Official statement
Other statements from this video 52 ▾
- 0:33 Is it really enough to just have an alt attribute for your graphics and infographics?
- 1:04 Should you use alt text for infographics instead of converting them to HTML?
- 2:17 Is it really necessary to duplicate the text of infographics for Google to index them?
- 2:37 Do you really need to duplicate your infographics' content in text for Google?
- 3:41 Why can a site that steals your content rank better than you?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait before reacting to ranking fluctuations?
- 6:52 Is it really necessary to wait for ranking fluctuations to stabilize before taking action?
- 8:58 Do outgoing links to authoritative sites really boost your Google ranking?
- 8:58 Can deep linking to a mobile app really boost your website's SEO?
- 10:32 Site Restructuring: Why does Google recommend redirects over reverse proxy?
- 10:32 Is it true that Google advises against using reverse proxies for migrating from a subdomain to a subfolder?
- 12:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to mask Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:03 Should you really invest in a reverse proxy to hide Google's hacking warnings?
- 13:50 Is it true that the highest number in Search Console is usually the right one?
- 14:44 Should you really put empty user profile pages on no-index?
- 14:44 Should you really set noindex for low-content user profile pages?
- 16:57 Do multiple redirect chains really hinder Google's crawling?
- 17:02 Are Multiple Redirect Chains Really Hurting Your SEO?
- 19:57 Do domain migrations and mergers really cause SEO penalties?
- 19:58 Could separating each step of a site migration save you weeks of SEO diagnostics?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 23:04 Do pop-under ads really penalize your organic SEO?
- 24:41 Should you overlook historical Mobile Usability errors in Search Console?
- 24:41 Should you ignore mobile errors in Search Console if the live test comes back clean?
- 25:50 Is it true that using nofollow on internal menu links can control PageRank?
- 25:50 Should you really nofollow your menu links to optimize crawling?
- 26:46 Do Google Ads scripts really slow down your site in the eyes of PageSpeed Insights?
- 27:06 Does Google Ads really penalize the speed of your pages in PageSpeed Insights?
- 29:28 Should you really aim for a perfect 100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
- 29:28 Should you really aim for 100/100 on PageSpeed Insights to rank well?
- 35:45 Do image metadata really influence rankings in Google Images?
- 35:45 Can image metadata really enhance your SEO performance?
- 36:29 How many internal links per page should you have to optimize your structure without hindering crawl efficiency?
- 37:19 What is the optimal number of internal links per page for SEO?
- 37:54 Does a completely flat site structure really hurt SEO?
- 39:52 Should you still use disavow or has Google truly automated the ignoring of spam links?
- 40:02 Should you still disavow spammy links pointing to your site?
- 41:04 Does the FAQ schema work if the answers are hidden in an accordion?
- 41:04 Is it possible to mark a main page with FAQ schema, or is a dedicated page necessary?
- 41:59 Is it really necessary to have a dedicated page for each video to rank on Google?
- 41:59 Should you create a separate page for each video instead of grouping them together?
- 43:42 How does Google choose which sitelinks to display under your search results?
- 44:13 Does Google really control sitelinks through site structure?
- 45:19 Has PageRank really become a negligible ranking factor for Google?
- 45:19 Is PageRank still a top-ranking factor that you should keep an eye on?
- 46:46 Should you always use the Video Object schema for YouTube embeds subject to GDPR?
- 46:53 Do YouTube two-click embeds really hurt video SEO?
- 50:12 Are mobile interstitials truly all penalized by Google?
- 50:43 Is it really possible to show different interstitials based on traffic source without SEO risk?
- 52:08 Is it true that Google ignores GDPR interstitials without penalizing your SEO?
- 53:08 Can we truly measure the SEO impact of intrusive interstitials?
- 53:18 Do intrusive interstitials really have a measurable impact on your SEO?
Google ranks sites based on hundreds of combined signals, not a single isolated criterion. A technically mediocre site can dominate if its content, authority, and user experience more than compensate. To surpass a competitor, you need to identify their strengths and work on your entire web presence — not just improving your title tags or adding text.
What you need to understand
What does Mueller mean by "multiple factors"?
When Google talks about multiple ranking signals, we're not talking about 10 or 20 criteria. Serious estimates mention several hundred variables: domain authority, content freshness, loading time, user behavior, semantic structure, backlinks, structured data, brand signals, thematic consistency, engagement... and many more.
Google's ranking system functions like a dynamically weighted combination of all these signals. A site may have catastrophic Time to Interactive but dominate due to overwhelming editorial authority. Another may have a mediocre link profile but perform well on a very specific intent thanks to ultra-targeted content and a fine understanding of the query.
Is this multi-factor approach new?
Absolutely not. Google has always operated this way since PageRank — which already combined quantity and quality of links, web structure, anchor text. What has changed is the sophistication: AI now allows cross-referencing behavioral, semantic, and technical signals in near real-time.
SEO professionals tend to seek the magic factor that will make a difference. This statement reminds us of an uncomfortable truth: there isn't one. Gains come from accumulation, consistency, and cross-sectional excellence — rarely from one isolated hack.
Why does Google emphasize this point so much?
Because the SEO industry is obsessed with single ranking factors. Each update triggers a hunt for the dominating signal: "It's HTTPS!", "No, it's Core Web Vitals!", "Actually, it's E-E-A-T!". This approach misses the essential.
Mueller wants to discourage siloed optimizations. Working solely on content without improving technique, or fine-tuning speed without strengthening authority, only yields marginal gains. Google favors sites that excel across the board — or at least those that do not have a critical flaw on a key criterion.
- Google ranking relies on hundreds of combined signals, not an isolated criterion
- A site can compensate for technical weaknesses through editorial excellence or strong authority
- To surpass a competitor, you need to audit your entire presence and identify where they dominate
- Siloed optimizations ("I'm just going to improve my content") produce limited results
- Google values sites that maintain a high level across all critical fronts, not those that excel in just one area
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with what's seen in the field?
Yes, and it's even frustrating for many practitioners. We frequently see technically flawless sites — Core Web Vitals in the green, perfect markup, siloed structure — lag behind competitors with outdated code and poor loading times. The difference? The latter have a solid link profile and content that generates real engagement.
Conversely, sites with massive domain authority can afford average content and average technical performance — up to a point. Google tolerates moderate imbalances, but not critical flaws. A news site with a 100 DR can survive a 4-second LCP; it won’t survive with plagiarized content or a broken mobile experience.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
Mueller's wording remains intentionally vague about the real weighting of each signal. Saying that "everything counts" doesn’t tell us if a backlink from the New York Times is worth 1000 minor technical optimizations or just 10. We’re still navigating blind over priorities.
Second nuance: some factors become qualifying or disqualifying depending on the sector. In a YMYL query (health, finance), E-E-A-T and overwhelming editorial authority likely overshadow all other signals. In a local proximity query ("pizzeria Lille"), geolocation and reviews dominate. Not all signals carry the same weight everywhere. [To be verified]: Google never publishes a weighting matrix by query type — any precise assertion on this matter is extrapolation.
When does this rule not fully apply?
In ultra-competitive niches (insurance, casinos, finance), domain authority and link profile become so dominant that optimizing everything else sometimes isn't enough. A new site with perfect content and impeccable technique will take years to dislodge historical players — even if the latter are technically mediocre.
Conversely, in long-tail queries with little competition, one well-executed factor (ultra-targeted content that precisely meets intent) can be enough to dominate — even with an overall weak site. In these cases, Google doesn't have much choice: the best of a bad selection wins.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you identify where your site is losing to a competitor?
Start with a multi-axis comparative audit. Take the 3-5 competitors that outrank you on your priority queries. Compare them on: link profile (quantity, quality, diversity), content structure and depth, technical performance (Core Web Vitals, crawl budget), engagement signals (observed bounce rate via third-party tools, time on site), content freshness and updates, semantic markup and structured data.
Use tools like Ahrefs, Screaming Frog, PageSpeed Insights, Search Console to cross-reference data. The goal: identify where your competitors significantly dominate. If their link profile is 10x higher, improving your H2 tags won't change anything. If their content is 3000 words and yours is 500, adding a breadcrumb won't solve the problem.
What mistakes should be avoided when trying to improve your ranking?
The most common is to optimize what's easy rather than what matters. Fixing micro-technical details (missing alt attributes, redundant canonical tags) gives the impression of progress, but rarely produces measurable impact if your flaws lie elsewhere.
Another mistake is believing that a content update is sufficient. Adding 500 words to a page doesn’t compensate for an absent link profile or a catastrophic mobile experience. Modern SEO requires cross-sectional consistency — content, technique, authority, and UX all must reach a minimum threshold.
Where to start concretely to improve the entire site?
First, identify your disqualifying flaws — the criteria where you are significantly below your competitors' level. A site with a DR of 15 facing competitors at 50+ must prioritize authority. A site with an LCP of 6 seconds must first fix the speed. A site with 300 words per page against content of 2000 words must expand.
Next, work in waves: fix critical blockages, then gradually strengthen each axis. Focus on 2-3 simultaneous projects at most — avoid spreading your resources too thin. A site that significantly improves its content AND its technique in 6 months progresses; a site that superficially touches on 10 criteria stagnates.
- Conduct a comparative audit against the 3-5 competitors that outrank you (links, content, technique, UX)
- Identify the major gaps where your competitors clearly dominate (not minor details)
- Prioritize disqualifying flaws over marginal optimizations
- Work in coherent waves: 2-3 simultaneous projects at most (content + technique, or authority + UX)
- Measure the impact of each project after 3-6 months before pivoting — holistic SEO takes time
- Avoid obsessing over micro-technical details if your faults lie elsewhere (content, links)
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de facteurs Google utilise-t-il réellement pour classer les sites ?
Un site peut-il vraiment bien se classer malgré des faiblesses techniques importantes ?
Quel est le facteur de ranking le plus important aujourd'hui ?
Faut-il optimiser tous les facteurs SEO à égalité pour progresser ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour voir l'impact d'une optimisation holistique ?
🎥 From the same video 52
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 24/07/2020
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