Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- □ Search Console : pourquoi les données ne concordent-elles jamais entre l'ancienne et la nouvelle interface ?
- 4:57 Faut-il vraiment éviter les mots-clés anglais dans un contenu en langue locale ?
- 5:29 JSON-LD ou microdata : Google a-t-il vraiment une préférence pour vos données structurées ?
- 10:54 Comment hreflang aide-t-il vraiment Google à cibler la bonne langue ?
- 16:15 Faut-il vraiment traduire les balises alt en hindi pour un site multilingue ?
- 44:04 Les sitemaps XML sont-ils vraiment indispensables ou juste un confort pour Google ?
- 46:52 Les URL en langue locale influencent-elles réellement le référencement de votre site ?
- 54:06 Faut-il vraiment mettre nofollow sur tous les liens tiers ?
- 58:02 Le responsive design est-il vraiment la seule approche mobile qui compte pour Google ?
Google claims that a site without incoming links can still appear in search results, as backlinks are just one factor among many. This statement confirms that the algorithm relies on hundreds of signals beyond link profiles. Practically speaking, this means that a strong content strategy combined with technical optimization can generate organic traffic even without active link building.
What you need to understand
Is Google really downplaying the importance of backlinks?
This statement represents a rhetorical shift in Google's official communication. For years, links have been presented as one of the three pillars of ranking alongside content and RankBrain. Today, Mountain View minimizes their absolute weight.
The nuance lies in the wording: a site can rank, not that it will necessarily rank well. The difference between appearing on page 8 and occupying the top 3 is likely still tied to your link profile, especially on competitive queries. Google plays with words: technically true, strategically misleading.
What other factors make up for the lack of backlinks?
Google relies on over 200 documented ranking criteria and several hundred non-public ones. Without links, your site must excel in other areas: semantic relevance via BERT analysis, user engagement signals (CTR, time spent on site, bounce rate), content freshness, Core Web Vitals.
Named entities and the Knowledge Graph also play an increasingly important role. If your brand becomes a recognized entity through unlinked mentions (citations, NAP for local), Google may grant you legitimacy without a hyperlink. Post-click user behavior also influences rankings: content that satisfies search intent without backlinks can outperform a competitor drowning in toxic links.
In what context does this statement make total sense?
This communication comes in a tense regulatory context. Antitrust authorities are scrutinizing Google's practices, and the company must demonstrate that its algorithm does not systematically favor large players with massive link building budgets. Claiming that small sites can rank without links supports this narrative.
Furthermore, Google has always fought link spam. By publicly minimizing their importance, the company hopes to discourage black hat practices while enhancing its AI and ability to understand content "naturally". It is also a way to justify investments in technologies like MUM, SGE, and others that reduce dependence on traditional PageRank.
- Links remain a confirmed ranking signal, but their relative weight is decreasing against behavioral and semantic signals
- A site without backlinks can rank on niche queries or low competition where relevance prevails
- Topical authority (demonstrated expertise on a topic) can partially compensate for the lack of domain authority
- E-E-A-T signals (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) are growing in importance, especially through author mentions and credentials
- User behavior is becoming a quality proxy: if users return to your site and do not bounce, Google registers this positive signal
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement reflect real-world observations?
Let's be honest: yes and no. For ultra-specific queries with anemic search volume, I've seen sites with no backlinks rank in positions 1-3. But as you increase competitiveness, the observation reverses sharply. An Ahrefs study on 1 billion pages shows that 90% of web pages receive no organic traffic, and the correlation with the absence of backlinks is overwhelming.
Exceptions confirm the rule: institutional sites (.gov, .edu) benefiting from native trust, ultra-known brands with a massive branded search volume, or unique content on virgin topics where no competitors exist yet. For the average site, this statement is more wishful thinking than operational reality. [To verify]: Google does not provide any quantitative data on the percentage of pages ranked without links or their average positions.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
Google talks about "ranking", not about "ranking well". The difference is enormous. Appearing on page 5 for a tertiary query generates no usable traffic. If you ask any SEO working in competitive sectors (finance, health, real estate, e-commerce), they will confirm that without links, you are invisible on money keywords.
Another crucial nuance: Google does not say that links have no importance, just that they are not the "only factor". This is a truism. No one in the industry has ever claimed that links alone are sufficient. The real question, which Google carefully sidesteps, is: what is their relative weight? Historical patents (PageRank) and previous statements from John Mueller placed links in the top 3 signals. This new position intentionally blurs the debate.
In which cases does this rule absolutely not apply?
For YMYL (Your Money Your Life), forget it. Health, finance, legal: these sectors require massive authority signals, and backlinks from authoritative sites (.edu, recognized media, institutions) remain essential. I have audited dozens of YMYL sites: those that rank without links are either official organizations or temporary anomalies before algorithmic correction.
The same goes for competitive e-commerce. Amazon, Cdiscount, and others dominate the results not only through their content but especially through millions of accumulated backlinks. A new e-commerce site without links will never break through on generic transactional queries, even with perfect product listings. Local SEO is an exception: here, Google reviews, consistent NAP, and geographical proximity can partially compensate for the lack of links.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you have no backlinks?
Prioritize content quality obsessively. Create resources that thoroughly meet search intent, with rigorous semantic structuring (hn, schema.org, FAQ). Invest in long-form content (2000+ words) that covers all angles of a question: these pillars are more likely to attract organic traffic even without links.
Optimize your Core Web Vitals and user experience. A fast site (LCP < 2.5s), stable (CLS < 0.1), and interactive (FID < 100ms) becomes more competitive against slower but better-linked competitors. Add structured data schemas (FAQ, HowTo, Article) to maximize your chances of appearing in featured snippets or People Also Ask, positions that partially bypass the handicap of links.
What mistakes should you avoid when relying on factors other than backlinks?
Don't fall into the trap of keyword stuffing to "compensate" for the lack of links. Google penalizes semantic over-optimization as severely as toxic links. Aim for natural density and lexical richness (LSI, related entities). Also, don't neglect internal linking: it's your only lever for distributing PageRank without external dependency.
Another frequent mistake: believing that good content can stand on its own. Without active promotion (social media, newsletters, communities), you will not generate any initial engagement signal. Google needs to see that your page attracts traffic and satisfies users. Finally, do not overlook E-E-A-T: mention your authors, their credentials, and add detailed biographies. In YMYL, this is critical.
How can you check if your backlink-less strategy is working?
Monitor your impressions and CTR in Google Search Console. If your pages are gaining visibility (increasing impressions) but not clicks, your problem lies in the title/meta description, not in the ranking. If impressions are stagnant, it means Google does not find you relevant: dig into semantic and technical optimization.
Analyze user behavior through GA4: average engagement time, scroll depth, conversion events. Strong metrics signal to Google that your content is working. Compare your performance to competitors using tools like SimilarWeb or SEMrush: if you are far behind despite superior content, the lack of backlinks likely explains the gap. At this stage, a link building strategy becomes essential.
- Create long-form content (1500-3000 words) that exhaustively covers search intent
- Optimize Core Web Vitals: keep LCP, CLS, FID in the green on mobile and desktop
- Implement structured data (schema.org) on all key pages
- Build a coherent internal linking structure with optimized semantic anchors
- Strengthen E-E-A-T signals: identified authors, detailed About/Contact pages, mentions of credentials
- Monthly monitoring of engagement metrics (GSC + GA4) to identify underperforming pages
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site e-commerce peut-il ranker sans backlinks ?
Les signaux sociaux peuvent-ils remplacer les backlinks ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour ranker sans backlinks ?
Le maillage interne peut-il compenser l'absence de backlinks externes ?
Les liens nofollow comptent-ils comme des backlinks pour le classement ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 30/06/2015
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