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Official statement

Google segments queries into terms and concepts (e.g., 'New York' is a single concept). The exact order of words in the text is less important; what counts is that terms appear grouped on the page to indicate they relate to the same topic. Synonyms and spelling variants are also treated equivalently.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 52:29 💬 EN 📅 14/05/2020 ✂ 39 statements
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Other statements from this video 38
  1. 1:07 Google rebascule-t-il automatiquement en mobile-first après correction des erreurs d'asymétrie ?
  2. 1:07 Le mobile-first indexing bloqué : combien de temps avant le déblocage automatique ?
  3. 3:14 Google signale des images manquantes sur mobile : faut-il ignorer ces alertes si votre version mobile est intentionnellement différente ?
  4. 3:14 Faut-il vraiment corriger les images manquantes détectées par Google sur mobile ?
  5. 4:15 Le mobile-first indexing améliore-t-il vraiment votre positionnement dans Google ?
  6. 4:15 Le mobile-first indexing impacte-t-il vraiment le classement de vos pages ?
  7. 5:17 Comment Google combine-t-il signaux site-level et page-level pour classer vos pages ?
  8. 5:49 Faut-il privilégier l'autorité du domaine ou l'optimisation page par page ?
  9. 11:16 Le duplicate content fonctionnel pénalise-t-il vraiment votre référencement ?
  10. 11:52 Le contenu dupliqué boilerplate est-il vraiment ignoré par Google sans pénalité ?
  11. 13:08 Faut-il vraiment plusieurs questions dans un FAQ schema pour obtenir un rich snippet ?
  12. 13:08 Faut-il vraiment abandonner le schema FAQ sur les pages produit single-question ?
  13. 14:14 Le schema markup sert-il vraiment à décrocher les featured snippets ?
  14. 15:45 Les featured snippets dépendent-ils vraiment du markup structuré ou du contenu visible ?
  15. 18:18 Le contenu FAQ caché en accordéon CSS est-il pénalisé par Google ?
  16. 18:41 Le FAQ schema fonctionne-t-il vraiment si les réponses sont masquées en accordéon CSS ?
  17. 19:13 Faut-il fusionner deux pages qui se cannibalisent ou les laisser coexister ?
  18. 19:53 Faut-il vraiment fusionner vos pages concurrentes pour améliorer leur classement ?
  19. 20:58 Peut-on vraiment combiner canonical et noindex sans risque pour le SEO ?
  20. 21:36 Peut-on vraiment combiner canonical et noindex sans risque ?
  21. 23:22 L'ordre des mots-clés dans une page influence-t-il vraiment le ranking Google ?
  22. 27:07 L'ordre des mots-clés dans la meta description impacte-t-il vraiment le CTR ?
  23. 27:22 Faut-il vraiment aligner l'ordre des mots dans la meta description sur la requête cible ?
  24. 29:56 Google maîtrise-t-il vraiment vos synonymes mieux que vous ?
  25. 30:29 Faut-il vraiment bourrer vos pages de synonymes pour ranker sur Google ?
  26. 31:56 Faut-il créer des pages mixtes pour couvrir tous les sens d'un mot-clé polysémique ?
  27. 34:00 Faut-il créer des pages spécialisées ou des pages généralistes pour ranker ?
  28. 35:45 Faut-il optimiser son site pour les synonymes ou Google s'en charge-t-il vraiment tout seul ?
  29. 37:52 Google donne-t-il vraiment 6 mois de préavis avant tout changement SEO majeur ?
  30. 39:55 Google annonce-t-il vraiment ses changements algorithmiques majeurs 6 mois à l'avance ?
  31. 43:57 Pourquoi les liens footer interlangues sont-ils indispensables sur toutes les pages ?
  32. 44:37 Pourquoi vos liens hreflang échouent-ils s'ils pointent vers une homepage au lieu d'une page équivalente ?
  33. 44:37 Pourquoi pointer vers la homepage casse-t-il votre stratégie hreflang ?
  34. 46:54 Sous-domaines ou sous-répertoires pour l'international : quelle architecture hreflang Google privilégie-t-il vraiment ?
  35. 47:44 Sous-répertoires ou sous-domaines pour un site multilingue : quelle architecture choisir ?
  36. 48:49 Faut-il ajouter des liens footer vers les homepages multilingues en complément du hreflang ?
  37. 50:23 Votre IP partagée pénalise-t-elle vraiment votre référencement ?
  38. 50:53 Les IP partagées en cloud peuvent-elles vraiment pénaliser votre référencement ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google segments queries into distinct terms and concepts rather than focusing on the exact order of words. What truly matters is co-occurrence — the fact that relevant terms appear grouped on the same page to signal to the engine that they pertain to the same topic. Synonyms and spelling variations are considered equivalent, making outdated exact match practices obsolete.

What you need to understand

What does Google mean by 'segmentation into terms and concepts'?

The engine does not read your pages as a human would read a linear sentence. It breaks down each query into semantic entities — units of meaning that can be isolated words or groups of words forming a single concept. 'New York' constitutes a single concept, not two distinct terms 'New' and 'York.'

This approach relies on Google's knowledge graph and natural language processing models. The system recognizes named entities, relationships between concepts, and understands that 'SEO agency Paris' and 'natural referencing agency in Paris' point to the same search intent. The order in which you arrange these terms in your title or paragraph becomes secondary.

Why does co-occurrence take precedence over exact order?

Google looks for thematic relevance signals, not strict text matches. If your page contains 'digital marketing', 'content strategy', 'social networks' in the same semantic area, the engine understands you are talking about digital communication — regardless of whether these terms are three lines apart or in the reverse order of the query.

This logic explains why some pages rank for queries whose exact order does not appear anywhere in the content. The engine reconstructs the overall semantic context from co-occurring terms. It’s probabilistic processing, not string matching.

How does Google handle synonyms and spelling variations?

The engine applies a semantic normalization that allows it to assimilate 'referencing', 'SEO', 'search engine optimization' as variations of the same concept. Common misspellings, singular/plural differences, and gender variations are also neutralized before analysis.

Practically? You no longer need to multiply exact variants in your content. A single clear mention of the main concept accompanied by its natural satellite terms is sufficient. Stuffing a paragraph with 'SEO agency Lyon', 'referencing agency Lyon', 'SEO expert in Lyon' adds no value — and may even harm readability without improving ranking.

  • Google segments queries into concepts, not raw word sequences
  • Co-occurrence (grouping of terms) indicates thematic relevance
  • The exact order of words in the text has a marginal impact on ranking
  • Synonyms and variants are treated as equivalents by the engine
  • Semantic proximity matters more than strict syntactic proximity

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, and we've been observing this for years. A/B tests on the order of keywords in title tags show variations in CTR (due to meaning for humans), but rarely significant disparities in pure ranking. Pages that rank in the top 3 for 'buy running shoes Paris' often contain the query in a different order — or even scattered across several paragraphs.

But let’s be honest: this does not mean that order has no impact. For ultra-competitive queries where all signals are neck-and-neck, a title that exactly matches the query can provide a micro-advantage. And for highly specific long-tail queries ('how to fix a kitchen faucet leak without disassembling'), exact match remains a direct relevance signal.

What nuances should we consider regarding this general rule?

Lexical proximity still holds weight in certain contexts. If your keywords are scattered across a 3000-word page without local semantic coherence, Google will have more difficulty establishing that they pertain to the same subject. Co-occurrence only works if it is semantically dense.

Another nuance: brand queries and sensitive named entities. For 'iPhone 15 Pro Max', order and accuracy matter because it is a strict proper name. Reversing to 'Max Pro 15 iPhone' or mixing with other models creates ambiguity that Google will not automatically normalize.

[To be verified] Mueller does not specify whether this approach applies uniformly to all types of queries (navigational, transactional, informational). We observe that commercial queries with purchasing intent still seem to favor a stricter match in titles and H1.

Caution: do not confuse 'the order matters little' with 'the semantic structure doesn’t matter'. Your content must remain logically organized for Google to extract entities and their relationships. A chaotic text with relevant terms thrown together will not rank better than a structured text.

In what cases does this rule not fully apply?

Featured snippets and direct answers are exceptions. To secure position zero on 'how to install WordPress', having exactly this phrase in H2 followed by a concise answer improves your chances. Google extracts raw text for these formats — literal matching becomes a selection criterion again.

Similarly, queries in conversational natural language (voice search) may still benefit from stricter matching. If the user asks 'what is the best SEO agency in Marseille', a page with this exact question in H2 will have an advantage to be cited as a vocal answer, even if the regular ranking does not change.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do with this information?

Stop torturing your writers to obtain exact matches down to the word. If your natural title is 'Natural referencing agency in Bordeaux — local SEO experts', it’s just as effective as 'SEO agency Bordeaux natural referencing local expert'. The latter is less readable for humans without measurable algorithmic advantage.

Instead, focus on the semantic density of your content. Each section should cluster relevant terms for the topic at hand. A paragraph on technical SEO audit should include 'crawl', 'indexation', '404 errors', 'sitemap', 'robots.txt' in proximity to one another — not scattered across 5 different chapters.

What mistakes should you avoid after this clarification?

Don’t fall into the opposite excess by completely neglecting the order of words in your key touchpoints. Your H1 remains the strongest signal of the main theme — it’s wise to include the target query in a natural and understandable order for the user, even if it’s no longer mandatory for Google.

Another trap: believing that synonyms exempt you from any repetition. If your page targets 'online SEO training', using only 'internet referencing course' everywhere may technically work, but you will lose perceived coherence by the user and direct relevance signals. The balance lies in a natural and varied usage.

How to optimize your editorial strategy in light of these principles?

Adopt a semantic cluster approach rather than isolated keywords. Identify the main entities and concepts of your topic, then ensure that each page covers a complete cluster with its satellite terms. 'Digital marketing' naturally calls for 'content marketing', 'social media strategy', 'automation', 'analytics'.

Use semantic analysis tools (SEMrush Topic Research, AnswerThePublic, Google NLP API) to identify natural co-occurrences in your field. These terms that statistically appear together in reference content are what Google expects to find grouped on a relevant page.

These advanced semantic optimizations require sharp technical and editorial expertise. If your team lacks the time or skills to carry out this strategic overhaul, engaging a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate your results by avoiding costly missteps on poorly structured content.

  • Prioritize natural readability of titles/H1 over keyword stuffing in a forced order
  • Group semantically related terms in the same sections/paragraphs
  • Use synonyms and variants naturally without mechanical multiplication
  • Structure content into thematic clusters with main entities and satellite terms
  • Analyze natural co-occurrences in the domain to enrich the semantic field
  • Maintain exact matching for featured snippets and targeted direct answers
The exact order of keywords in your content is no longer a determining ranking criterion. Google prioritizes semantic co-occurrence — the grouped presence of relevant terms — and treats synonyms as equivalents. Optimize for thematic coherence and density of related concepts rather than literal matchings. Your writers can finally write naturally without sacrificing SEO.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je arrêter de mettre ma requête principale exacte dans mon title ?
Non, gardez-la dans un ordre naturel et lisible pour l'humain. L'ordre exact importe peu pour le ranking, mais le title reste un signal fort de pertinence thématique et influence le CTR directement.
Les outils SEO qui analysent la densité de mots-clés sont-ils devenus obsolètes ?
En partie. La densité brute (%) d'un mot-clé exact n'est plus pertinente. Mais l'analyse de couverture sémantique et de cooccurrence reste utile pour vérifier que vous couvrez bien tous les concepts d'un cluster thématique.
Comment savoir si mes termes sont suffisamment « regroupés » pour être détectés comme cooccurrents ?
Règle empirique : les termes liés doivent apparaître dans le même paragraphe ou section. Au-delà de 200-300 mots de distance sans contexte sémantique commun, Google peut ne plus les associer au même sujet.
Cette approche change-t-elle quelque chose pour les ancres de liens internes ?
Oui et non. L'ancre exacte reste un signal fort pour le linking, mais vous pouvez varier avec des synonymes naturels sans perdre en efficacité. Évitez juste les ancres génériques type « cliquez ici ».
Les requêtes en plusieurs langues ou avec des accents sont-elles normalisées de la même manière ?
Oui, Google normalise les accents, cédilles, variantes régionales (« référencement » = « referencement »). Pour les langues, chaque index linguistique applique sa propre normalisation adaptée à la grammaire locale.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content AI & SEO Search Console

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 14/05/2020

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