What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

In the face of strong competition, consider focusing on specific variations or new questions that the dominant competitor has not yet covered, rather than directly competing on highly competitive queries.
56:48
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 58:29 💬 EN 📅 30/11/2018 ✂ 19 statements
Watch on YouTube (56:48) →
Other statements from this video 18
  1. 1:05 Les images uniques influencent-elles vraiment votre visibilité dans Google Images ?
  2. 1:35 Les images impactent-elles vraiment le classement dans les résultats de recherche web ?
  3. 2:08 Les attributs alt d'images sont-ils vraiment déterminants pour votre référencement Google ?
  4. 3:40 Pourquoi Google explore-t-il des pages sans les indexer ?
  5. 4:44 Peut-on vraiment utiliser du texte en français dans les balises de géolocalisation d'images pour le SEO local ?
  6. 6:13 Faut-il vraiment soumettre à l'indexation après avoir corrigé ses données structurées ?
  7. 7:20 Peut-on vraiment agréger les avis tiers sur son site sans risquer une pénalité ?
  8. 9:26 Pourquoi votre Knowledge Panel affiche-t-il des données incorrectes ?
  9. 11:41 La recherche vocale est-elle vraiment un facteur de classement à part entière ?
  10. 13:25 Comment gérer les interstitiels d'âge sans bloquer l'indexation Google ?
  11. 15:27 Les scores de qualité Google Ads influencent-ils vraiment votre référencement naturel ?
  12. 17:20 Les liens sortants améliorent-ils vraiment le classement de vos pages ?
  13. 19:31 Les avis clients en JavaScript doivent-ils être balisés en données structurées ?
  14. 24:06 Pourquoi vos pages JavaScript mettent-elles des semaines à être indexées ?
  15. 27:57 Le crawl de Googlebot depuis les États-Unis pénalise-t-il vraiment votre vitesse de chargement ?
  16. 29:35 Faut-il utiliser les outils de suppression lors d'une migration de site ?
  17. 33:29 Redirections 301 ou canoniques : quelle différence réelle pour un transfert de catégorie ?
  18. 45:44 L'indexation mobile-first exige-t-elle vraiment une parité stricte entre mobile et desktop ?
📅
Official statement from (7 years ago)
TL;DR

Mueller recommends avoiding direct confrontation on saturated queries and instead focusing on unexplored angles and specific variations. This means identifying the leader's weaknesses: emerging questions, micro-niches, overlooked secondary intents. The strategy relies on agility and the ability to capture segments that giants neglect due to lack of profitability or visibility.

What you need to understand

Why does Google favor variations over direct confrontation?

The logic is economic and algorithmic. In an ultra-competitive query, the dominant competitor accumulates domain authority, historical backlinks, massive behavioral signals, and often years of optimization. The entry cost is prohibitive.

Google knows that its algorithm favors established players on high-volume generic queries. Recommending direct confrontation would push average sites toward failure. Therefore, Mueller directs toward an asymmetric approach: exploiting areas where the leader is absent or approximate.

What do we mean by 'specific variations' and 'new questions'?

Specific variations correspond to long tails, geographical extensions, vernacular reformulations, or particular usage contexts. A query like 'CRM' is locked. 'CRM for small construction companies without API' opens up a segment.

New questions refer to emerging queries related to technological, regulatory, or social developments. For example, the arrival of GDPR generated thousands of questions not covered by existing SEO leaders for several months. Those who anticipate these waves capture traffic before saturation.

What pitfalls come with this approach?

The first pitfall is insufficient volume. Multiplying variations can dilute editorial effort over queries with only 20 monthly searches. Profitability becomes illusory if each page requires 15 hours of production for 3 visits per month.

The second pitfall is lack of semantic structure. Google values sites that cover a topic in depth. Scattering pages across micro-niches without linking them in a coherent architecture weakens overall relevance. Topicality collapses.

  • Avoid direct confrontation on queries dominated by established players with years of authority.
  • Target specific variations: long tails, geographical contexts, vernacular reformulations, secondary intents.
  • Anticipate emerging questions related to technological, regulatory, or social developments before saturation.
  • Ensure profitability: do not dilute effort on queries with too low volume without conversion potential.
  • Maintain semantic coherence: link variations within a solid topical structure to avoid scattering authority.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, and it's one of the few recommendations from Mueller that accurately reflects the reality of the SERPs. Behavioral studies show that successful challenger sites systematically bypass locked queries. They capitalize on adjacent segments before consolidating.

Concrete example: a competitor of Tripadvisor does not win on 'hotel Paris', but can dominate 'wheelchair accessible hotel Paris' or 'hotel Paris with Eiffel Tower view, no overlooking'. These micro-segments generate less unit volume, but their sum ultimately counts. And competition is ten times lower.

What nuances should we consider regarding this advice?

Mueller does not specify the minimum volume threshold for a variation to be profitable. A site targeting 200 variations at 15 monthly searches each might invest 300 hours of production for 3,000 monthly visits. If the paid acquisition cost on these queries is €0.20, the SEO effort is not justified.

Another nuance: this approach requires a monitoring and responsiveness capacity that many organizations lack. Identifying emerging questions before they saturate requires tools, time, and a culture of rapid iteration. Large organizations often struggle in this regard.

When does this strategy fail?

It fails when the challenger site lacks minimal domain authority. Google does not position a site with DR 12 on variations, even specific ones, if they remain in a semantic universe dominated by DR 70+. The topicality of the domain must be established.

It also fails when targeted variations are too far from the core business. An e-commerce shoe site trying to capture queries on 'eco-friendly shoes' without real content on sustainability will be seen as opportunistic. Google values editorial coherence over time.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you concretely identify exploitable variations?

Start with a semantic gap analysis between your site and the leader. Export their positioned keywords (via Ahrefs, Semrush, or similar), filter those where they are absent or weak (position 10+), and cross-examine with your own semantic universe. Intersections reveal the weaknesses.

Then utilize 'People Also Ask' features and related searches from Google. These modules indicate questions users ask that dominant content does not comprehensively cover. Each PAA is an opportunity for high-value micro-content.

What mistakes should be avoided in this approach?

Do not spread yourself thin without verifying the real intent. A variation may show 120 monthly searches but correspond to a non-monetizable informational intent. Analyze the SERPs: if page 1 consists of forums and Wikipedia, there's no point in investing in commercial content.

Also, avoid creating isolated pages without strategic internal linking. A specific variation should fit within a semantic cluster connected to a pillar page. Otherwise, it remains orphaned, and Google grants it no authority. The thematic silo structure is essential.

How do you measure the effectiveness of this strategy?

Measure the cannibalization rate: if your new variation pages drain traffic from your main pages without providing net volume, you are shooting yourself in the foot. A gain of 500 visits on variations that costs 300 visits on pillar pages is a failure.

Also, track the effort/impact ratio. Calculate the hourly production cost of each variation and compare it to the monthly traffic generated after 6 months. If the organic acquisition cost exceeds the average CPC for the sector, the approach is not viable. Adjust the focus toward higher volume variations or reduce production costs.

  • Export keywords from the dominant competitor and identify positions 10+ where they are weak
  • Analyze 'People Also Ask' modules to detect uncovered questions
  • Verify the real intent of each variation before producing content
  • Structure variations within thematic silos connected to pillar pages
  • Measure the cannibalization rate between variation pages and main pages
  • Calculate the effort/impact ratio after 6 months to adjust the strategy
The bypass strategy through variations relies on systematically identifying the leader's weaknesses, producing highly specific semantic content, and maintaining a rigorous internal linking architecture. However, the complexity of competitive analysis, detailed semantic targeting, and editorial orchestration can quickly exceed internal resources. If you find this approach demands expertise and responsiveness that your team cannot sustainably maintain, it may be wise to enlist a specialized SEO agency to structure this strategy and support its deployment. An external perspective can often identify angles that proximity to the project may obscure.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une variation spécifique commence à générer du trafic ?
Généralement entre 3 et 6 mois, selon l'autorité du domaine et la qualité du maillage interne. Les variations sur des requêtes très émergentes peuvent se positionner en quelques semaines si la concurrence est quasi inexistante.
Peut-on appliquer cette stratégie sur un site neuf sans autorité établie ?
Oui, c'est même recommandé. Un site neuf n'a aucune chance sur les requêtes génériques. Cibler des variations spécifiques dès le départ permet de construire une topicalité progressive et d'accumuler des signaux de pertinence avant d'attaquer des requêtes plus compétitives.
Combien de variations faut-il cibler pour que la stratégie soit rentable ?
Cela dépend du volume unitaire de chaque variation et du coût de production. En général, vise 30 à 50 variations à volume moyen (50-200 recherches mensuelles) plutôt que 200 variations à 10 recherches. La rentabilité émerge au-delà de 1 500 visites mensuelles cumulées.
Comment éviter que Google considère les variations comme du contenu dupliqué ?
Assure-toi que chaque variation traite une intention distincte avec un angle éditorial propre. Utilise des données structurées différenciées, des exemples spécifiques et un maillage interne qui contextualise chaque page dans son sous-thème. La similarité structurelle n'est pas un problème si le contenu apporte une valeur unique.
Cette approche fonctionne-t-elle aussi en e-commerce sur des fiches produit ?
Oui, mais elle demande des déclinaisons fines. Plutôt que de créer une fiche « Chaussures de running », crée « Chaussures de running pronation sévère route bitume » ou « Chaussures de running femme pieds larges trail technique ». Chaque variation correspond à une intention d'achat précise et réduit la concurrence frontale.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History AI & SEO JavaScript & Technical SEO

🎥 From the same video 18

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 30/11/2018

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.