Official statement
Other statements from this video 6 ▾
- 2:08 Faut-il vraiment ignorer les mises à jour algorithmiques et se concentrer uniquement sur l'utilisateur ?
- 10:07 Faut-il vraiment aligner le contenu mobile et desktop pour ranker ?
- 15:06 Les services de conversion mobile sont-ils vraiment équivalents au responsive design pour le SEO ?
- 28:18 Le contenu automatisé est-il vraiment compatible avec une stratégie SEO durable ?
- 29:56 Pourquoi Google déploie-t-il des algorithmes ciblés par langue ?
- 38:16 Pourquoi l'architecture de liens internes conditionne-t-elle vraiment le crawl des très grands sites ?
Google states that consolidating multiple sites covering related topics does not harm SEO as long as the goal is to simplify management and enhance user experience. The key lies in the quality of redirects and maintaining accumulated authority. However, this statement leaves several critical variables in the shadows, such as thematic dilution or the impact on internal linking.
What you need to understand
What does Google's stance really mean?
This statement validates a common scenario: a business owner manages multiple domains targeting similar audiences and wants to centralize content. Google states that this consolidation does not trigger an algorithmic filter, provided the operation is justified by a real improvement in user experience.
The phrase “slightly different topics” is intentionally vague. It implies that thematic proximity minimizes risks. A site selling kitchen accessories and another specializing in home appliances can merge without major alerts. In contrast, combining unrelated content (auto insurance and vegan recipes) could confuse the topical signals sent to the algorithm.
Why does Google support this practice?
The search engine favors coherent architectures that simplify content exploration and understanding. A single site with a clear structure creates a more efficient internal linking than a constellation of isolated mini-sites. Google also benefits from crawl efficiency: fewer domains to visit, optimized budget.
This tolerance aligns with a broader logic: for years, Google has encouraged consolidation over fragmentation. Satellite domains created solely to capture traffic (doorway pages) remain prohibited, but merging legitimate assets to streamline offerings poses no issue.
What conditions ensure a successful migration?
Google mentions two pillars: management simplification and UX improvement. Technically, this involves permanent 301 redirects from old domains to new URLs, without chains or loops. Authority transfer (PageRank) works if the redirects are clean and maintained over time.
The user experience must be planned in advance: clear navigation, logical categorization, no duplicated content after merging. If the user loses their bearings or if loading times skyrocket post-migration, the initial positive signal quickly deteriorates.
- 301 redirects must be permanent and direct to the most relevant pages, not necessarily to the homepage.
- Internal linking must be restructured to utilize the new site depth and redistribute authority.
- Thematic coherence between merged contents limits the risks of topical dilution.
- Post-migration monitoring is critical: track indexing, rankings, and organic traffic for at least 3 to 6 months.
- Google tools (Search Console, Analytics) must be set up before the switch to compare before/after.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, as long as classic migration rules are respected. Successful site mergers are common, especially in sectors where one player acquires competitors and centralizes content. Temporary traffic losses usually arise from technical errors (broken redirects, deleted content) rather than an algorithmic penalty related to the merger itself.
However, Google avoids several gray areas. [To be verified]: no public data quantifies the real impact on rankings when merging sites with very different backlink profiles. Can a historical domain with quality links associated with a spam-filled new site contaminate the whole? Google does not clarify this.
What nuances should we consider?
The phrasing “should not pose major problems” is a typical Google euphemism. No major problems do not mean zero risks. A poorly executed merger can cause documented traffic drops: orphan pages, keyword cannibalization, authority dilution if the internal linking does not compensate for the loss of separate domains.
Another blind spot: search intent. If users specifically sought a specialized domain (e.g., shoes-trail.fr) and find themselves lost in a general megastore, the bounce rate increases and the organic CTR declines. Google picks up these behavioral signals and adjusts rankings accordingly, irrespective of the technical quality of the migration.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Google explicitly condemns doorway pages: sites created solely to rank for specific queries and redirect to a main domain. If the merger resembles the consolidation of artificial satellites without real added value, manual action or algorithm adjustment may ensue.
Migrating country-code TLDs (.fr, .de, .uk) to a single .com presents geo-targeting challenges that Google does not mention here. Losing a ccTLD can weaken local positioning, even with hreflang correctly implemented. Likewise, merging sites in different languages without a solid multilingual structure creates more issues than it resolves.
Practical impact and recommendations
What steps should you take before merging?
First and foremost, audit the two (or more) candidate sites for merging. Inventory the content, organic rankings, backlinks, and traffic profiles. Identify strategic pages that drive conversions or capture qualified traffic. Map out future redirects to avoid loss of authority.
Next, design the new architecture while anticipating content coexistence. Clear categories, consistent URLs, no duplication. Plan the internal linking to ensure that the old star pages continue to bolster the new sections. Test in pre-production using tools like Screaming Frog or Oncrawl to spot anomalies.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?
Never redirect en masse to the homepage. Each old URL must point to the most relevant page of the new site, even if it requires tedious manual mapping. Generic redirects dilute authority and frustrate users arriving at a homepage that has no connection to their original intent.
Avoid also merging too quickly without a testing phase. A gradual migration (starting with one section, measuring the impact, then generalizing) limits damage if an issue arises. Keeping old domains active with redirects for at least 12 months ensures a smooth transition and gives time for backlinks to update.
How can you verify that the merge was successful?
Monitor indexing via Google Search Console: check that the new URLs are being discovered and that the old ones are gradually disappearing from the index. Watch for 404 errors, redirect chains, and canonicalization issues. A spike in errors post-migration indicates a technical problem that needs immediate correction.
Track organic rankings and traffic by segment (branded, generic, long-tail). Compare pre and post-migration performance by keyword category. An isolated drop on certain queries may indicate cannibalization or thematic dilution to be corrected through content or internal linking.
- Conduct a complete SEO audit of the source sites (content, backlinks, traffic, rankings).
- Design a page-by-page 301 redirect plan, never in bulk to the homepage.
- Test the target architecture in pre-production with comprehensive crawling.
- Set up Search Console and Analytics for the new domain before the switch.
- Maintain active redirects for at least 12 months.
- Monitor indexing, rankings, traffic, and technical errors for a minimum of 6 months.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Fusionner deux sites thématiquement proches dilue-t-il l'autorité de domaine ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google valide une fusion de sites ?
Peut-on fusionner des sites avec des profils de backlinks très différents ?
Faut-il conserver les anciens domaines actifs après la fusion ?
Une fusion de sites peut-elle déclencher une pénalité manuelle ?
🎥 From the same video 6
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 02/03/2017
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