Official statement
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- 3:00 Is it really necessary to limit the number of pages to enhance SEO value?
- 9:00 Are links between affiliate sites really risk-free for SEO?
- 10:33 Is noindex really enough to remove a page from Google search results?
- 12:23 Should you really remove breadcrumb markup from your homepage?
- 15:06 Can the HTTP 503 code really slow down Googlebot strategically?
- 25:23 Why is Google's indexing API prohibited for most of your pages?
- 30:49 Why are your domain migrations inexplicably killing your visibility?
- 44:59 Does duplicate backend code really harm your SEO?
- 48:54 Should you really be worried when you modify the anchor text of your main navigation?
- 58:12 Can hreflang enhance the visibility of an international site in local search results?
- 62:12 Why can a Google reconsideration request take two months without a response?
- 64:35 Do backlinks from adult sites really penalize your SEO?
- 65:39 Why does Google advise against automatic redirection for multilingual homepages?
Google claims to adjust its results based on the detected intent: commercial or informational. Specifically, this means that a well-optimized product page will never appear in the top 3 for a 'how to' query, even with strong linking. The real challenge? Precisely identify the dominant intent of your target keywords before producing any content.
What you need to understand
What does 'search intent' really mean for Google?
Search intent represents the actual goal of a user when typing a query. Google categorizes these intents into several types: informational ('how does X work'), navigational ('Facebook login'), commercial ('best CRM for SMEs'), or transactional ('buy iPhone 15').
John Mueller clarifies that Google does not simply analyze raw keywords. The engine evaluates the semantic context, user behavior signals from previous users, and linguistic patterns to guess what the user actually wants to achieve as a result.
How does Google identify this intent on a large scale?
The process relies on several layers of analysis. First, language models (BERT, MUM) decode grammatical nuances — 'buy' vs 'understand' vs 'compare'. Next, Google observes the click-through and bounce rates on existing results to validate or adjust its interpretation.
If 95% of users typing 'auto insurance prices' click on comparison sites rather than educational guides, Google deduces a strong commercial intent. This feedback loop is continuously refined through machine learning — which explains why SERPs evolve even without you changing your page.
Why does this statement change the game for SEO?
Too many SEOs still optimize for isolated keywords without analyzing the real intent in current results. A high search volume guarantees nothing if your content type does not match the dominant intent identified by Google.
Specifically, if you target 'company CRM' with an informational blog post while the top 10 results are product pages or comparisons, you’re wasting your time. Google has decided: this query is commercial, and your informational content will never surface, even with 100 DR80+ backlinks.
- Intent trumps technical optimization — technically perfect content but misaligned in intent won’t rank
- SERPs are your best source of intent — analyzing the top 10 results reveals Google's consensus
- The same query can have multiple intents — Google will then display a mix of results (recipes AND stores for 'apple pie')
- Intent evolves over time — 'COVID' was informational in March 2020, then became commercial (tests, masks) a few weeks later
- Query modifiers are strong signals — 'how', 'why', 'best', 'buy', 'price' guide the intent
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, massively. A/B tests on thousands of pages confirm that content format (guide vs product sheet vs comparison) impacts ranking as much as backlinks or technical structure. I’ve seen pages lose 60% of their traffic after converting an informational guide into a commercial landing page on an informational query.
On the other hand, Google remains vague about thresholds. What shifts an intent from 'primarily informational' to 'mixed' then 'primarily commercial'? No public metric. [To be verified] — the only reliable indicators remain manual SERP analysis and iterative tests with content.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
First nuance: intent is not binary. Many queries present a mixed intent, especially in the middle of the funnel. 'Free CRM' can mean 'I'm looking to understand what's available' (informational) or 'I want to download now' (transactional). Google then displays a mix: comparison articles, product pages, freemium tools.
Second nuance: some verticals skew the rules. In health or finance, Google favors E-E-A-T sources even for pure commercial queries — a government site can rank for 'buy aspirin' with a purely informative page. The YMYL context sometimes overloads the detected intent.
In which cases does this rule not fully apply?
For ultra-long-tail queries (fewer than 50 searches/month), Google lacks behavioral data to validate intent. Results then rely more on raw semantic matching — a well-optimized page can rank even if its format doesn’t fit perfectly.
Another exception: geolocated queries. 'Restaurant' is informational ('what is a restaurant') or navigational ('find a restaurant near me') depending on the GPS context. Google injects Maps results even if the pure textual intent would be different.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you identify the real intent of a query before creating content?
First step: manually analyze the top 10 results in incognito mode. Note the dominant page type: blog article, category page, product sheet, YouTube video, forum, interactive tool. If 8/10 are long guides, the intent is informational. If 8/10 are product sheets or comparisons, it’s commercial.
Second step: check the featured snippets and People Also Ask. These elements reveal the sub-questions Google associates with the main intent. 'Auto insurance prices' shows PAA on 'how to calculate', 'which deductible to choose' — commercial intent with a need for prior information.
What mistake should you absolutely avoid in your content strategy?
The fatal error: creating a single type of content to cover all variations of a topic. If you target 'CRM', you need multiple pages: a guide 'what is a CRM' (informational), a comparison 'best CRMs' (commercial), a product page 'our CRM solution' (transactional). A single mixed page will dilute your relevance for each intent.
Another trap: forcing a transactional intent on a blog. Adding 'Buy now' CTAs everywhere in a 'how to choose' article won’t align your page with the commercial intent — Google reads the overall content structure, not just the buttons. It’s better to create a real dedicated landing page.
How can you check if your site properly meets the intents of your target keywords?
Audit your keyword mapping → page → intent. For each ranked page, export the queries driving traffic (Search Console), then classify them by intent. If an informational page receives 40% of its traffic from commercial queries, you have a cannibalization or structural problem.
Then test by creating content variants explicitly targeting each intent. Publish a long-format guide for 'how to choose X', a structured comparison for 'best X', a landing with pricing for 'buy X'. Measure over 3 months which page gains traction on which intent — adjust your architecture accordingly.
- Analyze current SERPs for each priority keyword (top 10, type of pages, content format)
- Classify your target keywords by dominant intent (informational / commercial / transactional / navigational)
- Create a separate page for each intent for each strategic theme
- Avoid hybrid content that tries to satisfy multiple intents simultaneously
- Audit your existing pages to detect discrepancies between detected intent vs target intent
- Monitor SERP changes on your queries — intent can shift (news, seasonality, user behavior)
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on ranker sur une requête commerciale avec un article de blog informatif ?
Comment Google gère-t-il les requêtes avec plusieurs intentions possibles ?
Les outils de mots-clés indiquent-ils fiablement l'intention de recherche ?
L'intention de recherche évolue-t-elle dans le temps pour une même requête ?
Faut-il créer plusieurs pages pour couvrir toutes les intentions autour d'un sujet ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 19/04/2020
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