Official statement
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Google explicitly discourages long blocks of text placed below product grids on category pages. The goal is to prioritize informative content that is visible at the top of the page, providing clear context to users. Practically speaking, this stance calls into question a widespread SEO practice for years and forces a rethink of the editorial architecture of e-commerce sites.
What you need to understand
Why does this statement challenge a 15-year-old practice?
The placement of SEO text below product listings has become a Pavlovian reflex for most e-commerce sites. The logic? Stuffing 300 to 500 words of pseudo-content filled with keywords, hidden beneath the product grid, invisible to 90% of visitors but supposedly appreciated by Googlebot.
Mueller directly attacks this approach. This is not merely an aesthetic suggestion — it’s a clear signal regarding algorithmic detection of artificial content. Google can identify these generic text blocks that provide no real value. The engine now values immediate context that helps the user understand where they are from the first screen.
What does “relevant informative content at the top of the page” actually mean?
This refers to short and useful content (2-4 sentences max) positioned above or right next to the product grid. Something that immediately answers “What will I find here?” or “Why this choice of products?”.
This could be a concise category description: “Our 47 models of trail shoes for technical terrain, tested in the mountains.” Or a context of use: “To start wildlife photography without breaking the bank, these 15 lenses offer the best focal length/price ratio.” Nothing revolutionary — just functional information.
Does that mean we should never have text below the products again?
No, and this is where operational nuance becomes crucial. Mueller talks about “long blocks of text just for SEO” — he targets an intention, not an absolute position in the DOM.
Additional truly informative content at the bottom of the page remains legitimate: detailed buying guides, technical comparisons, comprehensive FAQs. The issue is not the geographical position but the perceived quality and editorial intent. If your 400-word block adds zero value to a human, it’s likely providing none to Google either.
- Prioritize immediate context that is visible at the top of the page, short and actionable
- Avoid generic blocks below products, stuffed with keywords lacking user coherence
- Tolerate additional content at the bottom only if it provides true value (guides, comparisons, FAQs)
- Consider this statement as a signal for the algorithmic detection of artificial content
- Rethink the editorial architecture of category pages with an UX lens above all
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with recent on-the-ground observations?
Let’s be honest: yes, it aligns with what we’ve been observing for the last 18-24 months. Several e-commerce audits conducted between 2023 and early 2025 show that category pages with concise “above the fold” content were outperforming those with the classic block at the bottom. Not systematically, but the trend is there.
However — and this is where it gets interesting — this overperformance is not always directly attributable to the positioning of the text. Sites that made the effort to elevate their content also generally improved its quality, actual utility, and eliminated keyword-stuffed leftovers. It’s difficult to isolate the pure variable of “content position” from the variable of “editorial quality.” [To be verified]: the specific impact of the text's geographical position versus its intrinsic utility remains to be properly quantified through controlled A/B tests.
What nuances should be applied according to the e-commerce sector?
This recommendation applies differently depending on the maturity of the category and the search intent. In hyper-competitive categories with pure transactional intent (“buy iPhone 15”), the editorial content — regardless of its placement — has a marginal impact. Price, stock availability, and UX signals (CWV, conversion rate) take precedence.
Conversely, in informational-transactional categories or technical niches (“how to choose a microscope for kids”, “which circular saw for beginners”), contextual content at the top of the page can truly shift the ranking. Why? Because Google seeks to satisfy a dual intent: understanding AND buying. A site that helps users understand immediately scores points.
In what cases does this rule not apply strictly?
In mega-categories with complex pagination (500+ products), the total absence of content may pose crawl and semantic indexing issues. Google needs textual signals to understand the theme — especially if product titles are poor or generic.
In this specific case, an intelligent compromise involves placing 2-3 contextual sentences at the top, then richer structured content (FAQs, comparison tables, guided filters) accessible through an accordion or tab — technically “at the bottom” in the DOM but not visually intrusive. The essential factor is that the main content is immediately visible and useful. The rest may exist, as long as it doesn’t harm UX.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should I do concretely with my existing category pages?
First step: audit the current content. Open your top 20-30 categories, identify those with a block of text below the products, and honestly ask yourself: “Does this text provide any value to a human?” If the answer is no, you have your action plan.
Next, write 2-4 contextual sentences per category, to be placed just above or next to the product grid. Think “quick guide” rather than “SEO stuffing.” Example for a “Urban Bicycle Helmets” category: “23 EN 1078 certified models, all equipped with a micro-metric adjustment system. Choose according to your use: daily commute, cargo bike, or sporty cycling in the city.” It’s short, useful, and scannable.
What mistakes should be avoided during this editorial overhaul?
Classic error #1: removing everything at once without analyzing the SEO impact. If your text block at the bottom carries 15% of the organic traffic on the page through long-tails, removing it abruptly will hurt. Solution: migrate high-performing elements (FAQs, comparisons, technical data) to structured modules at the top or middle of the page.
Error #2: replacing a generic block at the bottom with a generic block at the top. If your new “above the fold” content remains a jumble of keywords without user logic, you haven't solved anything. Google doesn’t reward the geographical position of nonsense — it rewards utility. If your text doesn’t genuinely guide the user, rewrite it until it does.
How to verify that my site complies with this recommendation after the overhaul?
Test in real conditions: open your categories in private browsing mode, on mobile. Does the content visible within the first 2 seconds help you understand what you are going to find? If you need to scroll after the product grid to read text, it’s probably too late.
Also, use Google Search Console to monitor the evolution of impressions and clicks on your revamped categories. Compare before/after over 8-12 weeks. If you observe a drop in traffic on certain categories, investigate: which queries have declined? What specific content held these queries? Reinstate it intelligently, but not by copy-pasting the old block.
- Audit the top 20-30 categories and identify the “pure SEO” text blocks without user value
- Write 2-4 short, useful contextual sentences to place above the product grid
- Migrate effective informative elements (FAQs, comparisons) to visible structured modules
- Test the mobile experience in private browsing: does the immediately visible content really help?
- Monitor Search Console over 8-12 weeks post-overhaul to detect any potential negative impacts
- Never suddenly eliminate content without analyzing its contribution to organic traffic
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je supprimer immédiatement tout le contenu situé sous mes grilles produits ?
Un bloc de texte en accordéon en bas de page est-il considéré comme problématique par Google ?
Quelle longueur idéale pour le contenu contextuel en haut de page catégorie ?
Cette recommandation s'applique-t-elle aussi aux pages de sous-catégories et filtres ?
Comment mesurer l'impact SEO réel du repositionnement de mon contenu éditorial ?
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