best.

Third nuance: sometimes the problem isn't with you. Google can favor a new type of content (videos, forums, featured snippets) and your classic format mechanically loses ground. In this case, "convincing" might mean changing your format — not just optimizing what exists.

In what cases does this rule not apply directly?

When your fluctuations are linked to external uncontrollable factors: seasonality, evolution of search intent, SERP display changes (BERT, MUM, SGE). You can optimize all you want, if Google decides your type of content no longer matches the majority intent, you'll fall back.

Another case: very new or low-authority sites. You can publish the world's best content, but if you have no authority signals (links, mentions, history), Google won't necessarily rank you — it tests first, then validates. There, "convincing" takes time, no matter what you do.

Warning: taking action for action's sake can be counterproductive. If you launch massive changes without a clear hypothesis, you risk muddying the signals and making the situation worse. Every action should respond to a precise diagnosis.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely when facing ranking fluctuations?

First, qualify the fluctuation. Is it a one-off movement (2-3 days), an established trend (2-3 weeks), or a sudden drop post-update? The answer determines the action.

If it's one-off, monitor without panicking. If it's a trend, audit your competitors: what did they do that you didn't? New content, fresh links, UX overhaul? If it's post-update, cross-reference with community feedback — maybe Google adjusted its criteria for authority or relevance.

Next, identify the main lever to activate. Content freshness? Depth of coverage? Popularity signals? User experience? Don't pull all the levers at once — you won't know what worked.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

Don't over-optimize out of panic. Stuffing your pages with keywords, multiplying low-quality backlinks, radically changing your structure — all of this can make the situation worse. Google detects sudden movements and may interpret them as manipulation.

Also avoid betting everything on a single signal. If you think "more content = better ranking" and you bloat your pages without adding real value, you're wasting your time. Google evaluates overall relevance, not raw length.

Finally, don't neglect technical signals. A slow site, indexation errors, misconfigured tags — all of this handicaps your editorial efforts. If the infrastructure is shaky, the world's best content won't compensate.

How do you measure the effectiveness of your actions?

Define specific indicators before you act: average positions on a cluster of target keywords, segmented organic traffic, SERP click-through rates, time on page. Compare before/after over a sufficiently long period (at least 4-6 weeks).

Use control groups if possible: test your modifications on part of your site before deploying everywhere. This limits risk and validates your hypothesis.

And most importantly, document everything. Note what you did, when, and what happened next. This will prevent you from repeating mistakes and give you a basis for refining your strategy.

  • Qualify the nature of the fluctuation — one-off, trend-based, or post-update?
  • Audit your competitors — which signals have they recently reinforced?
  • Prioritize a clear action lever — freshness, depth, authority, UX?
  • Avoid panic-driven over-optimization — Google detects suspicious movements.
  • Control technical fundamentals — speed, indexation, structure.
  • Measure impact on specific indicators — positions, traffic, engagement.
  • Test before large-scale deployment — minimize risk.
  • Document every action and its result — build a knowledge base.

When facing fluctuations, inaction is your worst enemy. But acting intelligently requires diagnosis, method, and perspective — three things that often go missing when you're under operational pressure.

If you lack the time or expertise to conduct these analyses rigorously, specialized SEO support can significantly accelerate the process. An experienced agency has the tools, benchmarks, and perspective needed to quickly qualify movements, identify priority levers, and pilot tests without over-optimization risk. Sometimes, delegating this technical part allows you to focus on what you do best — and recover peace of mind in the face of SERP's whims.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant d'agir sur une fluctuation de classement ?
Si la fluctuation dure moins de 48-72 heures, c'est souvent du bruit temporaire — surveillez sans paniquer. Au-delà de 2 semaines de tendance négative installée, il faut investiguer sérieusement et agir. Les chutes brutales post-Core Update méritent une réaction immédiate.
Peut-on vraiment 'convaincre' les algorithmes de Google ou est-ce du marketing ?
Les deux. Oui, renforcer vos signaux de pertinence, d'autorité et d'expérience influence positivement vos classements. Mais Google ne donne jamais la recette exacte — vous testez, mesurez, ajustez. Et parfois, malgré tout, vous perdez quand même parce que l'algo a changé ses priorités.
Quels signaux pèsent le plus lourd pour stabiliser un classement ?
Google ne le dit jamais explicitement, mais terrain et études convergent : autorité thématique (liens + mentions dans votre niche), fraîcheur éditoriale, profondeur de traitement, et expérience utilisateur (Core Web Vitals, engagement). Le poids relatif varie selon la requête et le secteur.
Est-il dangereux de modifier trop de choses en même temps sur un site qui fluctue ?
Oui, clairement. Si vous changez 10 variables simultanément, vous ne saurez jamais laquelle a eu un effet — et vous risquez d'envoyer des signaux contradictoires à Google. Priorisez, testez par étapes, mesurez. La méthodologie prime sur la vitesse.
Les fluctuations peuvent-elles se résoudre d'elles-mêmes sans intervention ?
Rarement. Certaines micro-variations se corrigent après un recrawl ou un ajustement algo mineur. Mais si vos concurrents progressent pendant ce temps, vous perdez mécaniquement du terrain. Compter sur l'auto-stabilisation, c'est jouer à la roulette russe avec votre trafic.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms AI & SEO

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 28/03/2022

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