Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 3:09 À quelle fréquence l'algorithme Google Panda s'exécute-t-il vraiment ?
- 4:12 Combien de temps faut-il vraiment attendre pour que Google prenne en compte le balisage Schema ?
- 5:09 Le balisage de données structurées correct suffit-il vraiment à obtenir des extraits enrichis ?
- 10:08 Les liens dans les menus déroulants sont-ils vraiment crawlés par Google ?
- 12:21 Existe-t-il vraiment une méthode unique pour ranker sur un mot-clé spécifique ?
- 13:22 Pourquoi les données Search Console ne sont-elles jamais en temps réel ?
- 15:25 Singulier ou pluriel : Google traite-t-il vraiment ces mots comme des requêtes différentes ?
- 17:01 Les pixels de suivi ralentissent-ils vraiment votre SEO ?
- 21:35 L'AMP améliore-t-il vraiment le classement SEO ou est-ce un mythe ?
- 21:40 L'index mobile-first dépend-il vraiment des résultats mobiles de Google ?
- 24:11 Votre blog peut-il vraiment plomber tout votre site dans Google ?
- 32:47 Pourquoi le contexte textuel autour des images impacte-t-il leur indexation ?
- 46:36 Fusionner plusieurs sites en un seul : Google va-t-il pénaliser votre trafic ?
Google recommends consolidating content on a main site rather than creating separate niche sites. This approach centralizes management and strengthens brand signals in the eyes of search engines. It remains to be seen if this stance applies uniformly across all industries and business models.
What you need to understand
What does this Google recommendation really mean?
John Mueller advises to centralize content on a single domain rather than spreading efforts across several themed niche sites. Essentially, Google prefers to see an authoritative site covering several related topics instead of a constellation of targeted micro-sites.
The official justification holds two key points: simplified management (one CMS, one analytics tracking, one content strategy) and strengthening brand signals. Google values recognized entities, and multiplying domains dilutes this authority signal.
How does this position fit into Google's algorithmic strategy?
Google's algorithm assigns domain authority based on history, backlinks, user behavior, and thematic consistency. A single site accumulates these trust signals on one domain, while separate sites start from scratch each time.
The concept of topical authority also comes into play. Google seeks to identify experts on broad topics. A site that covers various angles of the same theme sends a depth signal that isolated sites cannot replicate.
What are typical cases where this rule applies?
Content agencies that create a separate domain for each client, companies launching a micro-site for each marketing campaign, or affiliates multiplying exact-match domains to capture long-tail traffic. In all these cases, Google suggests that a single site with well-structured thematic sections would perform better.
The major problem with separate silos is that they fragment PageRank and dilute relevance signals. Instead of benefiting from strong internal linking, each domain must build its own link profile and reputation.
- A main domain captures authority better and distributes it through internal linking
- Technical management is simplified: one crawl budget, one robots.txt, one Search Console
- Brand signals concentrate rather than spreading across multiple entities
- SEO return on investment is faster as efforts accumulate rather than dilute
- Algorithmic risk decreases: fewer domains to monitor, less attack surface for penalties
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, in most cases. Sites that have merged their niche content onto a main domain typically see an increase in organic traffic over 6 to 12 months. PageRank circulates better, and crawl budget focuses on quality content rather than being scattered.
But let's be honest: some business models still benefit from separate sites. Brands operating in distinct geographic markets with different languages, or managing business units with their own identities, should not necessarily centralize everything. [To be verified]: Google states that this rule applies universally, but empirical data shows exceptions.
What nuances should be added to Google's position?
The recommendation assumes that all content has a thematic or brand connection. If you manage a B2C e-commerce site and a totally distinct B2B SaaS, merging them could create user confusion and dilute relevance signals. Google does not specify where the boundary lies.
Another point: exact-match domains have lost some weight since Penguin, but certain ultra-competitive sectors continue to benefit from them. An optimized micro-site for a high-ROI query can still perform well, even if Google prefers that this content live in a subsection of an authoritative site.
In what situations does this rule not strictly apply?
Companies with distinct brands (e.g., Procter & Gamble managing Pampers, Gillette, Oral-B on separate domains) have no reason to consolidate everything. Each brand builds its own authority and audience capital.
Projects with radically different audiences may justify separation. A site for professionals and a site for the general public, for example, if user journeys, tone, and business objectives diverge completely. But beware: this business logic must take precedence over a simple SEO calculation.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you currently manage several niche sites?
Start with a cannibalization audit: identify domains targeting similar or complementary queries. If two sites are competing for the same positions, you are losing ranking potential and fragmenting your backlinks.
Next, evaluate the link profile of each domain. If one of them has accumulated significant authority (high DR/DA, quality backlinks), it's probably your main domain. The other content should migrate to it via clean 301 redirections and a structure in sub-directories or sub-domains depending on the degree of thematic separation.
How to structure a single site to replace multiple silos?
Choose a thematic hub architecture: each former domain becomes a major section of your main site, with its own pillar page and internal linking. This approach keeps the niche logic while centralizing authority.
The internal linking must be strategic: link pages of the same theme together, but also establish connections between hubs to distribute PageRank. A clean breadcrumb, coherent taxonomy, and relevant contextual links will do the rest.
What mistakes should be avoided during a domain consolidation?
Do not rush the migration. A gradual deployment allows for monitoring impacts on traffic and making real-time adjustments. Start with low-traffic content, then escalate in importance.
Avoid the trap of mass redirection without logic. Each migrated page should find its most relevant destination page, not just point to the homepage. And above all, do not abruptly delete old domains without redirections: you would lose all the link equity and history.
- Audit current domains: traffic, backlinks, SEO performance
- Identify the main domain (strongest authority, most recognized brand)
- Plan a thematic hub architecture on this domain
- Establish a 301 redirection map page by page
- Deploy gradually, monitoring Search Console and analytics
- Keep old domains active with redirections for at least 6 to 12 months
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je absolument fusionner mes sites niches même s'ils performent bien séparément ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'un site consolidé retrouve ses performances après migration ?
Vaut-il mieux utiliser des sous-domaines ou des sous-répertoires pour organiser les anciens contenus ?
Que faire si mes sites niches ciblent des langues ou pays différents ?
Les domaines exact-match ont-ils encore un intérêt après cette recommandation ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 22/08/2017
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