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Official statement

Passage ranking helps Google better understand poorly structured pages, but that doesn't mean webmasters should do nothing. Properly structuring your content remains a best practice. It's more about helping Google understand the existing content than creating a new optimization opportunity.
40:59
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 52:18 💬 EN 📅 10/11/2020 ✂ 19 statements
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that passage ranking helps interpret poorly structured pages, but it doesn't exempt webmasters from optimizing their content architecture. Structuring remains a fundamental best practice. Essentially, this technology corrects your editorial mistakes without allowing you to multiply them.

What you need to understand

What exactly is passage ranking?

Passage ranking allows Google to extract and highlight specific sections of a page, even if the page covers multiple disparate topics. Rather than judging the page as a whole, the algorithm identifies relevant passages for a given query.

This technology relies on semantic understanding models like BERT and MUM. It analyzes the thematic coherence of each section and can decide to rank a specific passage rather than the entire page. This is particularly useful for long content, catch-all FAQs, or articles that answer multiple search intents.

Why does Google still emphasize structuring?

Because a wells-structured page facilitates the extraction of signals. Semantic tags (H2, H3, distinct paragraphs, lists) provide clear clues about thematic boundaries. Without that, the algorithm must guess where each passage begins and ends — which increases the risk of error.

Moreover, structuring improves user experience, which remains an indirect ranking signal. A clear page generates less pogo-sticking, more session time, and more featured snippets. Passage ranking does not compensate for poor UX.

Does this statement change anything about our practices?

No. Mueller simply confirms that Google can survive your mistakes, not that it rewards them. If you publish a page covering ten topics without a clear hierarchy, passage ranking might still rank a relevant snippet. But you would have achieved better results with ten targeted pages.

This technology is a safety net for Google, not a license for editorial chaos. It ensures that even poorly optimized sites can rise if their content adds value. This doesn't change your priorities: structure, segment, target one intent per page.

  • Passage ranking helps Google interpret complex or poorly organized pages
  • Structuring remains essential to maximize your ranking chances and improve UX
  • A targeted page on a single intent performs better than a catch-all page even with passage ranking
  • Semantic tags (Hn, lists, short paragraphs) facilitate the extraction of relevant passages
  • This technology is not an optimization opportunity — it's a safety net for Google

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes. Since the deployment of passage ranking, we have indeed observed long, general pages ranking for niche queries — which would have been ignored in favor of ultra-targeted pages before. Certain authoritative sites (Wikipedia, specialized forums) clearly benefit from this.

But — and this is crucial — these pages still have a minimal structure. They use headings, navigation anchors, lists. Google has never confirmed that it ranks walls of text without markup. [To be verified]: do completely flat pages, without Hn or paragraphs, really benefit from passage ranking? Public data is lacking.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Mueller states that passage ranking helps Google understand existing content. OK. But that doesn't specify whether this technology rewards or penalizes multi-intent pages. Does a page answering five different questions have five times the chance to rank, or does it dilute its relevance?

In practice, we find that one topic, one page performs better for the same effort. Passage ranking does not overturn this principle — it merely softens the penalty for pages that deviate. If you published a 5000-word guide covering ten sub-topics, you can rank. But you would probably have ten pages in the top 3 if you had segmented.

In what cases does this technology really change the game?

For authoritative sites like Wikipedia, StackOverflow, or technical documentation. These platforms naturally publish long and comprehensive pages. Passage ranking allows them to capture traffic on long-tail queries without creating thousands of sub-pages.

For traditional commercial sites? The impact is marginal. You are better off continuing to target one intent per URL. Passage ranking will not save you if your product page discusses delivery, customer service, technical specs, and brand history — all without a clear structure.

Warning: Do not take this statement as a green light to publish catch-all content. Google may understand them, but that does not mean it prefers them. Structuring remains a competitive advantage.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do with this information?

Continue to structure your pages as if passage ranking did not exist. Use H2/H3 to delineate each section, write short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max), and ensure that each block addresses a coherent micro-topic. If a section exceeds 300 words, ask yourself if it deserves its own page.

For long content (guides, comparisons, FAQs), add a clickable summary with anchors. This helps Google identify passages and improves UX. Also, test schema.org tags like HowTo or FAQPage to enhance semantic structure.

Which mistakes should be avoided at all costs?

Do not merge your pages on the grounds that Google understands passages now. If you had twenty pages aimed at distinct intents, maintaining that architecture remains the best strategy. Passage ranking does not justify regressing to generalist pages.

Avoid walls of text without markup as well. Even if Google can technically extract passages, you will lose readability and conversion rates. A user landing on a 2000-word block without titles or lists will immediately bounce — and that, passage ranking does not compensate for.

How can you verify that your pages are correctly optimized?

Use Search Console to identify the queries for which you rank. If you see that a single page captures traffic on fifteen very different keywords, that's a red flag. Either you have an opportunity to segment that content, or your page lacks focus.

Also, test the readability with tools like Hemingway or Readable. If your readability score is poor, it means your structure is too complex. Simplify, ventilate, cut down. Passage ranking helps Google, not your visitors.

  • Maintain a clear Hn hierarchy on all your pages (unique H1, H2 for main sections, H3 for subsections)
  • Limit each page to one primary search intent — if you cover multiple topics, segment
  • Add a clickable summary with anchors for content > 1500 words
  • Use relevant schema.org tags (HowTo, FAQPage, Article) to enhance semantic structure
  • Analyze your multi-query pages in Search Console to identify segmentation opportunities
  • Test the readability of your long content and correct overly dense blocks
Passage ranking is a technical improvement by Google, not a paradigm shift in SEO. You must continue to structure, target, and segment your content as before. If this approach seems complex to implement on a large scale — particularly for auditing and restructuring an existing site — consulting a specialized SEO agency can help you prioritize actions and avoid costly mistakes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le passage ranking peut-il faire ranker plusieurs sections d'une même page sur des requêtes différentes ?
Oui, c'est exactement le principe. Une page peut apparaître dans les résultats de recherche pour plusieurs requêtes si elle contient des passages pertinents distincts. Mais chaque requête ne fera remonter qu'un seul passage.
Dois-je créer des ancres HTML pour faciliter le passage ranking ?
Les ancres (id sur les titres) aident Google à identifier et référencer des sections spécifiques, mais ce n'est pas un facteur de ranking direct. Elles améliorent surtout l'UX en permettant les liens de saut et peuvent générer des sitelinks dans les SERP.
Est-ce que le passage ranking favorise les contenus longs ?
Indirectement oui, puisqu'une page longue peut ranker sur plusieurs requêtes. Mais un contenu long mal structuré reste moins performant que plusieurs pages courtes et ciblées. La longueur n'est pas un avantage en soi.
Comment savoir si Google utilise le passage ranking sur ma page ?
Google ne l'indique pas explicitement. Vous pouvez le déduire si une page longue rank sur des requêtes très spécifiques qui ne correspondent pas à son H1 ou son titre. La Search Console peut révéler ces patterns.
Le passage ranking change-t-il la façon dont je dois rédiger mes méta descriptions ?
Non. Google génère déjà des snippets dynamiques depuis des années en fonction de la requête. Le passage ranking affecte le ranking, pas l'affichage des snippets. Continuez à rédiger des méta descriptions ciblées sur l'intention principale de la page.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Content Featured Snippets & SERP AI & SEO Pagination & Structure

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