Official statement
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- 4:47 Les pages anciennes perdent-elles leur ranking après chaque mise à jour Google ?
- 6:50 Peut-on vraiment utiliser noindex et canonical sur la même page ?
- 27:58 JavaScript et SEO : Google indexe-t-il vraiment vos contenus chargés dynamiquement ?
- 31:31 Les redirections bloquées par robots.txt cassent-elles vraiment vos liens ?
- 34:04 Les employés de Google peuvent-ils vraiment manipuler le ranking de votre site ?
Google differentiates content based on its location on the page. Repetitive elements like footers or sidebars are deemed irrelevant for the main ranking of a given URL. However, this content can appear for very specific queries. In practical terms: stop stuffing your footers with strategic keywords, it serves no purpose.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by “repetitive content”?
Google refers here to structural elements present on multiple pages of a site: footers, sidebars, global menus, identical promotional banners everywhere. These areas are technically crawled and indexed, but the engine isolates them from the main content during scoring.
The logic is simple: if a block of text appears on 500 pages, it cannot represent the specific subject of a single URL. Google seeks to identify the unique content of each page, the content that justifies its existence in the index. Repetitive elements are therefore set aside in the relevance calculation.
How does Google identify these repetitive contents?
The engine uses several technical and structural signals. HTML tags play a role: <footer>, <aside>, <nav> are obvious markers. But Google goes further by analyzing patterns of repetition between pages.
If a block of text appears verbatim on 80% of your URLs, it will automatically be classified as non-discriminating. This detection also works for visually secondary elements, even without a semantic tag. The positioning in the DOM also matters: the lower the content is in the structure, the less weight it carries.
What does “may be displayed for specific searches” mean?
Google does not completely remove this content from its index. In some rare cases, it may appear in a featured snippet or direct answer if the query specifically targets information present only in these areas.
For example: a postal address in the footer may show up for a search for “address [company name]”. But this content will never contribute to your ranking on your strategic queries. It’s an important nuance: indexing does not mean weight in the ranking algorithm.
- Footers and identical sidebars on multiple pages are isolated from the main scoring
- Google detects repetition through semantic HTML tags and pattern analysis
- This content remains indexed for ultra-specific queries but does not influence overall ranking
- Positioning in the DOM and HTML structure affect the weight given to each block
- The more unique the content is to a page, the more it counts for its ranking
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, totally. For years, tests have shown that stuffing footers with keywords has no positive effect on rankings. Sites that have cleaned up their overloaded footers have not seen any drop in traffic.
What’s interesting is that Google is finally officializing a principle that experienced SEOs have intuitively applied. The placement on the page has always been a signal of relevance. The higher and more unique the content, the more it counts. This statement confirms that Google actively segments areas of a page when processing.
What nuances should be added to this rule?
The line between “repetitive content” and “legitimate content” is not always clear. An e-commerce site may have identical reassurance blocks on all its product pages. Will Google automatically ignore them? Not necessarily, if their position and integration into the main content make them contextual.
Another case: news sites with “Related Articles” or “Latest News” widgets. If these blocks change frequently, Google might handle them differently. [To be verified] Does the engine distinguish between static repetition and dynamic repetition? The statement remains unclear on this point. Tests suggest that it does, but Google has never explicitly confirmed this.
In what cases can this logic cause problems?
Some sites poorly structure their main content and place it too low in the DOM. As a result: Google may confuse it with secondary content. This is especially true on mobile, where useful content often ends up after several scrolls and expandable menus.
Another trap: sites using generic templates with little unique content per page. If 70% of the visible text is identical from one URL to another, even outside the footer, Google will struggle to differentiate the pages. The statement points to a symptom, but the real issue is often the lack of substantial unique content.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do on your existing pages?
Audit your templates to identify repeated blocks across multiple URLs. Measure the unique content / duplicate content ratio on a sample of strategic pages. If less than 40% of the visible text is unique, you have a differentiation problem.
Next, clean up your footers. Remove keyword lists, forced SEO texts, generic paragraphs. Keep only the essentials: legal mentions, contact, actual useful links. A streamlined footer will never harm your SEO, quite the opposite.
How to optimize the structure of your new pages?
Place your unique content as high as possible in the source code. Especially on mobile, the main content should appear before any repetitive elements. Use semantic HTML5 tags correctly: <main> for central content, <aside> for secondary elements.
Vary the content between similar pages. On an e-commerce site, each product page should have at least 150-200 words of unique description. Reassurance blocks can remain, but they shouldn't constitute the bulk of the visible text. Think ratio: 70% unique, 30% repetitive maximum.
How to check if Google is processing your content correctly?
Use the URL inspection tool in Search Console. Look at the HTML rendering and compare it to the source code. Google shows you what it considers as main content via the “explored” version.
Also test with very specific queries including pieces of text from your footer. If this content never shows up, even in exact search quotes, it means Google has indeed isolated them. This is a good sign for your strategic pages, bad for footers stuffed with keywords.
- Audit the unique / repetitive content ratio on your main pages
- Clean up footers and sidebars of any artificial SEO text
- Place the main content as high as possible in the DOM
- Use semantic HTML5 tags (<main>, <aside>, <footer>) correctly
- Ensure a minimum of 150-200 unique words per page on e-commerce templates
- Check the rendering in Search Console to confirm what Google considers as main
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un footer avec des liens vers mes pages catégories nuit-il au SEO ?
Google pénalise-t-il les sites avec beaucoup de contenu répétitif ?
Les blocs de réassurance e-commerce sont-ils considérés comme répétitifs ?
Faut-il supprimer complètement les textes dans les footers ?
Cette règle s'applique-t-elle aussi aux menus de navigation répétés ?
🎥 From the same video 6
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 42 min · published on 28/01/2016
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