Official statement
Other statements from this video 26 ▾
- 1:37 Google recrawle-t-il vraiment votre robots.txt tous les jours ?
- 1:37 Faut-il vraiment compter sur robots.txt pour désindexer vos pages ?
- 2:08 Pourquoi robots.txt ne suffit-il pas à désindexer une page ?
- 2:42 Les pages 404 peuvent-elles vraiment être indexées malgré les métabalises ?
- 2:45 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter du contenu présent sur vos pages 404 ?
- 3:12 Peut-on vraiment faire confiance au rel=canonical pour contrôler l'indexation ?
- 3:12 La balise canonical est-elle vraiment respectée par Google ?
- 4:48 Les images dans les résultats universels influencent-elles vraiment le classement Search Console ?
- 4:48 Pourquoi Google Search Console affiche-t-il des positions qui ne correspondent pas au trafic réel ?
- 7:29 Faut-il vraiment supprimer ou rediriger les pages de produits obsolètes ?
- 7:29 Modifier du contenu pour de nouveaux mots-clés suffit-il à mieux ranker ?
- 8:23 Comment un simple noindex peut-il faire disparaître votre site des résultats Google ?
- 8:40 La balise noindex accidentelle désindexe-t-elle vraiment vos pages clés ?
- 10:57 Le maillage interne depuis la page d'accueil fait-il vraiment la différence pour le ranking ?
- 11:47 Faut-il vraiment afficher une adresse locale pour booster le SEO international ?
- 11:47 Faut-il vraiment héberger ses sites internationaux localement pour le SEO ?
- 14:02 Google limite-t-il vraiment le nombre de résultats d'un même site dans les SERP ?
- 21:28 Le SEO négatif menace-t-il vraiment votre site ou Google gère-t-il seul ?
- 23:59 Que fait vraiment Google quand votre site se fait pirater ?
- 26:08 Les tests A/B peuvent-ils nuire au classement de votre site dans Google ?
- 32:00 Le SEO technique doit-il vraiment passer après le contenu ?
- 34:05 Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il de publier l'intégralité de ses facteurs de classement ?
- 39:56 RankBrain suffit-il à comprendre comment Google classe réellement vos pages ?
- 41:41 Comment RankBrain gère-t-il vraiment les requêtes inédites dans les résultats de recherche ?
- 45:39 Les liens nofollow transmettent-ils vraiment zéro PageRank ?
- 45:49 Les liens nofollow sont-ils vraiment ignorés par le PageRank de Google ?
Google confirms that internal links from strategic areas like the homepage help signal a page's importance. The algorithm interprets these links as indicators of priority, but user perception also plays a role in the equation. Simply placing a link in the header or footer is not enough: the context and actual visibility of the link also weigh heavily.
What you need to understand
How does Google assess a page's importance through internal links?
Google uses internal links as priority signals to understand which page deserves more crawl budget and weight in the index. A link from the homepage passes PageRank and signals that this destination is significant for the site. The more internal links a page receives from strong pages, the higher its internal authority rises.
Mueller's statement highlights a rarely explained point: Google does not merely count links. The algorithm seeks to understand if users perceive this page as important as well. A link buried in a footer accessible on all pages does not carry the same weight as a well-placed editorial link in the main content of the homepage. Visual and semantic context matters.
What distinguishes a strategic link from a standard link?
A strategic link combines a prime position, strong editorial context, and user visibility. Placing a link in the main menu, in a highlighted editorial block, or on the first screen of the homepage amplifies its impact. Google detects these areas through signals such as DOM positioning, proximity to main content, and likely behavioral data.
In contrast, a link present in a sidebar repeated across 10,000 pages dilutes its weight. Google has long applied filters to prevent systematic repetition from skewing signals. A unique, contextual link is worth more than a hundred generic links.
Why does user perception factor into the calculation?
Mueller emphasizes a behavioral aspect: the importance perceived by visitors. If a page receives actual clicks from the homepage, it reinforces the signal sent by the link itself. Google can cross-reference engagement data (click-through rate, time spent, bounce rate) with the link structure to enhance its understanding.
This means that an invisible or poorly labeled link loses some effectiveness. The link anchor must be clear and appealing, not a generic "Learn more". Design matters: a well-visible CTA outperforms a simple hyperlink buried in a paragraph.
- Links from the homepage pass PageRank and signal strong editorial priority
- The position of the link on the page (header, main content, footer) directly influences its weight
- Google cross-references technical signals (HTML structure, link frequency) and behavioral signals (clicks, engagement)
- A unique contextual link is worth more than a repeated link across all pages
- The link anchor and visual visibility enhance the signal's impact
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation really new?
No. The SEO community has known for years that internal links distribute PageRank and influence crawling. Historical Google patents have already described this mechanism back in the 2000s. What's changing here is the emphasis on user perception as an adjusting variable. Google no longer relies solely on a purely graphical algorithm.
The interesting aspect lies in the confirmation that Google weighs links according to their visual and editorial context. This validates field observations: a link in a sidebar does not have the same effects as a link in the hero section, even if both link from the homepage. The relative weight relies on criteria that Google does not detail [To verify], but A/B tests show clear differences.
Which aspects remain unclear or require cautious interpretation?
Mueller is vague about the exact metric Google uses to measure "perceived importance." Are we talking about the click-through rate on the link? The time spent on the destination page? Data from the Chrome User Experience Report? No quantified data supports this claim, leaving room for interpretation.
Another gray area: how does Google distinguish a strategic link from an artificially optimized link meant to manipulate the algorithm? If you place ten links to the same page in your header, footer, and sidebar, will Google count them all or apply a deduplication filter? Tests suggest that only the first link counts in terms of anchor and weight, but Google has never publicly decided [To verify].
In what cases is this rule insufficient?
A link from the homepage does not compensate for a broken site architecture. If your important page is six clicks deep despite this direct link, crawling will remain limited. Google also follows real navigation paths, not just isolated links. An orphan page receiving a single link from the homepage remains fragile.
Be cautious with high-volume sites as well. On an e-commerce site with 100,000 products, placing a homepage link to a category helps, but the overall internal linking structure remains crucial. A single strategic link does not do it all; the page must also receive links from other strong pages on the site to build solid authority.
Practical impact and recommendations
How do you identify pages that deserve a link from the homepage?
Start by cross-referencing organic traffic data and business objectives. Pages that generate revenue, qualified leads, or target strategic queries should be prioritized. Also analyze pages that have good SEO potential but struggle to rank due to insufficient internal PageRank.
Use tools like Screaming Frog or Oncrawl to map the number of internal links received by each page. If a key page only receives 3-4 links while secondary pages capture 50, there is an architectural problem. Prioritize under-linked pages with high commercial or editorial potential.
Where should you place these strategic links on the homepage?
The main menu remains the best location: accessible on all pages, immediately visible, and a strong editorial signal. For pages that do not fit into the menu, an editorial block in the hero section (first screen) works very well. Avoid relying solely on the footer, which does pass PageRank but with diluted weight.
If your homepage has several editorialized areas (slider, thematic blocks, product selections), ensure that the links are contextual and accompanied by a clear title. A link buried in a grid of 20 thumbnails loses visibility. It's better to have 3-5 well-highlighted links than 15 discreet links.
What common mistakes should be absolutely avoided?
Do not multiply redundant links to the same page (header + sidebar + footer). Google likely only counts the first one, wasting PageRank that could benefit other pages. Also, avoid generic anchors like "Click here": the anchor should describe the target page with relevant keywords.
Another classic trap: changing homepage links too often without a lasting strategy. If you add a link this week and remove it the next week, Google will not consider it a stable signal of importance. Consistency over time strengthens the cumulative effect.
- Identify 3-5 strategic pages (business + SEO) that lack internal links
- Place these links in the main menu or in a visible editorialized area (hero section)
- Use descriptive anchors rich in targeted keywords
- Avoid duplicate links to the same page (keep only the best-placed link)
- Ensure that these links remain stable over time (no weekly rotation)
- Cross-reference with crawl data to confirm that Google is effectively following these links
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un lien depuis la homepage suffit-il à améliorer le classement d'une page ?
Combien de liens stratégiques maximum peut-on placer sur une homepage ?
Un lien en footer a-t-il le même poids qu'un lien en menu principal ?
Faut-il changer régulièrement les liens homepage pour pousser différentes pages ?
Comment vérifier que Google suit bien les liens internes depuis ma homepage ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 11/03/2016
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