Official statement
Other statements from this video 2 ▾
Google claims to adapt its results based on search intent (informational, navigational, transactional) without systematically favoring big brands. For SEO, this means optimizing for intent remains central, but the claimed neutrality raises questions when faced with real-world observations. Specifically: check if your pages precisely respond to the intent detected by the algorithm, not just the keywords.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize search intent?
Google's algorithm no longer simply matches keywords with pages. It attempts to guess what the user actually wants: information, a specific site, or a purchase. This evolution is fundamental because it forces search engines to interpret the context behind each query.
For example, "iPhone 15" can express a navigational intent (going to Apple.com), informational intent (understanding the specs), or transactional intent (buying). Google adjusts the SERPs accordingly. If you optimize a product page without understanding what intent dominates for your target query, you are missing the mark.
What does Google mean by "without systematically favoring brands"?
This wording is interesting because it implies that there are cases where brands are favored, but not systematically. Google doesn't say it ignores brands. It says it does not favor them by default, which is very different.
In practice, for an informational query like "how to choose an office chair", a well-designed independent site can outperform a furniture giant. For a transactional query like "buy iPhone", established brands dominate. The nuance lies in the type of intent: the more transactional or navigational it is, the more brand weight matters. The more it is informational, the more content takes precedence.
How does the algorithm detect the real intent?
Google relies on behavioral signals (click-through rate, time on page, pogo-sticking) and linguistic patterns (the presence of terms like "buy", "how", "reviews", "vs"). It cross-references this data with the history of similar queries to refine its interpretation.
The problem is that this detection is not foolproof. An ambiguous query may be classified in the wrong intent category, and your well-optimized pages can become invisible because the algorithm misjudged. This is where SERP analysis becomes critical: if you see that Google shows 8 comparison guides and 2 product sheets, you know that the dominant intent is informational, even if the query contains "buy".
- Informational intent: the user is looking to understand, compare, learn (guides, tutorials, definitions).
- Navigational intent: the user wants to reach a specific site (brand queries, direct URLs).
- Transactional intent: the user is ready to convert (product sheets, purchase pages, forms).
- Commercial intent: an intermediate phase where the user compares before buying (reviews, comparisons, "best X").
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices?
Let's be honest: on paper, Google says it does not systematically favor brands. In practice, recent updates (Helpful Content, Product Reviews, Core Updates) show an opposite trend. Large brands are increasingly regaining visibility on informational queries that were once dominated by niche sites.
Take a concrete example: "best coffee maker 2023". Three years ago, independent blogs ranked easily. Today, you often find sites like Le Monde, 60 Million Consumers, or brands selling directly in the top 3. The difference? The algorithm now favors perceived authority, and this authority is often correlated with brand recognition. [To be verified] whether Google considers this as "not favoring brands" or simply as "rewarding trust".
What nuances should be added to this claim?
Google is not lying, but it simplifies. The reality is that the algorithm weights differently depending on the type of query. For a transactional intent, trust signals (reviews, recognition, quality backlinks) carry significant weight, and established brands benefit from this mechanically.
For a purely informational intent, content can indeed take precedence. But be careful: "content" does not just mean "good article". Google also looks at E-E-A-T, brand mentions, social signals, and site structure. A generic blog that publishes an excellent guide but lacks perceived authority will struggle against a recognized media site that publishes a mediocre guide. Meritocracy in content exists, but it is conditioned by entry barriers that favor established players.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
There are clear exceptions. YMYL queries (Your Money Your Life) such as "cancer symptoms" or "investing in stocks" are locked down by sites with high medical or financial authority. It’s impossible for a personal blog to rank, even with impeccable content.
Similarly, navigational queries are by definition brand-oriented: if someone types "Nike Air Max", Google will display Nike first. But here, it's consistent with the intent. The real problem arises when an informational query becomes dominated by commercial brands that redirect the intent to push their products. This is where the claimed neutrality begins to crack.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do to align your pages with intent?
Start with a manual SERP analysis for each target query. Type the query into Google, observe the top 10 results: are they guides, product sheets, videos, forums? This observation indicates the intent that Google has detected. If 8 out of 10 results are comparisons, your page should be a comparison, not a product sheet.
Then, adjust your content structure accordingly. For informational intent, prefer long formats (1500-2500 words), bullet lists, FAQs, diagrams. For transactional intent, highlight CTAs, prices, customer reviews, guarantees. Google analyzes these on-page elements to validate that your page matches the detected intent.
What mistakes should be avoided in intent optimization?
The classic mistake: forcing a transactional intent on an informational query. You publish a guide "how to choose X" but fill it with purchase CTAs within the first two paragraphs. Google detects this inconsistency between intent and content, and your page drops.
Another trap: ignoring secondary signals. A page may perfectly respond to the intent, but if it takes 5 seconds to load, displays aggressive popups, or lacks backlinks, it will not rank. Intent is a qualification filter, not a guarantee of ranking. Once this filter is passed, technical and authority criteria regain their importance.
How can I check that my site properly addresses the different intents?
Use Google Search Console to segment your pages by type of intent. Create filters for queries containing "how", "buy", "reviews", "vs", etc. Analyze the CTR and average position for each segment. If your informational pages have a low CTR despite a good position, it's because your title/meta does not match the intent detected by the user.
Then, cross-reference this data with your conversion rate. A page well-positioned for a transactional query should convert. If it doesn’t, either the real intent differs from what you think, or your page lacks trust signals (reviews, guarantees, clarity of offer). Adjust accordingly.
These optimizations may seem simple in theory, but their implementation on a site scale requires practical expertise and advanced analysis tools. If you manage a catalog of several hundred pages with mixed intents, manual diagnosis quickly becomes unmanageable. In this case, hiring a specialized SEO agency can save you months of trial and error and protect your investments by avoiding costly positioning mistakes.
- Manually analyze the SERPs for your top 20 queries and identify the dominant intent.
- Segment your pages by type of intent (info/nav/transac) in a tracking file.
- Adjust title, meta, H1, and structure to match the intent detected by Google.
- Ensure that your CTAs are consistent with the intent: no "buy" on a guide page.
- Cross-reference GSC data (CTR, position) with your conversions to detect inconsistencies.
- Test your pages on mobile: intent can be interpreted differently depending on the device.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Comment Google différencie-t-il une intention informationnelle d'une intention transactionnelle ?
Une page peut-elle satisfaire plusieurs intentions simultanément ?
Les marques sont-elles vraiment désavantagées sur les requêtes informationnelles ?
Faut-il créer une page différente pour chaque type d'intention ?
Comment savoir si Google a mal interprété l'intention d'une requête ?
🎥 From the same video 2
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 3 min · published on 04/03/2009
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