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Official statement

Some Google algorithms operate each time a page is crawled, while others, which are more complex, are executed less frequently. Major updates can take time to become evident in search results.
51:52
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h06 💬 EN 📅 05/12/2014 ✂ 20 statements
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Other statements from this video 19
  1. 3:08 Pourquoi la balise canonical ne fonctionne-t-elle pas instantanément ?
  2. 4:10 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il vos balises rel=canonical pourtant correctement implémentées ?
  3. 5:46 Faut-il vraiment optimiser vos titres pour l'affichage mobile ?
  4. 7:10 Comment Google gère-t-il vraiment les versions www et non-www de votre site ?
  5. 7:11 Comment Google consolide-t-il vraiment les signaux entre vos différentes versions de site ?
  6. 8:27 Comment Google raccourcit-il les titres sur mobile et que faire pour garder le contrôle ?
  7. 10:48 Un nom de domaine exact (EMD) suffit-il encore à bien ranker ?
  8. 11:47 La structure d'URL plate ou en dossiers : vraiment aucun impact sur le SEO ?
  9. 12:02 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter de la structure de ses URLs pour le référencement ?
  10. 20:01 Comment Google Penguin détecte-t-il vraiment les liens malveillants sur votre site ?
  11. 20:08 Penguin peut-il vraiment distinguer les mauvais liens que vous recevez malgré vous ?
  12. 40:49 Les commentaires utilisateurs influencent-ils vraiment le classement d'une page ?
  13. 44:49 Comment un nouveau site peut-il vraiment percer dans un marché saturé ?
  14. 50:06 Le contenu masqué derrière des onglets ou accordéons est-il pénalisé par Google ?
  15. 50:07 Le contenu caché derrière des onglets est-il vraiment pénalisé par Google ?
  16. 51:24 A quelle vitesse les algorithmes de Google se mettent-ils vraiment à jour ?
  17. 54:16 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le ranking Google ?
  18. 58:36 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le classement Google ?
  19. 99:29 Faut-il encore utiliser rel=alternate et rel=canonical pour un site mobile en sous-domaine m. ?
📅
Official statement from (11 years ago)
TL;DR

Google runs certain algorithms every time a page is crawled, while others that are more complex operate less frequently. Major updates often require several weeks before their effects are fully visible in the SERPs. This latency necessitates adjustments to your performance analysis and caution against hasty conclusions after every on-site change.

What you need to understand

Why do some algorithms run continuously while others operate less frequently?

Google differentiates between two families of algorithms based on their computational cost and complexity. Lightweight algorithms analyze simple signals like the presence of keywords, HTML structure, or basic technical criteria. They can run each time Googlebot visits a page.

Complex algorithms require heavy calculations: advanced semantic analysis, link graph processing at scale, evaluation of expertise via EEAT, user behavior correlation. Their execution demands too many resources to run in real time on every crawled URL.

How long should you anticipate seeing the effects of a major update?

Mueller's statement remains intentionally vague about specific timelines. Field experience indicates that Core Updates take about 2 to 3 weeks to deploy their effects, with daily fluctuations during that time frame.

Some targeted updates (Spam Updates, Product Reviews) may take 4 to 6 weeks to reach their full maturity. This latency is due to Google needing to recrawl a significant portion of the web and recalculate relative scores between competing sites.

How does this affect the analysis of your on-site changes?

You can no longer simply look at your stats the day after a change. A restructure of internal links can take 3 to 8 weeks before producing a measurable impact if it relies on a complex algorithm like internal PageRank.

In contrast, fixing a title tag or a canonical can show results within 48-72 hours if Googlebot quickly recrawls the page and the relevant algorithm runs continuously. Distinguishing between these two timelines is critical to avoid panicking prematurely or, conversely, ignoring a problem.

  • Continuous algorithms: metadata, structured data, HTTPS, mobile-first, simple technical criteria
  • Spaced algorithms: EEAT, deep semantic analysis, link graph processing, complex spam detection
  • Average impact delay: 2-3 weeks for Core Updates, up to 6 weeks for some targeted updates
  • Crawl factor: even a continuous algorithm only produces an effect if Googlebot has recrawled the modified page

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement align with what we observe in the field?

Yes, it matches the patterns seen over the years. Sites that fix basic technical errors (tags, redirects) often experience quick effects. Those working on content or authority tend to wait for weeks.

The issue is that Google remains opaque about which algorithms run when. We infer by correlation, but no official list exists. This lack of transparency complicates diagnosis when a site fluctuates: is it a spaced algorithm currently being deployed or a technical problem that has just been detected? [To be confirmed] on a case-by-case basis with your crawl data and server logs.

What nuances should we consider regarding this claim?

Mueller talks about major updates that take time, but he omits that some Core Updates have asymmetric effects: the losers feel the impact quickly (within 5-7 days), while the winners see a more gradual progression over 3 weeks.

Another point: crawl frequency directly influences how quickly even a continuous algorithm can act. A site crawled once a week will never see an 'immediate' effect even on simple criteria. The crawl budget remains a bottleneck that Google often downplays in its public statements.

In what cases does this rule not really apply?

On news sites or very large portals crawled in near real-time, some changes can impact within a few hours. Google has confirmed that certain sites benefit from priority processing in the indexing pipeline.

Small sites or those penalized by a history of spam may, conversely, wait months before a complex algorithm reevaluates them favorably, even after massive corrections. Mueller's statement is accurate on average, but the extremes are much further apart than it suggests.

If you see no movement 8 weeks after a major refresh and your crawl budget is correct, it's possible that your site is stuck in a low-priority queue. Google will never openly say this, but log data can confirm it.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete steps should you take to adapt to these algorithm cycles?

Start by segmenting your temporal analyses: never compare one isolated week to another. Look at windows of 4 to 6 weeks to smooth out the effects of the gradual deployment of complex algorithms.

Set up tracking of your changes with a clear timestamp in your tracking tool. Note the deployment date and wait at least 3 weeks before concluding anything about the real SEO impact. In the meantime, monitor your crawl: if Google has not recrawled the modified pages, your change has not yet been taken into account.

What mistakes should you avoid in interpreting fluctuations?

Don’t confuse volatility related to the deployment of an update with stabilized real impact. During the first 10-15 days of a Core Update, positions can move in all directions: this is normal, as Google recalibrates relative scores among competitors in real time.

Also, avoid panicking if you lose positions 48 hours after an on-site change during a Core Update. You do not know if it is your change causing the issue or just the background noise of the algorithm being deployed. Wait for full stabilization before rolling back or over-correcting.

How can I check if my site is benefiting from algorithm refreshes?

Analyze your server logs to confirm that Googlebot is regularly crawling your key pages. If certain URLs are only visited once a month, they cannot benefit from continuous algorithms.

Compare your position changes with Google's official announcements about update deployments. If you notice significant movement during a confirmed update window, that's a good sign: your site is indeed within the recalculation scope. If nothing ever changes, even during Core Updates, that’s more concerning.

  • Establish a 4-6 week analysis window minimum after each strategic modification
  • Document each on-site change with specific date and scope to facilitate future correlations
  • Monitor crawl frequency via server logs and Search Console to detect bottlenecks
  • Cross-reference your traffic fluctuations with Google’s official update calendar to distinguish algorithm impact from modification impact
  • Segment your KPIs by page type to identify which algorithms (continuous vs spaced) affect which sections of your site
  • Avoid any hasty conclusions within 3 weeks, especially during confirmed update periods
Understanding Google’s algorithm refresh cycles allows you to adjust your analysis methodology and avoid rushed decisions. SEO optimizations that focus on structure, deep content, or authority require patience and rigorous monitoring over several weeks. This type of technical and strategic analysis can be complex to conduct alone, especially when correlating server logs, Search Console data, and position fluctuations. Engaging a specialized SEO agency can often speed up diagnosis and prevent costly misdirections in time and opportunities.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps après une modification on-site faut-il attendre pour mesurer un impact SEO réel ?
Minimum 3 semaines pour des changements structurels ou de contenu. Les corrections techniques simples (balises, redirections) peuvent montrer des effets sous 48-72h si le crawl est rapide. Ne tire jamais de conclusion définitive avant 4 à 6 semaines.
Pourquoi mes positions fluctuent autant pendant les Core Updates ?
Google recalcule en temps réel des scores relatifs entre sites concurrents pendant 2-3 semaines. Ces fluctuations quotidiennes sont normales et ne reflètent pas l'impact final stabilisé. Attends la fin du déploiement annoncé pour analyser.
Comment savoir si mon site est crawlé assez souvent pour bénéficier des algorithmes en continu ?
Analyse tes logs serveur. Si Googlebot visite tes pages stratégiques au moins une fois par semaine, c'est acceptable. Une fréquence mensuelle ou inférieure crée un goulot d'étranglement qui retarde tout impact, même sur des critères simples.
Les algorithmes espacés concernent quels types de signaux SEO ?
Analyse sémantique profonde, EEAT, graphes de liens complexes, détection de spam sophistiquée. Tout ce qui nécessite des calculs lourds à l'échelle du Web ne peut pas tourner en temps réel sur chaque URL.
Que faire si aucun mouvement n'est visible 8 semaines après une refonte majeure ?
Vérifie d'abord que Google a bien recrawlé et réindexé tes pages modifiées via Search Console et logs. Si oui, ton site est peut-être en file d'attente basse priorité pour les algorithmes complexes. Creuse l'historique qualité et le profil de liens.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO

🎥 From the same video 19

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h06 · published on 05/12/2014

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