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Official statement

The May 2020 Core Algorithm Update is complete and deployed. If a site has lost traffic, it doesn’t necessarily mean there’s a problem: the decline may be due to the emergence of higher quality content elsewhere. Google advises against panicking and encourages users to calmly assess whether improvement is necessary.
2:22
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h14 💬 EN 📅 04/06/2020 ✂ 44 statements
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Other statements from this video 43
  1. 2:22 Are Core Web Vitals Really Going to Transform Your SEO Strategy?
  2. 3:50 Does a ranking drop after a Core Update really indicate an issue with your site?
  3. 3:50 Should You Really Wait Before Optimizing Core Web Vitals?
  4. 3:50 Why is Google delaying the complete transition to the Mobile-First Index?
  5. 7:07 Can Google really delay Mobile-First Indexing indefinitely?
  6. 11:00 Why doesn't Google canonicalize URLs with fragments in sitelinks and rich results?
  7. 11:00 Do URLs with fragments (#) in Search Console mean you need to rethink your tracking and analysis strategy?
  8. 14:34 Why do the numbers from Analytics, Search Console, and My Business never match?
  9. 14:35 Why do your Google metrics never align between Search Console, Analytics, and Business Profile?
  10. 16:37 How are FAQ clicks really counted in Search Console?
  11. 18:44 Are mobile and desktop accordions really neutral for SEO?
  12. 18:44 Is it true that mobile accordion hidden content is indexed as visible content?
  13. 29:45 Does the rel=canonical via HTTP header really still work?
  14. 30:09 Does the HTTP header rel=canonical really work to manage duplicate content?
  15. 31:00 Why does Search Console still show 'PC Googlebot' on recent sites when Mobile-First Index is supposed to be the standard?
  16. 31:02 Is it true that all sites indexed after July 2019 default to Mobile-First Indexing?
  17. 33:28 Why does Google emphasize textual context in Search Console feedback?
  18. 33:31 Are Search Console tools really enough to solve your indexing problems?
  19. 33:59 Why are your pages still not indexed after 60 days in Search Console?
  20. 37:24 What happens when Google occasionally indexes HTTP instead of HTTPS even after an SSL migration?
  21. 37:53 Is it really necessary to combine both 301 redirections AND canonical tags for an HTTPS migration?
  22. 39:16 What really causes your sitemap to fail in Search Console and how can you effectively resolve the issue?
  23. 41:29 Is your brand disappearing from the SERPs for no apparent reason: can Google feedback really fix it?
  24. 44:07 Should you choose a subdomain or a new domain for launching a service?
  25. 44:34 Subdomain or New Domain: What Does Google Really Think for SEO?
  26. 44:34 Do Google penalties really transfer between domains and subdomains?
  27. 45:27 Do Google penalties really spread between domains and subdomains?
  28. 48:24 Should you really overlook PageRank when deciding between a domain and a subdomain?
  29. 48:33 Do links between root domains and subdomains really pass PageRank?
  30. 49:58 Should you really be worried about duplicate content from scraping?
  31. 50:14 Can you relaunch an old domain without being penalized for duplicate content by spammers?
  32. 50:14 Should you really report every scraping URL via the Spam Report to prompt action from Google?
  33. 57:15 Is it really necessary to report spam URL by URL to assist Google?
  34. 58:57 Why does Google refuse to show your FAQs in rich results despite perfect markup?
  35. 59:54 Why doesn't Google display your FAQ rich results even with perfect markup?
  36. 65:15 Is it possible to add FAQs to your pages just to secure rich results in SEO?
  37. 65:45 Can you really add a FAQ just to get the rich result without risking penalties?
  38. 67:27 Should you still optimize rel=next/prev tags for pagination?
  39. 67:58 Should you really submit all paginated pages in the XML sitemap?
  40. 70:10 Should you really index all category pages to optimize your crawl budget?
  41. 70:18 Should you really stop placing category pages in noindex?
  42. 72:04 Does the number of JavaScript files really slow down Google indexing?
  43. 72:24 Does Googlebot really render all JavaScript in a single pass?
📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that a drop in traffic after a Core Update does not necessarily indicate a technical or quality issue with your site. The decline may simply reflect the emergence of competing content that better meets user expectations. The challenge for an SEO practitioner: learning to distinguish a penalty from competitive regression, and knowing when to optimize versus when to pivot strategically.

What you need to understand

What is a Core Update and why does Google communicate about it?

Core Updates are major updates to Google's algorithm, deployed several times a year. Unlike targeted updates (historical Panda, Penguin), they reevaluate the entire ranking based on adjusted relevance and quality criteria.

Google publicly communicates their deployment and conclusion for two reasons: to avoid misinterpretations ("I was penalized!") and to encourage webmasters to improve their content rather than look for technical hacks. This partial transparency remains frustrating for us — no details on the re-evaluated criteria, no quantifiable metrics.

Why does a drop in traffic not necessarily indicate a problem with my site?

Ranking on Google is relative, not absolute. Even if your content remains identical in quality, competitors may publish more comprehensive, better-structured, or more aligned content with current search intent.

Imagine a query like "best CRM for startups": your article from 2019 was optimal at the time. But if in 2020, three competitors publish comparisons incorporating recent SaaS tools with videos, customer testimonials, and up-to-date data, Google may legitimately prefer them. Your content hasn’t worsened — it has just been surpassed.

How can I tell if the drop reflects a real issue or competitive rise?

First check: audit your direct competitors on lost queries. Open Search Console, identify the pages that have dropped, and manually analyze the current top 3 for those keywords. If the new entrants have objectively superior content (fresher, more comprehensive, better UX), it’s competitive.

Second check: look for technical signals or degraded quality (Core Web Vitals, recent toxic links, sudden duplicated content). If nothing has changed technically and Search Console shows no massive indexing errors, the drop is probably purely algorithmic.

  • Core Updates reassess overall relevance, not just the technical quality of the site
  • A ranking drop can be due to the rise of competitors better aligned with the search intent
  • Distinguishing a competitive regression from a real penalty requires a manual analysis of SERPs post-update
  • Google advises against knee-jerk reactions: observe for 2-3 weeks before any major action
  • The lack of public metrics makes self-diagnosis difficult — multiple signals need to be cross-checked

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with field observations post-Core Updates?

Yes and no. In many observed cases, sites that drop do indeed display content weaknesses disclosed by the rise of competitors: superficial content, lack of updates for years, structure poorly suited for featured snippets.

But — and this is the catch — we also see technically impeccable sites that are regularly updated losing ground without any clear reason. Google doesn’t say your site has a problem, but it doesn't explain why the competitor is suddenly being favored. This opacity forces SEOs to guess at the underlying signals. [To verify]: Google claims that "better quality elsewhere" is enough to justify a drop, but what specific criteria define this "better quality" for each Core Update? No public data.

What nuances should be brought to this recommendation of "not panicking"?

Not panicking, okay — but don’t stay passive either. If your traffic drops by 40% on key queries, waiting six months in hopes of a natural rebound during the next update is risky.

The phrase "evaluate calmly" is vague. Specifically, you need to quickly audit (within 72 hours) the impacted pages, analyze the new top 3, and identify gaps in content or UX. If a competitor surpasses you with a 5,000-word guide featuring videos and an interactive tool, while you only have 800 words of raw text, the answer is clear. But Google doesn’t explicitly say so — it's up to you to decipher the intent behind the algorithm.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If your traffic drop coincides with anomalous technical signals (partial deindexing, explosion of crawl errors, massive toxic links appearing suddenly), then it is NOT just a matter of increased competition. It’s a technical issue or a Google manual action overlapping with the Core Update.

Another case: YMYL (Your Money Your Life — health, finance, legal) sites face enhanced E-E-A-T criteria during Core Updates. A decline in these niches can signal a perceived authority deficit, even if the content remains factual. Google does not penalize — it reassesses the credibility of the source. If you are an anonymous blog facing an institutional site with accredited authors, the Core Update amplifies this gap.

Attention: Google says "not necessarily a problem", not "never a problem". If several consecutive Core Updates cause you to drop, it’s a structural signal not to ignore. A site consistently losing ground update after update likely has serious underlying issues — outdated content, degraded UX, or failing strategic alignment with the evolution of queries.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you actually do after a drop in traffic post-Core Update?

First action: identify the losing pages in Search Console. Export the queries for 28 days before/after the update (Google usually announces the end date). Isolate those that lost >30% of clicks. Focus on the 10-15 most strategic pages — there’s no need to audit everything if you have 500 affected URLs.

Second action: manual SERP analysis. For each lost key query, open a private browsing window and check who now occupies your former position. Note: content length, format (text, video, infographic), presence of rich snippets, Hn structure, freshness (date of publication/update). Create a comparative table: your page vs. current top 3. The gaps will be glaring.

What mistakes should be avoided in the immediate reaction?

Error #1: massively rewriting content in a panic without analyzing competitors. You risk modifying in the wrong direction. I’ve seen sites artificially lengthening their articles from 500 to 3,000 words with filler, thinking that "longer = better" — result: dilution of the message and further decline.

Error #2: waiting passively for the next Core Update, hoping for an automatic rebound. Google doesn’t "correct" drops — each update reassesses based on the current criteria. If you change nothing and your competitors keep optimizing, you’ll fall behind. Let’s be honest: the idea that Google will "restore" your ranking without any action on your part is a comfortable but dangerous illusion.

How to verify that your strategic response is the right one?

After optimization (enriched content, improved structure, enhanced E-E-A-T signals), track your positions weekly on the targeted queries. Use a rank tracking tool with daily history. A rebound generally takes 2 to 8 weeks after changes — Google must recrawl, reindex, and reevaluate.

If after 6 weeks your positions stagnate despite objective improvements, two hypotheses: either your optimizations do not match the real criteria of the update (and you need to pivot), or you are in an ultra-competitive niche where even excellent content struggles to break through without increased domain authority. In this case, a targeted link-building strategy becomes essential — and that's where expert support can accelerate results, as identifying the right levers requires a keen understanding of algorithmic signals that only practical experience can master. Engaging an SEO agency specialized in post-Core Update analysis often saves several months and avoids costly wild goose chases in time and resources.

  • Export Search Console data 28 days before/after the update to isolate losing pages
  • Manually analyze the current top 3 on your key queries (length, format, structure, freshness)
  • Create a page-by-page comparative table: identify content or UX gaps
  • Do not rewrite massively without a diagnosis — target improvements based on factual data
  • Track your positions weekly after optimization: a rebound takes 2-8 weeks
  • If stagnation occurs after 6 weeks, reevaluate your strategy or strengthen authority through link building
A drop post-Core Update isn’t a foregone conclusion, but it requires a calibrated strategic response. The classic mistake: panicking and making random changes, or conversely, staying passive while hoping for an automatic rebound. The right approach combines precise SERP diagnostics, targeted optimizations on identified gaps, and rigorous metric tracking. If the gap with competitors is structural (domain authority, content depth), a holistic SEO action plan — including link building and editorial overhaul — becomes necessary.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Une baisse de trafic après une Core Update signifie-t-elle toujours que mon site a un problème de qualité ?
Non. Google précise que la baisse peut simplement refléter l'émergence de contenus concurrents mieux alignés avec l'intention de recherche, sans que votre site ait empiré. C'est une question de classement relatif, pas de pénalité absolue.
Combien de temps faut-il attendre avant de réagir à une baisse post-Core Update ?
Google recommande d'évaluer calmement, mais concrètement, lancez un diagnostic sous 72h pour identifier les pages perdantes et analyser les concurrents. Attendre plusieurs semaines sans analyse risque de creuser l'écart si vos concurrents continuent d'optimiser.
Comment distinguer une baisse concurrentielle d'un problème technique sur mon site ?
Vérifiez Search Console pour des erreurs d'indexation, crawl errors ou liens toxiques récents. Ensuite, analysez manuellement le top 3 actuel sur vos requêtes perdues : si leur contenu est objectivement supérieur (plus complet, plus frais, meilleure UX), c'est concurrentiel.
Faut-il systématiquement rallonger ses contenus après une Core Update pour remonter ?
Non, c'est une erreur fréquente. Rallonger sans analyser les gaps risque de diluer le message. Comparez d'abord votre contenu au top 3 actuel : si l'écart porte sur la profondeur, la fraîcheur ou les formats (vidéo, outils interactifs), agissez sur ces leviers précis.
Est-il possible de récupérer son trafic perdu lors de la prochaine Core Update sans rien changer ?
Peu probable. Chaque Core Update réévalue selon les critères actuels, pas selon une logique de "correction" des updates précédentes. Si vous ne changez rien et que vos concurrents optimisent, vous restez en retrait. Un rebond spontané est rare sans action stratégique.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms Content AI & SEO

🎥 From the same video 43

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 04/06/2020

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