Official statement
Other statements from this video 45 ▾
- 1:01 Does every change to content or design really affect SEO rankings?
- 1:01 What impact can changing your site's design or content have on your rankings?
- 2:37 Do domain extensions (.com, .fr, .uk) really influence the weight of backlinks?
- 2:37 Do domain extensions (.com, .fr, .uk) really influence the value of backlinks?
- 4:06 Does redirecting your old pages to an archive really help preserve SEO?
- 4:13 Can redirecting to an archive section really help preserve the SEO of old pages?
- 5:16 Does blocking a folder via robots.txt kill the PageRank transfer to your strategic pages?
- 5:50 Should you block pages receiving backlinks with robots.txt?
- 6:27 Do links from old press releases really hold any SEO value?
- 6:54 Do links from old press releases really drag down your backlink profile?
- 7:59 How does Google truly detect duplicate content and why doesn't it seek the original?
- 8:29 Does boilerplate content really harm SEO?
- 9:29 Does Google really not care who published the original content?
- 13:42 Do domain migration problems amplify the impact of Core Updates?
- 13:46 Are site migrations really as risky as they seem?
- 20:28 How long does it really take for a domain migration to stabilize in Google?
- 22:06 Are domain migrations really risk-free according to Google?
- 26:14 Should you really delay your SEO changes during a Core Update?
- 27:27 Should you really update all backlinks after a domain migration?
- 29:00 Should you really check a domain's history before purchasing it for an SEO migration?
- 31:01 Why does Google maintain SafeSearch filtering even after migrating to clean content?
- 32:03 Do you really need the address change tool to migrate between subdomains?
- 32:03 Should you really use the address change tool when migrating between subdomains?
- 33:10 Are Web Stories really indexable like regular pages?
- 33:10 Can Web Stories really rank like traditional pages?
- 36:04 Do AMP errors really harm Google rankings, or is it just a myth?
- 36:24 Do AMP errors really affect your Google ranking?
- 37:49 How does cleaning up your URL structure really enhance the ranking of your strategic pages?
- 38:00 How can cleaning up your URL structure solve your ranking problems?
- 39:36 Is it true that hidden text for accessibility is penalized by Google?
- 39:36 Does hidden text for accessibility really harm your site's SEO?
- 41:10 Why do your impressions skyrocket on certain days in Search Console?
- 42:45 How can you implement paywall schema when conducting A/B tests with multiple variations?
- 44:03 Should you really show the complete content to Googlebot if the paywall blocks users?
- 48:00 Does Google really rewrite your titles to boost clicks without affecting rankings?
- 48:07 Does Google rewrite your titles to manipulate your click-through rates?
- 49:49 Should you really stuff your titles with every keyword variation?
- 50:50 Is it true that Google rewrites your title tags, and how can you ensure your original version gets displayed?
- 51:56 Does a modified HTML title lose its ranking power in the SERPs?
- 65:39 Should you really stop optimizing for synonymous keywords?
- 65:39 Should you stop optimizing for synonyms and geographical variations?
- 67:16 Why does Google consistently block rich results for adult sites?
- 67:16 Can adult sites actually display rich results on Google?
- 68:48 Does SafeSearch really filter the entire domain if only a part contains adult content?
- 69:08 Can an adult domain host non-adult sections without penalizing the entire site?
Google claims that publishing original content first does not guarantee a better ranking than an enriched republication. A site that copies an article and adds deeper analysis may surpass the original source if its added value better meets the search intent. For SEO professionals, this means prioritizing relevance and depth over merely focusing on publication timing.
What you need to understand
Does Google really reward the originality of content?
Mueller's statement challenges a deeply held belief among many SEO professionals: being the first to publish provides no guarantee of superior ranking. Google does not function like a patent office that automatically grants a competitive advantage to the original creator.
The algorithm primarily seeks to serve the user's search intent. If someone takes your blog article and adds detailed graphs, real-life use cases, well-reasoned critiques, or additional data, Google may legitimately consider this version more relevant for certain queries — and rank it above your original publication.
What’s the difference between originality and relevance in Google's eyes?
Originality refers to being the primary source of information. Relevance measures how well content precisely answers what the user is searching for at a given moment, in a specific context.
An official press release can be original, but a journalistic analysis that dissects it, puts it into context, and critiques it will often hold more value for the user wanting to understand the implications. Google favors this latter approach, even if it comes afterward.
Does this position contradict Google's fight against duplicate content?
Not really. Google fights against pure duplicate content — whole copies with no added value that clutter the index. But it explicitly encourages derivative content that brings an additional dimension: translation, synthesis, analysis, contextualization.
The nuance is crucial: copy-pasting will be penalized or ignored. Taking content to substantially transform it and enhance its informational value can, on the contrary, yield a better ranking than the source. It's the depth of transformation that matters.
- Publication timing is not a direct ranking signal — being first does not guarantee anything
- Added value outweighs raw originality — enriched content can surpass its source
- Google measures contextual relevance — the same content may be more or less useful depending on the query
- Sanctioned duplicate content concerns exact copies — not enriched or reworked versions
- Search intent remains the central criterion — it determines which content deserves to rank
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Absolutely. SEO professionals have seen for years that well-designed aggregators or niche sites that compile and enrich public information consistently outperform original sources. Health sites that rephrase scientific studies with clear diagrams, comparison sites that aggregate product sheets with verified reviews — all these players derive their rankings from added value, not raw originality.
Where it gets tricky is when trying to draw the line between legitimate enrichment and parasitism. A site that takes 90% of an article, changes three words, and adds a basic graphic — is that enough? [To be verified] Google provides no quantitative criteria, and edge cases remain vague.
What risks does this approach create for original content creators?
The major issue: small publishers investing in original research can be cannibalized by better-established players. An independent blog publishes a thorough investigation, mainstream media picks it up adding a few interviews, and its domain authority does the rest — the original disappears from page 1.
Google responds that enrichment adds value to the ecosystem. Sure. But in practice, the original creator loses traffic and revenue to a player who capitalized on their work. It's legal, it complies with guidelines, but it raises an ethical question that Mueller does not address.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Raw factual content — real-time sports scores, stock data, weather alerts — often benefits from freshness and authority that favor the primary source. Google has specific systems (QDF, news) that prioritize speed for these verticals.
Similarly, content protected by contractual relationships or exclusive licenses escapes this logic. An official financial release published on a corporate site will always have a special status, even if subsequent media analyze it. But these exceptions are minority — the majority of informational web content remains subject to the enriched relevance rule.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do to maximize your ranking?
If you publish original content, don't rely on timing to protect you. Anticipate that others may take it and surpass you. The solution: integrate hard-to-copy elements from the outset — exclusive data from your own tools, detailed case studies with screenshots, original interviews, custom visualizations.
Make sure to regularly update your content so it remains the most comprehensive and current version. An article from 2022 enriched quarterly with new examples will retain more value than a static copy published by a competitor in 2023. The evolving depth creates a barrier to entry.
How can you transform existing content into a higher value version?
Identify well-ranked content that is incomplete or not actionable. Add practical sections: detailed checklists, downloadable templates, quantified case studies, annotated screenshots, tutorial videos. Each element should address a question that the original leaves unanswered.
Also contextualize for a specific audience. A generic GDPR guide can be reworked for niche e-commerce, with concrete compliance examples for that particular sector. This specialization creates added relevance that Google may value for longtail queries.
What mistakes should you avoid to prevent falling into penalized duplicate content?
Never solely slightly rephrase existing text. Changing synonyms or rearranging paragraphs without providing new information is disguised spinning — Google detects and ignores it. The transformation must be substantial, both in substance and form.
Avoid also republishing the same enriched content on multiple domains you control. Google will cannibalize your own pages and display only one, often not the one you would have chosen. Concentrate your added value on a single authoritative domain rather than diluting it.
- Incorporate exclusive or proprietary data from the outset of original content creation
- Regularly update strategic content to maintain its qualitative edge
- Add multimedia elements (videos, infographics, interactive tools) that are hard to copy
- Contextualize generic content for specific audiences or sectors
- Avoid spinning and superficial rephrasing without new informational value
- Centralize enriched content on a single domain to avoid self-cannibalization
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google pénalise-t-il la source originale si une copie enrichie la surpasse ?
Combien de valeur ajoutée faut-il apporter pour surpasser un contenu original ?
Peut-on utiliser cette logique pour republier les contenus de concurrents ?
Les balises canonical protègent-elles un contenu original contre les copies enrichies ?
Comment vérifier qu'une version enrichie ne cannibalise pas mon contenu original ?
🎥 From the same video 45
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h14 · published on 11/12/2020
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