Official statement
Other statements from this video 4 ▾
- 0:03 Qu'est-ce que Google entend vraiment par 'thin content' et comment l'éviter ?
- 0:38 Les pages de porte d'entrée tuent-elles vraiment votre SEO ?
- 1:56 Les sites d'affiliation sont-ils condamnés à être pénalisés par Google pour thin content ?
- 3:20 La syndication de contenu risque-t-elle vraiment une pénalisation Google ?
Google advises removing duplicate or low-value content and adding elements derived from personal experiences to address thin content issues. This statement confirms that originality based on real-life experiences remains a major quality signal for the search engine. The real question is how Google assesses this notion of personal experience within its algorithms.
What you need to understand
What does thin content really mean for Google?
Thin content refers to low-value content that provides nothing new to users. This includes duplicate pages, automatically generated content aggregations, or overly short texts lacking substance.
Google specifically targets sites that create multiple such pages in hopes of ranking for as many queries as possible. The reasoning is straightforward: if a page does not help a user solve their problem, it does not deserve to rank.
Why does Google emphasize personal experiences?
This recommendation aligns with the E-E-A-T criteria (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness). The first E, added recently, represents the author's direct experience.
Google aims to promote content that cannot be mass-produced through scraping or AI. A lived experience, with concrete details and nuances, remains challenging to replicate on an industrial scale.
How does this directive impact editorial strategy?
Content removal is now a legitimate SEO action. Many sites still maintain zombie pages that dilute their overall authority. Cleaning the site of these low-value URLs can enhance overall performance.
Adding personal experiences transforms content production. It is no longer just about rephrasing what is already available elsewhere, but about providing a unique angle based on lived experiences, case studies, or actual testing.
- Thin content includes duplicate pages, automatically generated content, or pages lacking substance
- Personal experience is now an official E-E-A-T criterion
- Removing low-value content can improve the overall site performance
- Unique content encourages recurring visits and natural recommendations
- Google values what cannot be produced industrially without effort
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, audits regularly show that sites cleaning up their low-value content improve their overall visibility. This phenomenon is particularly evident on sites that have accumulated hundreds of thin pages over the years.
However, Google remains vague on quantitative thresholds. How many words constitute thin content? What percentage of duplicate content triggers a penalty? These gray areas force interpretation on a case-by-case basis. [To be verified]
How does Google actually assess personal experience?
Let’s be honest: we don’t know precisely. Google talks about personal experience but never details the algorithmic signals that allow it to be detected. Is it only Natural Language Processing? User behavior signals?
What we observe is that content with concrete details, precise figures, original photos, and specific anecdotes performs better. But correlation is not causation. It is likely that Google uses indirect proxies rather than directly detecting lived experiences.
What are the risks of mass deleting content?
Mass deletion can lead to a temporary loss of long-tail traffic. Even thin pages can capture a few monthly visits. It's essential to conduct a thorough audit before removing everything at once.
A better approach is to prioritize: remove what has never received organic traffic, merge similar pages, and enhance those with potential. 301 redirects must be carefully planned to retain the SEO juice transferred.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be done concretely to resolve thin content?
Start with a comprehensive content audit. Export all your indexed URLs via Search Console, add Analytics traffic metrics, and identify pages with zero or very low performance. Look for patterns: automatically generated product pages, empty categories, overly short articles.
For each group of weak pages, decide on an action: complete removal, merging with a similar page, or substantial improvement. Pages to be improved should receive real experiential content: use cases, customer feedback, original photos, internal numerical data.
How can content be enriched with personal experience?
Integrate proof elements that are difficult to replicate: screenshots of real dashboards, photos of internal processes, named customer quotes, results from comparative tests you conducted. The more specific, the better.
Train your writers to interview internal experts. An article on optimizing crawl budget written by someone who has actually optimized sites with 500k pages will contain practical nuances that a generalist writer cannot fabricate.
What mistakes should be avoided in this approach?
Do not turn your pages into off-topic journals. Personal experience must remain relevant to the target query. Sharing your weekend story will not magically make mediocre content relevant.
Avoid also industrial fake testimonials. Google and users quickly detect fabricated reviews or invented experiences. Authenticity is evident in concrete details and accepted imperfections.
- Audit all indexed URLs and identify those with low organic traffic
- Remove worthless pages, merge similar ones, enhance those with potential
- Plan 301 redirects to preserve the transferred PageRank
- Enrich retained content with lived experiences, numerical data, and original visuals
- Train writers to interview internal experts to capture real lived experiences
- Monitor traffic changes after cleanup to adjust the strategy
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de mots minimum pour qu'une page ne soit pas considérée comme thin content ?
Vaut-il mieux supprimer ou désindexer les pages à faible valeur ?
Le contenu généré par IA est-il automatiquement considéré comme thin content ?
Comment mesurer l'impact d'un nettoyage de thin content ?
Les fiches produits e-commerce sont-elles forcément du thin content ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 7 min · published on 08/08/2013
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