Official statement
Other statements from this video 6 ▾
- 0:33 Les rich results sont-ils vraiment un levier SEO à prioriser ou juste un gadget cosmétique ?
- 0:33 Les données structurées servent-elles vraiment à améliorer la compréhension du contenu par Google ?
- 2:09 Pourquoi tester les données structurées avant la mise en ligne pourrait vous faire gagner des semaines ?
- 2:41 Search Console vous alerte-t-elle vraiment pour chaque erreur de données structurées ?
- 5:19 Comment Google valide-t-il vraiment les corrections dans Search Console ?
- 6:24 Comment exploiter l'onglet Search Appearance pour optimiser vos rich results ?
Google recommends prioritizing errors stemming from faulty templates before addressing isolated issues, following the default sorting in Search Console that combines severity and volume of affected pages. This approach favors massive impact over exhaustive correction. In practical terms, a template bug affecting 500 pages takes precedence over 50 unique errors scattered across pages, even if the latter seem critical individually.
What you need to understand
Why does Google insist on prioritizing the correction of template errors?
The logic is clear: a faulty template multiplies a unique error across hundreds or even thousands of pages. When a single PHP file or a React component generates a structural problem — incorrect canonical tag, missing hreflang, duplicated title — each new page created automatically inherits the bug.
Fixing this type of error instantly unlocks a massive volume of pages. The effort/results ratio is incomparable to manually correcting 200 isolated pages, each with a specific problem. Google advocates this approach because it aligns its interests — to crawl and index properly — with yours: to unlock ranking potential quickly.
How does Search Console sort errors by default?
The sorting algorithm combines two variables: the technical severity of the error and the number of impacted pages. A "severe" error affecting 10 pages may be relegated below a "medium" error affecting 1000 pages. This is not a system bug; it is a deliberate choice by Google to steer your attention towards overall impact.
Let's take a concrete case: a 404 error on 5000 internal URLs (often resulting from a poorly managed structural change) will consistently rise above a handful of pages with poorly formatted schema.org. The volume amplifies the perceived priority, even if technically the schema error might cost more in Rich Results. This is where human discernment comes into play.
What does "unique problems for each page" actually mean?
These are errors that do not repeat due to a systemic pattern. An overly long title on a specific product page, a missing meta description on an old blog post, a broken internal link pointing to a deleted resource. Each correction requires a targeted intervention, often manual or semi-automated.
These unique problems generally represent the long tail of your SEO technical debt. They accumulate over time, due to partial redesigns, content migrations. Google explicitly tells you: don’t exhaust yourself treating them first if a broader pattern awaits resolution.
- Template errors create a domino effect: a single fix potentially unlocks thousands of pages
- The default sorting of Search Console is not arbitrary: it reflects Google’s view on the efficiency of your corrective efforts
- Isolated problems, although sometimes critical, should follow systemic patterns to maximize ROI on the time invested
- This approach assumes that you’ve correctly identified the source: confusing a pattern with isolated errors skews the entire prioritization
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation still relevant for complex sites?
Let’s be honest: Google’s rule works perfectly for 80% of sites but runs into real-world exceptions. On an e-commerce site with 500,000 listings, you might simultaneously have a template bug affecting 100,000 product pages (empty meta descriptions) AND 5,000 category pages with canonical loops. Technically, the volume tells you to address product pages first.
However, category pages generate 70% of organic traffic and convert 10 times better. Blindly applying Google’s rule can cost you revenue for weeks. In this case, business severity outweighs the volume criterion — and it’s you who must decide, not the sorting algorithm of Search Console.
What are the limits of a volume-based approach?
The number of affected pages reveals nothing about their strategic value. 10,000 paginated pages with no traffic may rank higher than 50 core landing pages that drive most of your conversions. Google has no visibility into your business funnel — it optimizes for its crawler, not for your revenue.
Another point: some template bugs are cosmetic in the short term but toxic in the long term. A malformed hreflang attribute on 20,000 pages may not block indexing immediately but gradually dilutes the targeting signal. You won’t see the impact for 3-6 months, when your rankings erode in certain regions. [To be verified]: Google never communicates a precise timeline on the cumulative effect of this type of error.
When should the rule be deviated from?
When an isolated error blocks a page of very high value — a campaign landing page, a flagship product page, a strategic content hub. If your page generating 40% of organic traffic has a critical schema markup issue, fix it immediately, even if 5,000 WordPress tag pages have duplicated titles.
Second case: when correcting the template requires a development cycle of several sprints. If resolving the systemic bug necessitates a partial CMS redesign or intervention from the product team with a 2-month timeline, you cannot leave 200 critical errors pending. You address what is actionable now, and you plan the structural fix in parallel.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you identify if an error actually comes from a template?
First method: analyze URL patterns in Search Console reports. If 2000 affected pages share the same slug structure — all product listings, all author pages, all articles in a category — it’s probably a template. Export the URLs and search for regularities with regex or a simple alphabetical sort.
Second check: inspect the source code of 4-5 affected pages. If the same defective HTML fragment appears identically — same debug comment, same malformed attribute, same tag order — you have your culprit. Conversely, if each page presents a variation of the issue, you are facing contextual errors, not systemic ones.
What methodology should be applied to address errors in the correct order?
Start by segmenting your errors into three buckets: critical templates, secondary templates, isolated problems. A critical template affects traffic or conversion-generating pages — product listings, service pages, SEO landing pages. A secondary template concerns low-impact areas — archives, tags, deep pagination.
Then, cross-reference Search Console sorting with your Analytics data. An error affecting 10,000 pages generating 0.2% of traffic doesn’t deserve the same urgency as a bug on 500 pages driving 30% of organic sessions. It’s this volume × value crossover that provides true prioritization — and this is where most teams fail due to lack of appropriate tools.
What tools can be used to automate detection and correction?
For detection, combine the Search Console API with a crawler like Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. The API provides you with Google’s perspective, the crawler offers a technical granularity that GSC does not provide — crawl depth, detailed HTTP statuses, internal link structure. By cross-referencing both, you’ll identify not just the error but also its exact source in the code.
For large-scale correction, solutions vary depending on your stack: Python scripts for massive scraping/replacement, dedicated WordPress plugins for standard CMSs, direct intervention in Liquid/Twig templates for e-commerce platforms. Manual correction page by page quickly becomes unsustainable beyond 100 URLs — automate or delegate.
- Export errors from Search Console and search for recurring URL patterns
- Check the source code of several affected pages to confirm it’s a template
- Segment your errors by business criticality, not just by technical volume
- Cross-reference GSC data with Analytics to identify high-value pages
- Prioritize fixes that unlock the most qualified traffic, not just the most pages
- Automate mass error correction with scripts or intelligent crawl tools
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Dois-je vraiment suivre l'ordre de Search Console si certaines erreurs me semblent plus graves ?
Comment savoir si une erreur vient d'un template ou d'une saisie manuelle ?
Combien de temps après la correction d'un bug de template vais-je voir l'impact dans Search Console ?
Une erreur touchant 10 000 pages sans trafic est-elle prioritaire sur 50 pages à fort trafic ?
Faut-il corriger toutes les erreurs remontées par Search Console ou peut-on en ignorer certaines ?
🎥 From the same video 6
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 7 min · published on 08/07/2020
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