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Official statement

Google acknowledges that certain SEO initiatives, like implementing AMP or PWAs, require technical expertise. However, the goal of these technologies is to enhance user experience rather than focusing on their implementation as a direct means of improving rankings.
42:55
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h19 💬 EN 📅 03/04/2018 ✂ 20 statements
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Other statements from this video 19
  1. 0:21 Les PWA boostent-elles vraiment votre classement Google ?
  2. 0:23 HTTPS est-il vraiment un facteur de classement ou juste un prérequis technique ?
  3. 3:10 Le Mobile-First Index est-il vraiment irréversible et pourquoi Google l'impose en permanence ?
  4. 7:49 L'indexation mobile-first de Google : qu'est-ce qui change vraiment pour votre stratégie SEO ?
  5. 8:59 L'AMP améliore-t-il vraiment votre classement dans Google ?
  6. 9:45 AMP pour l'e-commerce : faut-il encore investir dans cette technologie ?
  7. 10:19 AMP est-il toujours pertinent pour booster la vitesse de vos pages ?
  8. 12:59 Faut-il vraiment utiliser AMP pour les pages desktop ?
  9. 14:04 La vitesse de chargement influence-t-elle vraiment le classement Google ?
  10. 15:53 Les PWA peuvent-elles nuire au référencement naturel de votre site ?
  11. 18:40 Faut-il vraiment éviter l'AMP sur desktop pour votre SEO ?
  12. 23:39 HTTPS : un facteur de classement Google surestimé par les SEO ?
  13. 35:59 Les backlinks sont-ils toujours un critère de ranking majeur ou Google bluffe-t-il ?
  14. 41:30 Le Mobile-First Index nécessite-t-il vraiment une refonte de votre stratégie SEO ?
  15. 52:25 Pourquoi votre site reste invisible dans Google malgré vos efforts SEO ?
  16. 60:05 Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il autant sur la compatibilité mobile ?
  17. 61:00 L'indexation mobile-first impose-t-elle vraiment la parité stricte entre mobile et desktop ?
  18. 65:00 Hreflang et URLs régionales : pourquoi Google insiste-t-il autant sur cette architecture ?
  19. 67:26 Un ccTLD pénalise-t-il vraiment votre visibilité internationale ?
📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that AMP, PWA, and other advanced technologies do not directly enhance rankings. Their value lies in their impact on user experience, which in turn influences behavioral signals. For an SEO, this means that implementing these technologies without a coherent UX strategy is pointless and could even be counterproductive if the technical implementation degrades perceived performance.

What you need to understand

Is Google playing with words in this statement?

This statement from Google walks a fine line. The company acknowledges that some SEO initiatives require advanced technical skills, but quickly adds that this doesn't mean they should be implemented just for that. The implicit message: stop treating AMP or PWAs as direct ranking levers.

The nuance is crucial. Google is not saying these technologies are useless. It says that their SEO value comes through UX, not from a hidden algorithmic bonus. This is a distinction that many practitioners still overlook, especially when a client asks, "I want AMP because it boosts SEO."

Why does Google emphasize user experience so much?

Because the algorithm cannot directly measure the quality of a PWA. What it measures are indirect behavioral signals: bounce rate, time on site, conversion rate, engagement. A poorly implemented PWA can degrade these metrics despite the flattering technical label.

Google has been pushing this rhetoric for years. The goal is to discourage cargo cult optimizations where SEOs stack technologies without understanding their real impact. AMP is a perfect example: some sites adopted the format for access to the Top Stories carousel, only to see a drop in ad revenue without a significant gain in organic traffic.

What technical expertise is actually necessary?

Correctly implementing AMP or a PWA requires advanced front-end skills. It involves mastering Service Workers, understanding the cache manifest, managing client-side rendering without sacrificing SEO. Many agencies underestimate this complexity and deliver shaky implementations.

The trap lies here: the technology seems to work, validation tests pass, but the real UX is degraded. Longer interactive load times, broken features on certain browsers, unnoticed JavaScript indexing issues. Google observes these degradations via the Chrome User Experience Report and adjusts rankings accordingly.

  • AMP and PWAs are not direct ranking factors: no algorithmic bonus for their mere presence.
  • The SEO impact comes from measurable UX improvements: speed, engagement, user satisfaction.
  • A poor technical implementation can harm SEO: JavaScript bugs, misconfigured caches, degraded experience.
  • Technical expertise should serve business objectives, not the developer's tech resume.
  • Behavioral signals remain the true judge: what users do on the site matters more than the technical stack.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes and no. On paper, Google speaks the truth: AMP has never been a direct ranking factor. The A/B tests I've conducted on dozens of sites show that switching to AMP without any other changes does not alter organic positions. However, access to the Top Stories carousel (before its gradual removal) did provide an indirect visibility boost.

But here's the problem: Google has long communicated ambiguously about AMP. Early adopters were encouraged with placement benefits (AMP badge, carousel), which created a perceived correlation between AMP and SEO performance. Practitioners noticed traffic gains and naturally concluded that AMP helped ranking. In reality, they were observing the effect of increased visibility, not an algorithmic boost.

What nuances should be added to this official position?

Google underestimates (deliberately?) the indirect effect of technologies on Core Web Vitals. A well-implemented PWA improves LCP and FID. Core Web Vitals are confirmed ranking factors. Therefore, technically, Google says the PWA does not help ranking, but if it enhances your Core Web Vitals, it does help ranking. It’s semantics.

The second nuance: sector context matters. For a high-traffic mobile media site, AMP can still make sense for loading speed on slow networks, even without a SEO bonus. For a B2B e-commerce site viewed on desktop, it’s a waste of time and money. [To be verified]: Google provides no clear metrics on the threshold where UX improvement becomes significant for ranking. Everything remains vague.

When doesn't this rule apply?

When technologies enhance explicit ranking factors. For example: a PWA that significantly reduces LCP and eliminates CLS will have an SEO impact, not because it’s a PWA, but because the Core Web Vitals have improved. The same goes for HTTPS: technically required for PWAs, it’s also a slight ranking factor.

Another exception: exclusive features. A PWA enables push notifications, offline mode, and home screen installation. If these features increase return rates or time spent, behavioral signals improve, and Google takes that into account. But it’s an indirect effect, exactly what Google describes in its statement.

Warning: Do not confuse correlation and causation. If AMP or PWA sites perform better, it’s often because the teams investing in these technologies are also investing in UX, content, and overall strategy. Technology alone saves nothing.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do with this information?

First, audit your technical priorities. If you’re considering AMP or a PWA, ask yourself: what UX problem are you solving? If the answer is "we want Google to like us", that’s the wrong answer. If it’s "our LCP is at 4 seconds and we’re losing 40% of mobile visitors", that’s the right answer.

Next, measure before and after. Implement rigorous tracking of Core Web Vitals, bounce rates, engagement time. An AMP or PWA implementation that does not move these metrics is a failure, no matter how technically beautiful. Google Search Console and the CrUX Dashboard are your friends here.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?

The classic mistake: implementing AMP or PWA because “it’s what you need to do for SEO”. No. These technologies are means, not ends. I’ve seen sites migrate to AMP, break their ad monetization, lose 30% of revenue, for a 5% traffic gain. Disastrous outcome.

Another trap: underestimating the complexity of maintenance. A poorly documented PWA becomes a nightmare for the dev team. The cache behaves oddly, content updates do not propagate, and users see outdated versions. Google detects these issues through user signals and indirectly penalizes.

How can you check if your approach aligns with this directive?

Conduct an honest audit of your technical stack. For each "advanced" technology in place, ask yourself: what business KPI does it improve? If you can’t answer with numbers, it’s probably cargo cult.

Use Lighthouse and PageSpeed Insights to verify that your technical optimizations translate into measurable UX metrics. A Lighthouse score of 100 that doesn’t translate into improved field data (real user data) is a laboratory win, not a field success.

  • Audit your current SEO technologies and identify their real, not assumed, UX impact.
  • Measure Core Web Vitals before any heavy technical implementation (AMP, PWA).
  • Define clear business KPIs (conversion, engagement, revenue) for each technical project.
  • Test on a sample of pages before full deployment.
  • Monitor behavioral signals post-deployment for at least 4 weeks.
  • Thoroughly document any complex implementation to ease future maintenance.
The bottom line: treat AMP, PWA, and other advanced technologies as tools serving UX, never as SEO shortcuts. Invest in these technologies only if you can measure their impact on concrete user metrics. If you lack the resources or expertise to properly assess these technologies, consider working with a specialized SEO agency that can audit your actual needs and prioritize optimizations with the best ROI for your specific context.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

AMP est-il encore pertinent pour le SEO aujourd'hui ?
AMP n'a jamais été un facteur de ranking direct. Avec la disparition progressive du carrousel Top Stories réservé à AMP et l'amélioration générale des performances web, son intérêt SEO a diminué. Il reste pertinent seulement si votre site mobile est extrêmement lent et que vous ne pouvez pas optimiser autrement.
Une PWA améliore-t-elle mes positions Google ?
Une PWA n'améliore pas directement le classement. Par contre, si elle réduit votre LCP, améliore votre FID et augmente l'engagement utilisateur, ces facteurs indirects peuvent influencer positivement votre SEO. L'impact dépend entièrement de la qualité de l'implémentation.
Faut-il des compétences dev avancées pour implémenter ces technologies ?
Oui, absolument. AMP et PWA nécessitent une expertise front-end solide : Service Workers, gestion du cache, rendu JavaScript, debugging multi-navigateurs. Une implémentation approximative peut dégrader l'UX et nuire au SEO.
Comment mesurer si mon implémentation technique améliore réellement mon SEO ?
Suivez les Core Web Vitals dans Search Console et comparez les données field (utilisateurs réels) avant/après. Surveillez aussi les métriques comportementales : taux de rebond, temps d'engagement, pages par session. Si ces chiffres ne bougent pas positivement, l'implémentation n'aide pas votre SEO.
Google privilégie-t-il les sites qui utilisent ses technologies recommandées ?
Non, Google affirme ne pas donner de bonus algorithmique pour l'utilisation de technologies spécifiques. Ce qui compte, c'est l'amélioration mesurable de l'expérience utilisateur, peu importe la stack technique utilisée pour y parvenir.
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