Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 2:15 Peut-on vraiment occuper plusieurs positions dans les SERP avec un seul site ?
- 10:25 Faut-il vraiment mettre tous les liens de guest posts en nofollow ?
- 13:30 Google ignore-t-il vraiment les liens non naturels ou faut-il les désavouer ?
- 20:00 Les pages AMP doivent-elles vraiment être identiques aux pages mobiles pour ranker ?
- 26:12 Les thèmes WordPress populaires ont-ils vraiment un avantage SEO ?
- 35:00 Le contenu dupliqué peut-il vraiment faire disparaître votre site de l'index Google ?
- 40:10 Les liens nofollow transmettent-ils encore du PageRank en SEO ?
- 42:00 Les mises à jour d'algorithme Google sont-elles vraiment continues et comment s'y adapter ?
- 50:00 Faut-il vraiment allonger vos meta descriptions pour Google ?
Google defines natural link building as the spontaneous acquisition of links from third parties who recommend your content. Paying for links or inserting them manually into directories is a direct violation of guidelines. For an SEO practitioner, this means entirely reevaluating their linking strategy: content creation must become the cornerstone, and any link obtained through a proactive approach remains in a gray area that Google may penalize.
What you need to understand
How does Google draw the line between natural and artificial?
Google sees a link as natural when it results from an independent editorial decision made by a third party. Specifically, a blogger who spontaneously adds a link to your resource in their article because they find it relevant creates a natural link. Conversely, any exchange of value—monetary or otherwise—breaks this spontaneity.
However, Mueller's definition poses a major practical problem. It effectively excludes nearly all active link-building techniques: outreach, negotiated guest posting, link exchanges, partnerships. Even sending an email to notify a webmaster about your content could technically fall outside the 'natural' framework since you initiate the process.
Why does this statement remain intentionally vague?
Google deliberately maintains a zone of ambiguity to preserve interpretative flexibility. If the firm precisely defined what is acceptable, SEOs would immediately find loopholes to exploit. The approach of 'you know what natural means' allows Google to penalize on a case-by-case basis.
This strategy puts practitioners in an uncomfortable position. Should one understand that all proactive outreach is forbidden? That contacting a journalist to submit an original study breaches the rules? The line remains subjective and largely depends on the scale and detectability of practices.
What’s the difference between paid links and manual insertion?
Mueller distinguishes between two categories of artificial links: purchased links and self-inserted links in directories or listings. This distinction is crucial because it indicates that even without a financial transaction, certain links are problematic.
Low-quality directories, exchanged footer links, forum signatures, and social profile links optimized with exact anchors fall into this category. Google considers that if you directly control the link placement without third-party editorial validation, that link lacks authentic recommendation value.
- A natural link results from an independent editorial decision made by a third party who spontaneously recommends your content
- Any form of compensation or value exchange to obtain a link constitutes a direct violation of the guidelines
- Manual insertion of links in directories, listings, or profiles without editorial validation is also considered artificial
- The gray area encompasses most proactive outreach practices, even without financial compensation
- Google deliberately maintains a vague definition to retain interpretative flexibility and penalize on a case-by-case basis
SEO Expert opinion
Does this definition really reflect observable on-the-ground practices?
Let's be honest: if we strictly apply Mueller's definition, 99% of current link-building strategies fall into the 'non-natural' category. Sites that rank on the first page haven't passively waited for links to come. They have engaged in guest posting, targeted outreach, partnerships, and sometimes disguised purchases.
The gap between the official narrative and real-world practice is vast. Sites with evidently constructed link profiles continue to perform as long as the execution remains high-quality and discreet. Google mainly detects gross patterns: mass buying, poorly disguised PBNs, over-optimized anchors, links from sites without thematic coherence.
What nuances should be applied to this absolute rule?
Mueller's stance must be contextualized. Google cannot publicly admit that certain forms of outreach are tolerable, as this would open the door to all kinds of abuse. Therefore, the official message remains maximalist by necessity.
In practice, the algorithm evaluates the editorial likelihood of a link. A link from a substantive, contextualized article with a natural anchor on a thematically coherent site will pass even if you proactively contacted the editor. In contrast, a footer link with an exact commercial anchor on an unrelated site will be flagged immediately. [To be verified] The sophistication of Google’s filters for detecting coordinated outreach patterns remains challenging to quantify precisely.
In what cases does this doctrine become counterproductive?
Some sectors simply cannot rely on spontaneous links. A B2B company selling fleet management solutions will never see lifestyle bloggers spontaneously creating links to its site. The content may be excellent, but it only interests a narrow circle of professionals.
For these players, waiting passively amounts to an SEO death sentence. The only viable option remains targeted outreach toward specialized publications, partnerships with professional associations, and content sponsorship. All of this technically falls outside Mueller's 'natural' framework, but represents the only realistic strategy. Google knows this well and tolerates these practices as long as they maintain an appearance of editorial legitimacy.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you build a link strategy compatible with this doctrine?
The first step is to produce linkable assets: original studies, proprietary data, free tools, comprehensive guides that fill an informational gap. These types of content naturally have a higher probability of attracting spontaneous mentions than traditional commercial pages.
Next, it is essential to accept that outreach is still necessary but must be executed with finesse. Contact journalists with relevant news angles rather than generic link requests. Offer expert contributions to publications actively seeking this type of content. The goal is to create a situation where the link results from a genuine editorial decision, even if you initiated the contact.
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided to stay under the radar?
Directly purchasing links remains the riskiest practice, especially on a large scale. Google now easily detects networks of selling sites and can massively devalue links from these sources. If a site openly offers 'sponsored articles' with dofollow links without nofollow, steer clear.
Over-optimized anchors signal a second alarm bell. A natural link profile features a massive variety of anchors: brand names, bare URLs, 'click here', 'this study', article titles. If 40% of your backlinks use your exact commercial keyword, you are in the red zone regardless of the quality of the source sites.
How to audit your existing link profile?
Use Search Console and third-party tools (Ahrefs, Majestic, Semrush) to extract your full backlink profile. Identify links from evidently artificial sites: low-quality directories, mass footer links, sites with a high spam score, parking domains.
For each suspicious link, assess the risk. An old directory link from 2012 with a generic anchor on a site that still exists probably doesn’t warrant action. A cluster of 50 footer links with exact anchors added in the same month from PBN sites requires an immediate disavow. Prioritize patterns over isolated links.
- Create at least one major linkable asset each quarter (study, tool, comprehensive guide) to maximize the chances of spontaneous links
- Limit exact commercial anchors to less than 5% of the total backlink profile
- Prefer outreach toward publications that actively seek expert contributions
- Quarterly audit your link profile to identify suspicious patterns before they trigger a penalty
- Systematically use the disavow file to neutralize clusters of toxic or negative inherited links
- Document any outreach efforts to justify editorial legitimacy in case of a manual audit
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un lien obtenu via outreach ciblé est-il considéré comme artificiel par Google ?
Les liens depuis des annuaires de qualité sont-ils toujours problématiques ?
Comment Google détecte-t-il qu'un lien a été payé ?
Le guest posting est-il interdit selon cette définition du naturel ?
Faut-il désavouer tous les liens d'annuaires existants sur mon site ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 57 min · published on 22/12/2017
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