Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 4:15 Faut-il une adresse précise ou un nom de ville dans le balisage d'offres d'emploi ?
- 6:11 Faut-il vraiment paniquer quand Google Search Console remonte des titres et meta descriptions similaires ?
- 8:27 Faut-il vraiment utiliser l'outil d'indexation manuelle de Search Console ?
- 10:31 Robots.txt bloqué : Googlebot respecte-t-il vraiment vos interdictions de crawl ?
- 13:37 Les images CSS background sont-elles invisibles pour Google Images ?
- 17:28 Peut-on migrer un site vers un domaine pénalisé sans tout perdre ?
- 21:43 Comment une page de mauvaise qualité peut-elle saboter le classement de tout votre site ?
- 23:28 Le trafic et le taux de rebond influencent-ils réellement le classement Google ?
- 32:09 Faut-il encore investir dans AMP pour son SEO ?
- 42:49 Les liens internes mobile différents du desktop peuvent-ils nuire à votre indexation mobile-first ?
- 44:57 Le SEO est-il vraiment une carrière viable à long terme ?
- 46:02 L'emplacement des liens internes sur la page impacte-t-il vraiment le SEO ?
Google has officially launched the gradual rollout of mobile-first indexing. Some sites are switching this week, with notification via Search Console. For an SEO practitioner, this means that the mobile version of your site becomes the reference for ranking, which necessitates an immediate check on content and performance parity between desktop and mobile.
What you need to understand
What does mobile-first indexing really mean?
Mobile-first indexing reverses Google's historical approach. The crawler now primarily explores the mobile version of your pages to index and rank them, even for desktop searches. The Googlebot smartphone has become the primary crawler.
This shift is neither instantaneous nor universal. Google rolls out this change in successive waves, site by site. If your domain is part of the transition, you will receive a notification in Search Console. No message? Your site remains in desktop-first indexing.
Why is this change happening now?
Mobile traffic has surpassed desktop for several years. Google aligns its indexing with real user behavior. The former logic that prioritized desktop indexing created a gap between what Google saw and what mobile users consulted.
This gradual rollout allows Google to monitor impacts site by site and adjust its strategy. Sites with significant disparities between mobile and desktop may experience ranking fluctuations during the transition.
Are all sites affected at the same time?
No. Google proceeds in staggered waves, selecting sites deemed ready for the transition. The exact criteria remain unclear, but we observe that sites that have already adopted responsive design and maintain content parity are prioritized.
Sites with distinct mobile versions (m.site.com) or dynamic serving implementations receive particular attention. The Search Console notification remains your only reliable indicator to know if you are affected.
- The mobile version becomes the indexing reference, even for desktop searches
- Progressive rollout in waves, with mandatory Search Console notifications
- No global switch: some sites remain in desktop-first indexing for months
- Potential ranking impact if significant disparities exist between mobile and desktop
- Responsive design alone does not guarantee a smooth transition
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with what we observe on the ground?
Yes, broadly speaking. Search Console notifications are indeed arriving in waves, and affected sites show an increased crawl from the Googlebot smartphone in their logs. However, there are inconsistencies: some sites receive notifications while logs still show a predominant desktop crawl for several weeks.
The timeline remains unclear. Google speaks of a gradual rollout without providing a specific timeline. [To be verified]: it's impossible to predict when a specific site will switch. Some domains wait months after their direct competitors without apparent reason.
What points remain unclear from Google?
Google remains vague about the selection criteria for deployment waves. Why does one site switch now and not another? No official answer. It's assumed that the quality of mobile implementation plays a role, but without numerical confirmation.
Another gray area: how Google handles content discrepancies between mobile and desktop after the switch. If your mobile version displays 60% of the desktop content, do you lose 40% of your ranking potential? Google advises parity but never quantifies the actual impact of a difference.
In what cases does this transition really pose problems?
Sites with slimmed-down mobile versions are the first affected. If you provide less text content, fewer images with alt text, or truncated structured data on mobile, you lose signaling for Google. E-commerce sites hiding filters or product descriptions on mobile have observed measurable declines.
Poorly configured dynamic serving implementations are also problematic. If your user-agent detection is approximative and Googlebot smartphone sometimes receives the desktop version, indexing becomes inconsistent. The same issue occurs with m.site.com URLs if the bidirectional redirection is not perfect.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize checking on your site?
Audit content parity between mobile and desktop. Compare the actual HTML source delivered to the Googlebot smartphone versus desktop. Not just the visual display: the source code matters. Structured data, title tags, meta descriptions, image alt texts, internal links... everything should be identical or nearly identical.
Check your crawl performance in Search Console. Section "Settings" then "Crawl Statistics": compare the crawl volume of smartphone versus desktop. If smartphone traffic spikes after the notification, that’s a good sign. If desktop remains dominant several weeks after the notification, you should investigate your server logs to understand why.
What errors should you absolutely avoid?
Do not block critical resources for the Googlebot smartphone. CSS, JavaScript, hero images must be crawlable. Some sites still block mobile CSS files via robots.txt, thinking they are optimizing crawl budget. Fatal mistake: Google cannot understand your actual layout.
Avoid intrusive pop-ups and interstitials on mobile. Google already penalizes these practices, but with mobile-first indexing, their impact on ranking increases. An interstitial that obscures main content on the first click degrades your relevance signal.
How can you ensure the transition goes smoothly?
Monitor Search Console daily for two weeks following the notification. Watch for crawl errors, excluded pages, and mobile Core Web Vitals. Any anomalies should be corrected immediately, before Google consolidates its mobile indexing.
Compare your positions before and after the transition on a sample of strategic keywords. A drop of 10-15% post-transition signals a parity issue. If you notice declines, audit the affected pages with the URL inspection tool in Googlebot smartphone mode.
- Check the complete HTML content parity between mobile and desktop
- Test all strategic pages with the Search Console inspection tool in smartphone mode
- Analyze server logs to confirm the increase in smartphone crawl
- Audit structured data and ensure they are identical on mobile
- Measure mobile Core Web Vitals and fix regressions before the switch
- Eliminate any robots.txt blocking on critical CSS/JS for mobile
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Comment savoir si mon site est passé en indexation mobile-first ?
Que se passe-t-il si ma version mobile affiche moins de contenu que le desktop ?
Mon site responsive est-il automatiquement prêt pour l'indexation mobile-first ?
Dois-je modifier mon robots.txt pour l'indexation mobile-first ?
Puis-je refuser la bascule vers l'indexation mobile-first ?
🎥 From the same video 12
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h03 · published on 27/03/2018
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