Official statement
Other statements from this video 16 ▾
- 1:55 Pourquoi un nouveau site subit-il des montagnes russes dans les SERP pendant 12 mois ?
- 3:29 Faut-il vraiment ignorer les backlinks spammy automatisés ?
- 6:43 Pourquoi les redirections géographiques automatiques sabotent-elles votre crawl Google ?
- 12:00 Le mobile-first indexing est-il vraiment un facteur de classement ?
- 15:11 Pourquoi vos images et vidéos desktop deviennent-elles invisibles pour Google en mobile-first ?
- 18:17 Le géotargeting repose-t-il vraiment sur le ccTLD et Search Console uniquement ?
- 21:21 Faut-il vraiment abandonner les redirections géolocalisées pour une bannière de sélection régionale ?
- 24:43 Le bounce rate Analytics est-il vraiment inutile pour votre SEO ?
- 28:23 Les pop-ups après redirection 301 pénalisent-ils vraiment le référencement ?
- 29:55 Faut-il vraiment garder le canonical desktop→mobile en mobile-first indexing ?
- 29:55 Les liens externes vers m. ou www. influencent-ils différemment le ranking ?
- 34:01 Le rel canonical consolide-t-il vraiment TOUS les signaux de liens vers l'URL choisie ?
- 40:07 Pourquoi la navigation JavaScript sans URLs tue-t-elle l'indexation mobile-first de votre site ?
- 43:27 Google teste-t-il vraiment la version AMP pour les Core Web Vitals même si la version mobile est indexée ?
- 45:23 Pourquoi votre site n'est-il toujours pas migré vers le mobile-first indexing ?
- 47:24 Google estime-t-il vraiment les Core Web Vitals des sites à faible trafic ?
Google states that the number of words is not a direct ranking factor. There's no magic threshold at 1000, 2000, or 5000 words. What matters is the value provided to the user, whether it fits in 300 or 3000 words. This statement challenges conventional wisdom but requires a nuanced real-world reading.
What you need to understand
What exactly does Google say about word count?
John Mueller's position is clear: Google does not count the words on a page to determine its ranking. No algorithm checks if you have reached 1000, 2000, or 5000 words before giving you a better ranking.
This statement directly targets a belief ingrained in the SEO community: that of minimum content thresholds. Many guides still recommend specific volumes—often based on correlation studies that confuse cause and effect.
Why does this confusion persist?
Correlation studies regularly show that top-ranking pages contain more words on average. This statistical finding has been transformed into an optimization rule: "you need to write long to rank".
The problem? These studies observe an outcome without analyzing causality. Long contents often rank better because they address the topic in depth, answer more related questions, generate more engagement signals—not because they contain X words. Length is a symptom, not a cause.
What does Google mean by "value provided"?
Google reiterates that user value is paramount. In practice, this encompasses several dimensions: relevance to search intent, thoroughness of treatment, clarity of presentation, credibility of information.
A short page can be excellent if it answers a simple question precisely and quickly. A recipe, a targeted technical tutorial, a definition do not need 3000 words. Conversely, a comparative guide, a sector analysis, or an in-depth article require volume to be truly useful.
- Google assesses user satisfaction through behavioral signals (time on page, pogo-sticking, bounce rate)
- Depth of treatment matters more than raw volume—better to have 800 dense words than 2000 diluted words
- The context of the query determines the ideal length—a broadly informational query calls for more content than a precise transactional query
- Arbitrary thresholds (1000, 2000 words) have no algorithmic basis—they stem from misinterpreted observations
- A short, excellent content will always beat a long, mediocre one—it's the informational density that matters
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes and no. For competitive informational queries, we almost systematically observe that long contents dominate the top 3. Not because they are long, but because thoroughly addressing a complex topic requires volume.
The trap is to confuse the means and the end. A 3000-word content that answers 15 related sub-questions ranks well because it covers the semantic spectrum of the query—not because it is 3000 words long. If you manage to cover that same spectrum in 1500 ultra-dense words, you will rank just as well.
What nuances should be added to Mueller's statement?
Google's statement is technically true but dangeously oversimplifying for a practitioner. Saying "the number of words does not count" without specifying "but exhaustive semantic coverage does" is misleading.
In practice, to rank for "life insurance," you will probably need to produce 2500-3500 words—not because Google is counting, but because seriously addressing the topic requires this volume. Taxation, investment types, differences with death insurance, saving profiles, exit strategies... You won't cover it in 500 words. [To be verified]: Google claims not to count, but its Quality Raters Guidelines explicitly value comprehensiveness and depth—two attributes correlated with volume on complex topics.
When does length become counterproductive?
For queries with a clear transactional intent: the user wants to buy, compare prices, find a local service. Forcing them to read 3000 words before reaching the comparison table generates frustration and pogo-sticking—a negative signal for Google.
The same goes for quick definition queries, "quick answers", simple step-by-step tutorials. Trying to reach 2000 words on "how to restart an iPhone" is absurd and degrades user experience.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely with your existing content?
Audit your pages based on search intent, not a word counter. A page with 800 words that ranks poorly may not suffer from a lack of volume but from a mismatch with user expectations.
Analyze the top 3 for your target query. If all of them are 2500+ words and cover 12 dimensions of the topic that you do not address, your problem is not raw length—it’s insufficient semantic coverage. Conversely, if you have 3000 words on a query where the top 3 are between 600 and 900 words, you are probably diluting your message.
How to determine the optimal length for a new page?
Start with the necessary semantic structure, not a word goal. List the sub-questions that the user really has about this topic. Each sub-question = a section. Write each section in a dense and complete manner.
The final volume will naturally result from this approach. A complex YMYL topic (health, finance, legal) will often require 2000-3000+ words to address all dimensions with credibility and depth. A well-crafted e-commerce product page can excel in 400-600 words if it meets the purchasing criteria precisely.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Never inflate content artificially to reach a threshold. Google detects dilution tactics: repetitions, unnecessary paraphrases, off-topic sections. These techniques degrade engagement metrics and harm rankings.
Avoid also the opposite excess: creating skeletal content on topics that warrant development. If your competitors cover the topic in 2500 words with diagrams, case studies, and exhaustive FAQs, your 600-word page won't hold up—regardless of writing quality.
- Analyze search intent and the type of response expected (informational vs transactional)
- Benchmark the depth of treatment of the top 3, not just their word count
- Build a content plan based on actual sub-questions, not a quota
- Measure engagement metrics (time on page, scroll depth, bounce rate) rather than volume
- Prioritize informational density: each paragraph should provide specific value
- Adapt length to the medium: mobile often favors conciseness, desktop tolerates more depth
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Faut-il supprimer les contenus courts qui rankent mal ?
Les pages de 300 mots peuvent-elles ranker en première page ?
Comment mesurer si mon contenu est assez exhaustif ?
Le temps de lecture est-il un signal indirect du nombre de mots ?
Dois-je viser le même nombre de mots que mes concurrents top 3 ?
🎥 From the same video 16
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 12/06/2020
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