Official statement
Other statements from this video 4 ▾
- 1:05 Les prévisualisations de résultats doivent-elles toujours refléter la requête exacte de l'utilisateur ?
- 3:14 Comment Google sélectionne-t-il les images affichées dans les SERP ?
- 6:25 Le markup structurel pour forums booste-t-il vraiment l'engagement utilisateur ?
- 7:46 Les formats de prévisualisation enrichis sont-ils vraiment neutres pour le ranking ?
Google automatically generates sitelinks under certain search results based on the internal organization of the site. These shortcut links depend on a clear architecture and a coherent internal linking strategy — not just a simple request. Specifically, if your sitelinks don’t appear or display inappropriate pages, it means your structure is sending confusing signals to Google.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by 'site organization'?
Google refers here to the structural hierarchy that the engine detects by analyzing your internal linking, URLs, main navigation, and breadcrumbs. The algorithm seeks to identify the most important pages and their logical relationship with the homepage.
This 'organization' is not something you declare — it is an algorithmic inference based on multiple signals: internal link anchors, position in the hierarchy, crawl frequency, and page authority. If Google cannot deduce a clear structure, sitelinks simply won't appear.
Can sitelinks be controlled by SEO?
No, not directly. Google removed the tool for manually demoting certain sitelinks via Search Console in 2016. Since then, control is only exercised indirectly by optimizing the architecture.
You cannot 'request' the display of specific sitelinks. However, you can influence their relevance by clarifying your navigation, strengthening strategic pages through targeted linking, and avoiding flat structures where all pages seem at the same level.
Why does Google emphasize a 'well-defined structure'?
Because sitelinks serve a user purpose: to shorten the journey to key sections of the site. If your structure is confusing — incoherent navigation, chaotic URLs, orphan pages — Google cannot predict what the user is really looking for.
A 'well-defined' structure also signals that the site is professional and maintained. Google favors sites where the navigation intent is clear, as this reduces the bounce rate after clicking on the sitelinks themselves.
- Sitelinks are generated automatically — no manual submission is possible.
- The architecture must be algorithmically readable: clear hierarchy, coherent internal linking, logical navigation.
- No direct control since 2016 — optimization occurs through site structure, not via a dedicated interface.
- Sitelinks reflect the perceived quality of the site's organization by Google, not necessarily what you think you have implemented.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices on the ground?
Yes, but it remains deliberately vague on the activation thresholds. It is observed that sitelinks mostly appear for brand or navigational queries, rarely on informational or transactional queries — Google never specifies this explicitly.
In practice, even with a flawless structure, some sites never acquire sitelinks due to insufficient brand search volume or domain authority. Google says nothing about these implicit criteria, making optimization partially blind. [To be verified]: the exact role of CTR on brand searches in triggering sitelinks.
What nuances should be added to this claim?
Google talks about 'generating' sitelinks as if it were a neutral and automatic process. In reality, the algorithm makes editorial choices that can be surprising: pages shown as sitelinks that are not in the main menu, sections ignored even though they receive massive internal links.
The 'well-defined structure' is not a guarantee — it is a necessary but insufficient condition. Sites with exemplary architecture may have no sitelinks, while sites with mediocre structures display six. The differentiator seems to be user engagement on brand searches, which Google never mentions.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Sitelinks almost never appear for single-page sites or sites with very flat structures (everything at the same level). Even if technically the navigation is clear, Google has no hierarchy to exploit.
Another case is sites with multiple poorly tagged language or regional versions. Google can generate incoherent sitelinks mixing several languages, even if each version has a proper structure. The statement completely overlooks multi-domain and hreflang issues.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should be taken to encourage the appearance of relevant sitelinks?
Start with a review of your internal linking: identify strategic pages and ensure they receive links from the homepage and top-level pages. Anchors should be descriptive and coherent — no 'click here' or 'learn more.'
Next, check that your main navigation genuinely reflects your business priorities. If a key section is only accessible after three clicks, Google is unlikely to consider it for sitelinks. Simplify the hierarchy, even if it means consolidating similar sub-sections.
What mistakes should be avoided to prevent confusing signals to Google?
Do not create too rigid silo structures where each category is isolated without any cross-links. Google must be able to identify a hierarchy but also understand lateral relationships between sections.
Avoid mega-dropdown menus that display 50 links at once — Google might interpret this as a lack of prioritization. Favor up to a two-level navigation in the header, with targeted sub-menus.
How can I verify that my site is 'well-structured' according to Google's criteria?
Check the coverage report in Search Console to spot indexed pages that never show up as sitelinks, despite their position in the navigation. If orphan pages are surfacing, it’s a signal that your linking has gaps.
Use tools like Screaming Frog to visualize the crawl depth of each page: anything more than 3 clicks from the homepage is unlikely to be considered for sitelinks. Adjust your architecture accordingly.
- Comprehensive audit of internal linking and identification of orphan or poorly connected pages.
- Review of main navigation to ensure it reflects the 4-6 most strategic sections of the site.
- Descriptive and coherent link anchors — ban generic anchors like 'see more.'
- Check that priority pages are no more than 2-3 clicks from the homepage.
- Implement structured breadcrumbs with Schema.org BreadcrumbList markup.
- Monthly monitoring in Search Console of pages displayed as sitelinks vs. actual intentions.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Peut-on demander à Google de retirer un sitelink indésirable ?
Les sitelinks apparaissent-ils uniquement pour les requêtes de marque ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour voir apparaître des sitelinks après une refonte ?
Les sitelinks améliorent-ils le taux de clic sur ma page d'accueil ?
Le balisage Schema.org a-t-il un impact sur les sitelinks ?
🎥 From the same video 4
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 7 min · published on 31/03/2020
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.