What does Google say about SEO? /

Official statement

Indexing time varies enormously depending on the interest and popularity of the content. For a viral event with numerous backlinks (like Eurovision), indexing can happen in seconds. For isolated content with no apparent interest, it can take indefinitely because Google sees no reason to index it.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 22/06/2023 ✂ 18 statements
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Other statements from this video 17
  1. Is your site missing from Google because of indexation issues or poor ranking?
  2. Why does Google really push Search Console as the gold standard for indexation diagnostics?
  3. Does Google's URL Inspection Tool really replace manual indexation testing?
  4. Is Google's Search Console indexation report really enough to diagnose all your indexation problems?
  5. Should you really stress about indexing 100% of your website pages?
  6. Does Google really prioritize indexing the homepage first on brand new sites?
  7. Why isn't your new website's homepage getting indexed by Google?
  8. Why isn't your homepage showing up in Google's search results yet?
  9. Is your website really missing from Google's index, or could canonicalization be playing tricks on you?
  10. Is hreflang distorting your indexation reports in Search Console?
  11. Why will your 'site under construction' pages never get indexed by Google?
  12. Can Google still index the entire web?
  13. Does Google really impose an indexation quota on your website?
  14. Does deleting old content really boost your new pages' indexation speed?
  15. Should you really be using Google Search Console's 'Request indexing' button?
  16. Is the site: operator truly reliable for measuring your website's indexation?
  17. What can you really do with the site: operator beyond just checking indexation?
📅
Official statement from (2 years ago)
TL;DR

Gary Illyes confirms that indexing speed varies from a few seconds to indefinitely depending on the perceived interest of the content. A viral event with numerous backlinks (like Eurovision) gets indexed almost instantly, while an isolated page without interest signals may never be indexed. Link popularity and site structure remain the determining factors.

What you need to understand

What actually triggers fast indexing?

Gary Illyes points to two main criteria: virality and the volume of incoming backlinks. When an event generates a massive flow of backlinks in a short time, Google's algorithms detect the interest and prioritize indexing.

The Eurovision example is not random. We're talking about an event followed live by millions of people, reported simultaneously by hundreds of media outlets. Social signals, mentions, editorial links flood in in real time — exactly the type of content Google wants to serve immediately.

Why do some pages never get indexed at all?

The word "indefinitely" is harsh but revealing. Google doesn't crawl the entire web out of charity. If a page has no incoming links, no popularity signals, no observable direct traffic, the algorithm considers it unworthy of attention.

This is where the concept of crawl budget becomes crucial. Google allocates limited resources to each site. If your orphaned pages or weak content generate no engagement signals, they get deprioritized — and in practice, they're never visited.

Does this logic apply to all types of sites?

Short answer: yes, but with nuances.

An established authority site benefits from a more generous crawl budget. Its new pages have a better chance of being discovered quickly, even without immediate external links. Conversely, a small site with no track record must trigger indexation through clear external signals.

  • Immediate popularity (links, mentions, traffic) = indexation in seconds to minutes
  • Isolated content without signals = risk of permanent non-indexation
  • Limited crawl budget = strict prioritization based on perceived interest
  • Domain authority = slight advantage but no absolute guarantee

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Absolutely. We've observed for years that news sites index their articles within minutes, while product pages on low-authority e-commerce sites may wait days or even disappear from the radar.

The problem is that Gary Illyes oversimplifies. He doesn't mention the role of XML sitemaps, the Indexing API, or manual submissions via Search Console. These levers exist and work — but their effectiveness remains conditional on content quality and external signals. [To verify]: Does manual submission really accelerate indexation on a site without authority, or does it merely trigger a visit without guaranteeing indexation?

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Popularity isn't just about backlinks. Google now integrates behavioral signals, Chrome data, and potential direct traffic. Content can be indexed quickly if it generates direct traffic before even acquiring links — think newsletters with large readerships or content shared internally within companies.

Another point: topical freshness. On trending topics (crypto, AI, political news), Google indexes faster even for mid-tier sites. The algorithm anticipates demand. On stable or older niches, the bar is higher.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

Sites with access to the Indexing API (jobs, livestreams, events) partially circumvent this logic. Indexation is nearly guaranteed within minutes, regardless of immediate popularity.

Canonicalized or duplicate pages don't strictly follow this rule either. Google may crawl them quickly but choose not to index them due to duplication. Crawling ≠ indexing.

Warning: This statement can give the impression that without backlinks, nothing happens. That's true for most cases, but ignoring other levers (technical structure, internal linking, user signals) would be a strategic mistake.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to accelerate indexation?

First priority: generate popularity signals as soon as you publish. This means quality editorial backlinks, targeted social sharing, mentions in high-circulation newsletters. Don't expect Google to magically discover your content.

Next, maximize internal discoverability. An orphaned page with no internal links is invisible. Integrate your new content into your existing structure, on your homepage if relevant, in thematic hubs, in related articles.

Finally, leverage official tools: updated XML sitemap, Google Search Console to verify indexation, Indexing API if your site is eligible. These levers don't guarantee anything, but they improve your odds.

What mistakes should you avoid at all costs?

Don't publish isolated content without a promotion plan. If you have no way to generate external signals, postpone publication or merge the content with a stronger existing page.

Stop spamming the "Request indexation" tool in Search Console for every new page. It changes nothing if your content has no perceived interest. Google puts you in queue and processes when it decides to.

How do you verify your strategy is working?

Track the average indexation delay of your new pages. If you notice progressive improvement (from 7 days to 2 days, for example), it means your authority and external signals are strengthening.

Analyze pages that never got indexed. If they represent more than 10% of your content, you probably have a perceived quality or crawl budget problem. Audit, consolidate, eliminate what's superfluous.

  • Publish with an external promotion strategy (backlinks, shares, mentions)
  • Integrate each new page into internal linking structure on day one
  • Submit XML sitemap and verify proper reading in Search Console
  • Monitor average indexation delay over 30 days to detect trends
  • Identify and address pages "discovered but not indexed" monthly
  • Prioritize quality over quantity: 10 strong pages beat 100 weak ones
Fast indexation is not a right—it's a reward for content perceived as popular and useful. Building this perception requires a coherent editorial, technical, and netlinking strategy. If your site struggles to index new pages despite well-executed efforts, or if you lack resources to orchestrate these levers simultaneously, working with a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate your results by optimizing every interest signal.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Est-ce que soumettre une page via Search Console garantit son indexation ?
Non. La soumission manuelle déclenche une visite de Googlebot, mais l'indexation reste conditionnée à l'intérêt perçu du contenu (liens, popularité, qualité). Google peut crawler sans indexer.
Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant de s'inquiéter qu'une page ne s'indexe pas ?
Pour un site établi avec bon crawl budget, 48-72h est un délai raisonnable. Au-delà de 7 jours sans indexation malgré présence dans le sitemap, il faut investiguer (qualité, duplication, signaux externes absents).
Les petits sites ont-ils une chance d'indexer rapidement leurs contenus ?
Oui, s'ils génèrent des signaux de popularité externes dès la publication (backlinks de qualité, trafic direct, partages ciblés). L'autorité du domaine aide, mais n'est pas le seul critère.
Pourquoi certaines pages sont crawlées mais jamais indexées ?
Google peut découvrir une page via le sitemap ou un lien interne, la crawler, mais décider qu'elle n'apporte pas de valeur unique (contenu faible, duplication, absence de signaux d'intérêt) et ne pas l'indexer.
L'API Indexing fonctionne-t-elle mieux que le sitemap XML ?
Pour les types de contenu éligibles (emplois, livestreams, événements), oui — l'indexation est quasi garantie en quelques minutes. Pour les autres contenus, cette API n'est pas accessible et le sitemap reste le standard.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Links & Backlinks

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