Official statement
Other statements from this video 47 ▾
- 2:42 Does Google penalize dynamic content on e-commerce pages?
- 2:42 Does variable content on e-commerce pages harm SEO?
- 4:15 Is Google really penalizing wide or inconsistent e-commerce categories?
- 4:15 Is it true that Google penalizes category pages lacking strict thematic consistency?
- 6:24 How does Google determine the order of images on a single page?
- 6:24 Does Google prioritize image quality over the display order on the page?
- 8:00 Is machine learning for images truly a secondary SEO factor?
- 8:29 Can machine learning really replace text for SEO-ing your images?
- 11:07 Why does Google Discover traffic seem to vanish overnight?
- 11:07 Why does Google Discover traffic drop off overnight without warning?
- 13:13 Does Google really impose page-by-page granular penalties instead of site-wide ones?
- 15:21 Could Google hide one of your sites if they look too similar?
- 15:21 Why does Google omit certain unique sites in its results?
- 17:29 Can a low-quality page really taint your entire site?
- 17:29 Can a poorly optimized homepage really penalize an entire site?
- 18:33 How does Google measure Core Web Vitals on your AMP and non-AMP pages?
- 18:33 Does Google really track Core Web Vitals for AMP and non-AMP pages separately?
- 20:40 Core Web Vitals: Which version truly impacts your ranking when Google shows the AMP?
- 22:18 Should you really match the query in the title to rank well?
- 22:18 Should you choose an exact match title or a user-optimized title?
- 24:28 Do user comments really influence your page rankings?
- 24:28 Do user comments really count for SEO?
- 28:00 Are intrusive interstitials really a negative ranking factor?
- 28:09 Can intrusive interstitials really lower your Google ranking?
- 29:09 Why does Google convert your SVGs to PNGs and how does it affect your image SEO?
- 29:43 Why does Google convert your SVGs into pixel images internally?
- 31:18 Should you optimize the user experience before tackling SEO?
- 31:44 Should you really use rel=canonical for syndicated content?
- 32:24 Does rel=canonical to the source really protect syndicated content?
- 34:29 Should you create broad topical content to boost your authority in Google's eyes?
- 34:29 Should you create related content to boost your topical authority?
- 36:01 How long should you really expect to wait for a manual link action to be lifted?
- 36:01 Why can manual link actions take several months to get a response?
- 39:12 Does PageSpeed Insights really reflect what Google sees on your site?
- 39:44 Why do PageSpeed Insights and Googlebot show different results for your site?
- 41:20 Is it true that your PageSpeed Insights tests don't accurately reflect what Google really measures regarding Core Web Vitals?
- 44:59 Do you really need to wait 30 days to see the impact of your Core Web Vitals optimizations in PageSpeed Insights?
- 45:59 Core Web Vitals: Why Do Only Real User Data Matter for Ranking?
- 45:59 Why does Google overlook your Lighthouse scores when ranking your site?
- 46:43 How does Google really group your pages to evaluate Core Web Vitals?
- 47:03 How does Google group your pages to measure Core Web Vitals?
- 51:24 Why does Google keep crawling outdated 404 URLs on your site?
- 51:54 Why does Google keep rechecking your old 404 URLs for years?
- 57:06 Do 301 redirects really pass on 100% of PageRank and link signals?
- 57:06 Do 301 redirects really transfer all ranking signals without any loss?
- 59:51 Is it true that the text/HTML ratio is completely irrelevant for Google SEO?
- 59:51 Is the text/HTML ratio really useless for SEO?
Google claims it does not apply tiered penalties (level 1, 2, 3) but evaluates each page individually. As a result, some sections of a site may be demoted while others retain their positions. For SEO, this means that a localized issue doesn't necessarily contaminate the entire domain — it also means that performance should be analyzed page by page rather than relying on overall averages.
What you need to understand
What does the absence of penalty levels really mean?
Google's statement breaks a persistent belief: that of a system of graduated sanctions applied across an entire domain. No yellow, orange, or red cards. No overall trust score that would shift an entire site from one category to another.
In practice, Google evaluates each URL on its own merits: content quality, engagement signals, topical relevance, technical structure. If one section of a site publishes thin content while another offers in-depth analyses, both will not be treated the same. The granularity goes down to the page, or even down to content fragments within the same page depending on queries.
How does this precision change an SEO's diagnostic approach?
Too many practitioners still look at overall traffic trends and conclude, "the site is penalized." Let's be honest: this macroscopic view often masks very localized realities. A cluster of pages may plummet while another progresses — the net balance may be negative, but the diagnostic of "overall penalty" would be incorrect.
This granular approach requires a URL by URL analysis of performance after every core update or traffic drop. Crawling tools and Search Console exports become essential to identify which sections are affected. And this is where it gets tricky: many sites lack the URL structure or analytical tagging to properly isolate segments.
What does Google mean by a “smooth transition” of trust?
Rather than a binary switch (trust / distrust), Google describes a continuum of quality signals. A page that gradually accumulates negative signals (high bounce rate, low reading time, query rephrasing) will see its visibility decline gradually — not overnight through a manual action like "level 2 penalty".
Conversely, gradually improving content can restore its position without requiring a formal "penalty lift", since there was never an explicit sanction. This is consistent with field observations: recoveries after core updates often happen in phases, over several months, as Google recrawls and reevaluates modified pages.
- Page by page evaluation: each URL is judged individually, not the entire domain
- No fixed tiers: no “level 1, 2, 3” penalty system in the algorithm
- Smooth transition: trust and ranking evolve on a continuum, not through abrupt jumps
- Intra-site heterogeneity: some sections may be demoted while others maintain or improve their visibility
- Demanding diagnostics: requires segmented analysis and URL by URL tracking tools
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with what we observe in the field?
Overall, yes — but with important nuances. Post-core update analyses do indeed show very heterogeneous impacts within the same domain. An e-commerce site may see its product listings drop while its buying guides improve. A media outlet may lose traffic on its short news while gaining on its long investigations.
Where it gets tricky is with the notion of a “smooth transition.” Sometimes the field contradicts this: some traffic drops are sudden and concentrated within 24-48 hours during the rollout of a core update. It's hard to talk about a continuum when 60% of the traffic from a section disappears in two days. [To be verified]: Google may be referring to the gradual building of signals upstream, but the application of the update itself remains binary (before/after).
What limits should be set on this page by page granularity?
The first limit: domain-level signals do exist. The overall backlink profile, the topical authority built over the years, and the allocated crawl frequency — all of this influences individual pages. Saying that the evaluation is "as granular as possible" does not mean it is only granular.
The second limit: manual actions can indeed target an entire site. Algorithmic spam vs manual spam, the distinction matters. If Mueller is talking here about algorithmic evaluation, this does not cover instances where a human team decides to demote or de-index an entire domain. This nuance is missing from the original statement — intentionally vague?
In what scenarios does this approach really change the SEO strategy?
For large sites (10k+ URLs), it's a game changer. Instead of panicking over an overall drop, we can pinpoint the types of losing pages and focus our efforts there. This involves structuring the architecture with recognizable URL patterns, tagging segments in Analytics, and monitoring performance by cluster.
For small sites (fewer than 100 pages), the impact is less significant — a “section” may shrink to 10 pages, and a localized drop will have a visible effect on overall traffic anyway. But even there, understanding which specific page is problematic helps avoid blindly reworking the entire site and breaking what was already working.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to audit a site according to this page by page logic?
First step: segment the URLs by type. Product pages, category pages, blog articles, landing pages, FAQs — each template should form a separately analyzable group in Search Console and your crawling tool. If your URLs are chaotic, start there before any optimization.
Second step: export performance by segment over 12-16 months to capture several core updates. Compare the graphs: do some types perform better than others? Do some systematically drop after each update? These patterns reveal which content Google considers weak — and which it values.
What mistakes should be avoided following this statement?
Don’t jump to conclusions too quickly that an issue is “just algorithmic” and that waiting for the next update will resolve it. If pages are consistently demoted, it's because they are accumulating persistent negative signals — low reading time, high bounce rate, superficial content. Waiting without doing anything will not solve the issue.
Another pitfall: over-optimizing pages that are performing well thinking it will boost the entire domain further. If Google evaluates page by page, adding 500 words to an already performing piece of content won't help the weaker pages. Focus resources on what's wrong, not on what’s already working.
What concrete actions can be taken to leverage this granularity?
Identify pages in gradual decline (those losing 5-10% of traffic each quarter without sudden drops). These are ideal candidates for a refresh: updating data, adding missing sections, improving Hn structure, optimizing images and internal linking.
For pages already collapsed, ask yourself: is it better to repair or redirect? If the content is thin and you lack the time or expertise to transform it into a reference resource, a 301 redirect to a more comprehensive page may be more effective than leaving a zombie URL that drags down the average signals of its section.
- Segment URLs by template/type in Search Console and crawling tool
- Export and compare performance by segment over a minimum of 12-16 months
- Identify decline patterns: which types systematically lose after core updates
- Prioritize gradually declining pages for targeted refreshes rather than global overhauls
- Audit page by page for engagement signals: reading time, bounce rate, scroll depth
- Clean up or redirect zombie URLs that accumulate negative signals without hope of rapid recovery
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google peut-il quand même pénaliser tout un site d'un coup ?
Si une section est déclassée, cela affecte-t-il les autres sections par ricochet ?
Comment savoir si une page est 'déclassée' ou simplement en concurrence normale ?
Peut-on récupérer d'un déclassement page par page sans toucher au reste du site ?
Les signaux domaine-level (backlinks, autorité) jouent-ils encore un rôle ?
🎥 From the same video 47
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 05/02/2021
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.