Official statement
Other statements from this video 16 ▾
- 3:29 Should we really disregard spammy automated backlinks?
- 6:43 Is it true that automatic geographic redirections sabotage your Google crawling?
- 12:00 Is mobile-first indexing really a ranking factor?
- 15:11 Why do your desktop images and videos become invisible to Google in mobile-first?
- 18:17 Does geotargeting really depend solely on ccTLD and Search Console?
- 21:21 Should you really abandon geolocated redirections for a regional selection banner?
- 24:43 Is the Analytics bounce rate really irrelevant for your SEO?
- 28:23 Do pop-ups after a 301 redirect really harm your SEO?
- 29:55 Should you really keep the canonical from desktop to mobile in mobile-first indexing?
- 29:55 Do external links to m. or www. affect ranking differently?
- 34:01 Does the rel canonical really consolidate ALL link signals to the chosen URL?
- 36:45 Is it true that word count is really unnecessary for ranking on Google?
- 40:07 Is JavaScript navigation without URLs ruining your site’s mobile-first indexing?
- 43:27 Is Google really testing the AMP version for Core Web Vitals even if the mobile version is indexed?
- 45:23 Why hasn't your site been migrated to mobile-first indexing yet?
- 47:24 Does Google really estimate the Core Web Vitals of low-traffic sites?
Google confirms that sites under one year old experience significant ranking fluctuations — a normal algorithmic learning phase. For an SEO practitioner, this means avoiding panic or over-optimization with every sudden movement. The key is to maintain a consistent strategy during this adjustment period rather than react hastily to every position change.
What you need to understand
What does this algorithmic learning period really mean?
When Google discovers a new site, it lacks any history to assess its relevance, legitimacy, or actual quality. The algorithms need to test different positions in search results to observe how users interact with your pages.
This phase resembles a permanent A/B test: Google places your content in various positions, measures behavioral signals (CTR, dwell time, bounce rate), and gradually adjusts. An article might find itself on page 3 one day, leap to position 8 the next day, and then drop back to page 5.
Why does this instability last for up to a year?
The duration of one year is not arbitrary. Google accumulates seasonal data, observes your ability to maintain a publishing rhythm, and validates the thematic consistency of your site. An e-commerce site can have vastly different performance depending on the time of year.
The algorithms also check if your backlink profile is evolving naturally or shows signs of manipulation. A growth that is too rapid or uniform may trigger additional algorithmic caution, prolonging fluctuations.
Does this statement apply to all types of sites?
Mueller discusses sites “a few months old,” but the intensity of fluctuations varies by sector. A site in a low-competition niche may stabilize in 4-5 months, while a player in a saturated field (finance, health, law) may experience adjustments for 18 months.
Sites that publish content regularly tend to stabilize faster — Google has more data points to calibrate. In contrast, a static site with 10 pages that never changes extends this phase of uncertainty.
- Fluctuations are an algorithmic test, not a penalty — Google is seeking your accurate position in the results ecosystem.
- Duration varies by industry competitiveness and frequency of fresh content publication.
- Behavioral signals (CTR, engagement, bounce rate) play a major role in stabilization speed.
- A natural backlink profile speeds up algorithmic trust — artificial links delay it.
- Seasonal sites require a complete cycle for Google to understand their traffic model.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, and it's one of the few Google assertions perfectly
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do during this period?
Maintain a consistent editorial strategy without panicking at every movement. If you publish 4 articles a week, don’t suddenly drop to 1 per month just because a page lost 10 positions. The algorithms are also testing your ability to produce content consistently.
Avoid reactive over-optimizations: don’t change your internal linking every 15 days, don’t modify your title tags with every fluctuation. Google needs time to evaluate each version of your page. If you constantly change everything, you reset the learning clock.
How to distinguish a normal fluctuation from a real issue?
Look at the trend over 4-6 weeks, not daily variations. A site in the learning phase shows a sawtooth pattern, but with a stable or slightly increasing average. If the curve descends in a staircase without ever climbing back up, that’s something else.
Compare performances by page type. If all your categories fluctuate, it’s likely normal. If only the commercial pages are diving while the blog remains stable, you may have an over-optimization issue or thin content on those pages.
What errors to avoid during the first 12 months?
Do not launch a major redesign or technical migration during this period — you would add an additional layer of algorithmic uncertainty. Wait until the site is stabilized before changing architecture, CMS, or URL structure.
Avoid aggressive link-building campaigns: a sudden influx of 50 backlinks in one month on a 6-month-old site triggers alert signals. Favor natural growth, even if slow. Better to have 3 quality links a month than 30 mediocre links at once.
- Track positions weekly, not daily — daily fluctuations create noise without useful information.
- Document every change (content, technical, backlinks) to identify what triggers lasting movements.
- Prioritize user experience: Core Web Vitals, loading times, intuitive navigation — behavioral signals accelerate stabilization.
- Build a direct audience (newsletter, social media) to generate non-Google traffic and brand signals.
- Publish regularly without creating an artificial spike — 2 articles a week are better than 10 in one week followed by radio silence.
- Analyze stable competing pages to identify patterns (content depth, structure, linking) that foster algorithmic trust.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site de 8 mois qui perd 50 % de son trafic, est-ce normal ?
Faut-il attendre 12 mois avant de faire du netlinking sur un nouveau site ?
Les fluctuations affectent-elles toutes les requêtes de la même manière ?
Un site qui rachète un nom de domaine expiré évite-t-il cette période ?
Comment savoir si mon site commence à se stabiliser ?
🎥 From the same video 16
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 12/06/2020
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