Official statement
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Google claims that **content, structure, speed, mobile-friendliness, and HTTPS** directly impact SEO through user experience. This means these technical criteria are no longer optional but condition your visibility. However, the exact weighting of each remains unclear, and some poorly optimized sites still rank very well on competitive queries.
What you need to understand
What does user experience really mean for Google?
Google does not define user experience as a single criterion but as a **set of technical and editorial signals** that influence user satisfaction. This includes **Core Web Vitals**, **loading time**, mobile compatibility, HTTPS security, as well as editorial quality and information architecture.
The problem? This statement remains quite general. Google does not specify the **performance thresholds** to achieve nor the **relative weighting** of each criterion. We know that Core Web Vitals matter, but to what extent compared to semantic depth or backlinks? No official answer.
Why does Google emphasize these technical aspects so much?
Because **user expectations** have evolved. A slow or poorly secured site leads to **pogo-sticking** (immediate return to search results), which Google tracks very well. By steering webmasters towards high technical standards, Google mechanically enhances **overall user satisfaction**, hence its perceived value.
But let’s be honest: this insistence also aims to **standardize the web** according to criteria that Google technically controls. HTTPS, AMP, Core Web Vitals… each standard proposed by Google strengthens its ecosystem and makes it harder for competitors or alternative practices to emerge.
Do these criteria apply the same way to all sites?
No. **Established authority sites** (national media, government sites, major brands) enjoy a **broader tolerance** on technical aspects. An article from Le Monde or Le Figaro can rank even if the LCP exceeds 4 seconds. In contrast, a **new or lesser-known site** needs to align all indicators to green to hope for success.
This asymmetry is never explicitly acknowledged by Google, but it is observable across thousands of queries. The **historical PageRank**, **editorial freshness**, and **thematic authority** largely compensate for technical weaknesses, at least on highly competitive informational queries.
- User experience encompasses **speed, mobile-friendliness, HTTPS, structure, and editorial quality**.
- Google does not provide **any numerical weighting** for these criteria.
- **Authority sites** tolerate technical weaknesses that newcomers cannot afford.
- **Pogo-sticking** and behavioral signals carry significant weight in the equation.
- HTTPS has become an **absolute prerequisite**, not just an advantage.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement correspond to what we observe on the ground?
Yes and no. **Core Web Vitals** indeed have a measurable impact, especially on **transactional queries** (e-commerce, local services). Several audits show that fixing an LCP over 4 seconds can gain 10 to 20 positions on moderately competitive keywords. But for **informational queries**, the impact is much more nuanced.
Sites like Wikipedia, Reddit, or even some specialized forums rank very well despite **average technical performance**. Why? Because their **content precisely meets** search intents and generates positive behavioral signals (time spent, pages viewed, regular return). [To be verified]: Google claims these signals are not directly used, but the correlations are too clear to ignore.
What are the blind spots of this statement?
Google says **nothing about the hierarchy** of these criteria. Will a fast HTTPS site with mediocre content outrank a slow HTTP site with exceptional content? In real life, **content remains king**, but Google prefers to highlight objectively measurable technical criteria over subjective editorial criteria.
Another blind spot: the **overestimation of mobile-first**. Yes, mobile-first indexing is the norm, but on certain complex B2B queries, users still largely search from a desktop. Optimizing solely for mobile can **degrade the desktop experience** without real gain in these niches. Google never mentions this, yet it is a ground reality.
Should we take this statement literally?
No. It should be viewed as a **guiding framework**, not a mechanical checklist. If you fix your Core Web Vitals but your **content is shallow**, you won't get far. Conversely, a site with exceptional content but an LCP of 3.5 seconds will likely rank better than a fast site without added value.
The real message? Google pushes towards a **minimal technical standard** that every serious site must meet. But once this threshold is crossed, it is the **semantic depth**, **thematic authority**, and **behavioral signals** that make the difference. Don’t waste six months trying to shave off 0.2 seconds of LCP if your content does not clearly address search intent.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete steps should be taken to align your site with these criteria?
Start with a **comprehensive technical audit** using PageSpeed Insights, Lighthouse, or tools like GTmetrix. Identify the three Core Web Vitals metrics: **LCP** (Largest Contentful Paint), **FID** (First Input Delay), **CLS** (Cumulative Layout Shift). If any of them are red, it’s a priority. LCP should be under 2.5 seconds, FID under 100 ms, CLS under 0.1.
Next, migrate to **HTTPS** if you haven't already. Use a CDN like Cloudflare to speed up global distribution. Activate **Brotli or Gzip compression**. Optimize your images (WebP format, lazy loading, appropriate dimensions). And above all, test your site in **mobile mode** with an actual smartphone, not just the Chrome emulator.
What mistakes should be avoided at all costs?
Never sacrifice **editorial quality** for marginal technical gains. I’ve seen sites remove rich content or relevant visuals just to gain 0.3 seconds of LCP. The result: the **bounce rate** skyrockets and rankings drop. Google measures overall user experience, not just raw speed.
Another pitfall: **mobile-only**. Many sites drastically reduce visible content on mobile to speed up loading, thinking that Google indexes only the mobile version. However, if your content becomes too sparse, you lose **semantic depth**, and Google can downgrade you. Maintain a balance between performance and substance.
How can I verify that my site meets these criteria?
Use **Google Search Console**: section "Experience" > "Core Web Vitals". You will see problematic URLs grouped by type of error. Complement this with **PageSpeed Insights** for each key template (homepage, product page, article). Don’t forget to test under **real conditions** (4G, mid-range smartphone), not just from your office with fiber.
Implement **continuous monitoring** with tools like Dareboost, SpeedCurve, or New Relic. Performance often degrades over time due to updates (plugins, tracking, A/B testing). A site that was green three months ago can shift to orange without you noticing. Automate alerts if your Core Web Vitals exceed thresholds.
- Comprehensive technical audit (PageSpeed, Lighthouse, GTmetrix)
- HTTPS migration + valid SSL certificate
- Image optimization (WebP, lazy loading, compression)
- CDN for global distribution
- Real mobile testing (not just emulator)
- Continuous monitoring of Core Web Vitals
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les Core Web Vitals sont-ils vraiment décisifs pour le classement ?
Un site HTTP peut-il encore se classer correctement ?
Faut-il sacrifier du contenu pour améliorer la vitesse mobile ?
Les sites d'autorité sont-ils exemptés de ces critères techniques ?
Comment prioriser entre vitesse, contenu et backlinks ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h03 · published on 16/02/2017
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