Official statement
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- 52:37 L'attribut hreflang suffit-il vraiment à cibler correctement vos pages multilingues ?
Google confirms that a site can occupy multiple positions in the results for the same search if its content covers different products or categories. This situation is common for e-commerce sites with diverse catalogs. Specifically, this means that good thematic linking and a clear architecture can multiply your visibility for a given query.
What you need to understand
What does this statement from Google really mean?
Google states that a single domain can occupy multiple positions in search results for the same query. This multiplicity is not a bug, but a logical consequence of the diversity of content offered.
For e-commerce sites, this translates concretely: if you sell running shoes, your "Running" category page, your product page for "Nike Air Zoom Pegasus," and your buying guide can all appear for the query "running shoes." Google considers that each of them meets a different user intent.
When does this phenomenon occur?
This situation is particularly visible for sites structured with a silo architecture. A marketplace selling electronics, fashion, and home goods can see three distinct categories appearing for a broad query like "gift ideas."
Another common case is editorial sites with multiple content formats. A tech media outlet can occupy two positions with a news article and a product review on the same query. Google differentiates the informational intent from the transactional intent.
Is this multiplicity systematic or conditional?
Google never guarantees multiple positions for the same domain. It all depends on the relative relevance of the pages and the diversity of intents detected in the query. For highly competitive keywords, the engine often prioritizes domain diversity.
The URL structure also plays a role: distinct URLs with truly differentiated content are more likely to be displayed simultaneously than a domain with 50 nearly identical variants. Google applies duplication filters even on a single site.
- A site can occupy 2-3 positions if its pages cover distinct user intents
- Multi-category e-commerce sites are particularly concerned by this phenomenon
- The diversity of domains remains a priority for very competitive queries
- Each URL must provide a genuinely differentiated value to avoid duplication filters
- A silo architecture promotes this multiple visibility in the SERPs
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with on-the-ground observations?
Yes, but with a major nuance that Google omits. In practice, sites that achieve multiple simultaneous organic positions are often those that already have a strong domain authority. A small e-commerce site, no matter how perfect its architecture is, will rarely secure 3 positions on a competitive query.
Tests show that Google prioritizes source diversity on YMYL (Your Money Your Life) and high-volume commercial queries. Conversely, for niche or long-tail queries, the same domain can indeed monopolize multiple positions. The competitive context matters as much as the structure.
What limits does Google not explicitly mention?
The statement remains vague about the maximum number of positions a domain can occupy. In practice, exceeding 2-3 organic positions for the same query is extremely rare, even for giants like Amazon. [To be verified]: Is there an algorithmic ceiling or merely a consequence of competition?
Another point not addressed is the impact of featured snippets and rich results. A site can technically appear 4 times: in position zero, two classic organic positions, and a product carousel. Google does not specify whether these multiple formats fall into the logic of "diversity" or if they are additional.
Should you actively seek to occupy multiple positions?
Strategically, yes, but without forcing it. Artificially creating nearly duplicate pages to "saturate" the SERPs is counterproductive. Google applies filters for similar content that cannibalize visibility instead of multiplying it.
The effective approach is to identify queries where your audience has documented multiple intents (buying vs. comparison vs. learning), and then create truly differentiated content for each intent. Internal cannibalization remains the number one risk for poorly structured sites.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you structure your site to maximize this opportunity?
The first concrete action is to audit the existing architecture. Identify your pages that address the same semantic universe but from different angles. A category page for "Samsung Smartphones" and a page for "Comparison of the Best Samsung" can coexist if they meet distinct intents.
Next, strengthen the semantic differentiation between these pages. The title tags and meta descriptions should reflect different promises. The content should avoid overlap: if two pages use 70% of the same keywords, you are in a cannibalization zone.
What technical errors block this multi-visibility?
The first frequent error is misconfigured canonicals. If you point all your product pages to the parent category, you are telling Google to consider only one URL. Each page with unique content should have a self-referencing canonical.
Another trap is unintentional duplicated content. E-commerce filters (color, size, price) often generate distinct URLs with the same content. Without proper management (URL parameters in Search Console, correct pagination), you dilute your ranking potential instead of multiplying it.
How can you verify that the strategy works?
Use Search Console to monitor queries with multiple impressions. Filter the queries where multiple URLs of yours appear, then analyze their respective CTRs. If one URL captures 80% of the clicks, the other may be superfluous or poorly positioned.
Also, test with manual searches in private browsing. Personalized SERPs distort analysis. If your site occupies only one position for queries where you think you have multiple relevant contents, it signals cannibalization or lack of differentiation perceived by Google.
- Map the distinct user intents for your main target queries
- Create dedicated URLs with truly differentiated content for each intent
- Ensure that each page has a self-referencing canonical if the content is unique
- Avoid semantic overlaps exceeding 50% between competing pages
- Monitor Search Console to detect cases of cannibalization (multiple URLs vying for the same query with fluctuating positions)
- Implement a coherent internal linking structure that reinforces the theme of each silo without creating competition
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de positions maximum un site peut-il occuper dans les SERP pour une même requête ?
Est-ce que multiplier les pages sur un même sujet améliore mes chances d'apparaître plusieurs fois ?
Les filtres e-commerce (couleur, taille) comptent-ils comme des contenus distincts pour Google ?
Comment savoir si mes pages se cannibalisent entre elles ?
Cette stratégie fonctionne-t-elle mieux sur certains types de requêtes ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h03 · published on 16/02/2017
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