Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 1:08 How does my site get included in the Chrome User Experience Report without signing up?
- 1:08 How does your site end up in the Chrome User Experience Report?
- 2:10 How can you measure Core Web Vitals when your site isn't in CrUX?
- 3:14 Can negative reviews really penalize your Google ranking?
- 3:14 Can negative reviews really hurt your Google ranking?
- 7:57 Should you really separate sitemaps for pages and images?
- 7:57 Does splitting your sitemaps truly impact crawling and indexing?
- 9:01 Could a 304 Not Modified code actually prevent your pages from being indexed?
- 9:01 Is the 304 Not Modified code really a trap for your indexing?
- 11:39 Does Google Cache Really Influence the Ranking of Your Pages?
- 11:39 Is Google Cache really not useful for assessing a page's SEO quality?
- 13:51 Why doesn't your niche change generate any traffic despite all your SEO efforts?
- 17:59 Do translated pages really count as duplicate content in Google's eyes?
- 17:59 Are translated pages really treated as unique content by Google?
- 20:20 Why does Google ignore your canonical tags, and how can you enforce separate indexing for your regional URLs?
- 22:15 Why does Google overlook your canonical on multi-country sites?
- 23:14 Why is your Search Console crawl budget skyrocketing for seemingly no reason?
- 23:18 Why is your Search Console crawl budget skyrocketing for no apparent reason?
- 25:52 Should you really limit the crawl rate in Search Console?
- 26:58 Hreflang and geo-targeting: Can Google really ignore your international signals?
- 28:58 Are Hreflang and Canonical really reliable for geographic targeting?
- 34:26 Why is Search Console showing the wrong URL for Hreflang and Canonical?
- 34:26 Why does Search Console display a different canonical than what appears in the SERP for your hreflang pages?
- 38:38 How does Google really differentiate between two sites in the same language but targeting different countries?
- 38:42 Should you canonicalize all your country versions to a single URL?
- 38:42 Should you really keep each hreflang page self-canonical?
- 39:13 How can local signals help you prevent canonicalization between your multi-country pages?
- 43:13 Should you really abandon country variations in hreflang?
- 45:34 Is it really necessary to use hreflang for a multilingual website?
- 47:44 Do Facebook comments really impact your site's SEO and EAT?
- 48:51 Should you isolate UGC and News content in subdomains to avoid penalties?
- 50:58 Should you create a lightweight version for Googlebot to speed up crawling?
- 50:58 Should you focus on optimizing your site speed for Googlebot or your actual users?
- 50:58 Should you serve a streamlined version of your pages to Googlebot to improve crawl efficiency?
- 52:33 Can you create local pages by city without risking penalties for doorway pages?
- 52:33 How can you tell a legitimate city page from a penalizable doorway page?
- 54:38 Has Google's manual action for doorway pages disappeared in favor of algorithmic solutions?
- 54:38 Are doorway pages still subject to manual penalties from Google?
Google views link directory sites as an outdated model, offering no real added value to the user. The search engine struggles to justify their ranking compared to source sites directly. For an SEO, this means that investing in such platforms is a dead end: it's better to focus efforts on quality link-building strategies and unique content.
What you need to understand
Why does Google reject link directories today?
John Mueller's stance is clear: sites that merely display URLs submitted by users create no added value. Google cannot justify ranking these intermediary pages over the source sites directly.
The fundamental issue is that these directories function as unnecessary layers of abstraction. The user is searching for information or a service: why redirect them to a page that simply lists a link, when the engine can display the final resource directly? This logic aligns with Google's goal to reduce friction in the user journey.
What about 404 links on these platforms?
Mueller points out that broken links do not constitute a quality signal for Google's algorithm. Technically, a site with 404s will not be directly penalized for this reason.
However, the nuance is essential: while Google does not penalize 404s as such, the resulting degraded user experience inevitably impacts the overall perception of the site. A directory filled with dead links loses all credibility — and behavioral signals (bounce rate, session duration, etc.) will eventually factor into the equation.
What is the only viable escape route for a directory?
Mueller's recommendation is clear: moderation and automatic verification of submitted links. In other words, transform the passive model into an editorialized platform.
This means no longer simply displaying whatever comes in, but qualifying, contextualizing, and enriching the entries. A directory that adds written descriptions, relevant categorizations, verified reviews, or structured data can regain its purpose — but then it moves away from the traditional model under scrutiny.
- Link directories without added value are considered outdated by Google
- 404 links do not directly penalize a site, but they degrade the user experience
- Moderation and editorial enrichment are essential to differentiate a directory
- Google still prioritizes source sites over passive intermediaries
- Investing in a traditional directory no longer makes strategic sense in SEO
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, and it’s even a well-known fact. General directories have lost all SEO traction for years. The few platforms that survive are those that have evolved into hybrid models: comparators, content aggregators, structured databases with advanced filters.
In practice, we see that the directories still generating organic traffic are those offering advanced search functionalities, third-party evaluations, or that incorporate complementary editorial content. In other words, they are no longer just lists of links. [To be verified]: no public Google Search Console data precisely confirms the decline of pure directories, but user experiences are unanimous.
What nuances should be added to this position?
Not all directories are created equal. There are still vertical niches where a specialized, well-moderated directory with an active community can retain utility. Think of WordPress plugin directories, catalogs of developer resources, or academic databases.
The difference? These platforms provide expert curation and organization that users would not easily find through a standard Google search. But they break away from the realm of general directories where anyone can submit anything. The “submit your link” model without filtering is dead — the editorial model can still thrive.
Should you abandon any submission strategy to directories?
For pure link building, directories hold no interest anymore. The links they pass are either nofollowed or so diluted that they carry no weight. Worse yet, some low-quality directories may associate your site with a toxic neighborhood.
However, submitting your site to a few reputable directories in your field — provided they are moderated, well-indexed, and frequented — may still generate some minimal direct traffic and contribute to diversifying your visit sources. But don’t count on them to boost your rankings.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you manage a link directory?
Let’s be honest: if your site relies solely on a passive submission model without moderation, you are on dangerous ground. The top priority is to transform this model into an editorial platform.
In practical terms, this involves automatically verifying submitted URLs (status codes, response times, SSL certificates), rejecting broken or suspicious links, and adding a layer of editorial content around each entry. A directory that describes, categorizes, and contextualizes resources can still have its place — but it’s no longer really a directory in the classic sense.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?
Do not rely on raw link volume displayed to compensate for the lack of added value. A directory with 10,000 unchecked entries will never earn Google’s trust or that of users.
Avoid also stuffing your pages with ads to the point of drowning out useful content. Google closely monitors the content/ad ratio, and a directory that resembles a monetized link farm is likely to be downgraded. Finally, don’t count on backlinks from your own directory to boost your SEO — it’s a circular scheme easily detected by Google.
How to restructure your link-building strategy?
If you were still using directories as a source of backlinks, it’s time to pivot towards qualitative strategies: creating linkable content (studies, infographics, free tools), digital press relations, guest blogging on sites with high thematic authority.
Prioritize natural editorial mentions in in-depth articles, rather than bulk submissions to directories. A well-thought-out content strategy generates spontaneous links, which carry infinitely more weight than an artificially inflated profile. And if you lack internal resources to manage this transition, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can help accelerate this transformation without losing visibility during the transitional phase.
- Audit the directories where your site is listed and disavow toxic links
- Cease any automated submissions to general directories
- If you manage a directory, implement strict moderation and automatic URL verification
- Enrich each directory entry with unique and relevant editorial content
- Redirect your link-building efforts towards editorial and relational strategies
- Monitor behavioral signals (bounce rates, session durations) to identify low-value pages
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un annuaire de niche peut-il encore être viable en SEO ?
Les liens 404 dans un annuaire pénalisent-ils le référencement ?
Faut-il désavouer les backlinks issus d'annuaires de mauvaise qualité ?
Comment vérifier automatiquement les liens soumis dans un annuaire ?
Peut-on encore générer du trafic qualifié via un annuaire bien géré ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 04/08/2020
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