Official statement
Other statements from this video 38 ▾
- 1:07 Is Google automatically switching back to mobile-first after fixing asymmetry errors?
- 1:07 Is it true that mobile-first indexing is stuck: how long until automatic unlocking?
- 3:14 Does Google flag missing images on mobile: Should you ignore these alerts if your mobile version is intentionally different?
- 3:14 Should you really fix the missing images detected by Google on mobile?
- 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really improve your ranking on Google?
- 4:15 Does mobile-first indexing really impact your page rankings?
- 5:17 How does Google blend site-level and page-level signals to rank your pages?
- 5:49 Should you prioritize domain authority or optimize page by page?
- 11:16 Does functional duplicate content really harm your SEO ranking?
- 11:52 Is Google really ignoring duplicate boilerplate content without punishment?
- 13:08 Do you really need multiple questions in an FAQ schema to get a rich snippet?
- 13:08 Should you really abandon the FAQ schema on single-question product pages?
- 14:14 Does schema markup really help you land featured snippets?
- 15:45 Do featured snippets really depend on structured markup or visible content?
- 18:18 Is Google penalizing CSS-hidden FAQ content in an accordion?
- 18:41 Does the FAQ schema really work if answers are hidden in a CSS accordion?
- 19:13 Should you merge two cannibalizing pages or let them coexist?
- 19:53 Is it really necessary to merge your competing pages to boost their rankings?
- 20:58 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risking your SEO?
- 21:36 Can you really combine canonical and noindex without risk?
- 23:02 Does the exact order of keywords in your content really affect your Google ranking?
- 23:22 Does the order of keywords on a page really impact Google rankings?
- 27:07 Does the order of keywords in the meta description really affect CTR?
- 27:22 Should you really align the word order in your meta description with the target query?
- 29:56 Does Google really understand your synonyms better than you do?
- 30:29 Should you really stuff your pages with synonyms to rank on Google?
- 31:56 Should you create mixed pages to cover all meanings of a polysemous keyword?
- 35:45 Should you optimize your site for synonyms, or does Google really handle it all by itself?
- 37:52 Does Google really give a 6-month notice before any major SEO changes?
- 39:55 Does Google really announce its major algorithm changes 6 months in advance?
- 43:57 Why are multilingual footer links crucial on every page?
- 44:37 Why do your hreflang links fail when they point to a homepage instead of an equivalent page?
- 44:37 Why does linking to the homepage undermine your hreflang strategy?
- 46:54 Subdomains or Subdirectories for Internationalization: Which Hreflang Architecture Does Google Really Favor?
- 47:44 Should you opt for subdirectories or subdomains for a multilingual site?
- 48:49 Should you add footer links to your multilingual homepages in addition to hreflang?
- 50:23 Does your shared IP really harm your SEO rankings?
- 50:53 Can shared cloud IPs really harm your SEO?
Google claims to favor ultra-specialized pages on a specific sub-theme rather than diluted general pages covering multiple variations. Specifically, a page dedicated to denim jackets and another to denim pants will perform better than a catch-all page on the term 'jeans.' This stance pushes SEOs to reconsider their site architecture and prioritize thematic depth over superficial breadth.
What you need to understand
Why does Google favor specialized pages?
The engine operates on a principle of semantic matching between the query and the content. A precise query like 'men's denim jacket' calls for a precise response—not a diluted catalog also discussing pants, shorts, and denim shirts.
When you group multiple sub-themes on one page, you weaken the semantic density for each of them. Google then has to guess which section best fits which query, and the result is rarely optimal. A specialized page sends a clear signal: this content responds to this intent—period.
What does Mueller mean by 'diluted page'?
A diluted page covers several variations of the same generic term without delving into any of them. A classic example: a 'Jeans' page that lists jackets, pants, skirts, accessories—with two paragraphs per category and weak internal linking.
The problem? None of these sections delve sufficiently into the topic to satisfy a precise search intent. The user searching for a denim jacket doesn't want to scroll through irrelevant content. Google knows this and ranks that page behind more focused competitors.
Does this logic apply to all sectors?
No, and that’s where Mueller's advice needs nuance. In some cases—particularly in sectors with low search volume per sub-category—creating ten ultra-specialized pages with 200 words each can weaken your site. The overall quality signal drops, and you dilute your crawl budget.
The rule works when each sub-theme generates a sufficient search volume to justify a dedicated page with substantial content. If you create a page 'denim socks' when no one is searching for that term, you produce noise—not signal.
- Google seeks to match a precise query with a specialized landing page, not with a section buried in a catch-all page
- General pages dilute semantic density and weaken the relevance signal for each sub-theme
- This logic applies especially when each sub-category generates a sufficient search volume to justify a dedicated page
- Creating ultra-specialized pages without real demand can weaken your site's overall quality signal
- Deep architecture works if it is accompanied by strong internal linking and substantial content per page
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Yes, but with massive exceptions that Mueller does not mention. The top-ranking e-commerce sites indeed practice this specialization logic—but they compensate with aggressive internal linking and hub pages that orchestrate navigation.
The problem is that many SEOs have tested this approach and ended up with dozens of zombie pages: indexed, but with no traffic or backlinks. Creating an ultra-specialized page about 'high-waisted slim jeans for women' assumes that this term generates searches—if it doesn't, you just fragmented your authority for nothing.
What nuances should be added to this advice?
Mueller implies that any specialization is good by nature. False. A specialized page without search volume, without backlinks, and with 300 words of generic content is worse than a well-structured section in a broader page. [To check]: Google has never published an official threshold to define when a page becomes 'too specialized' compared to demand.
Second point: this logic completely ignores sites with low domain authority. If you’re launching a new site, creating 50 ultra-specialized pages from the get-go could dilute your crawl budget and slow down your indexing. In this case, starting with slightly broader pages and then fragmenting them when traffic justifies it is often more pragmatic.
In which cases does this rule not apply?
When your sector practices search using synonyms or spelling variations. Example: 'fitness coach', 'personal trainer' — Google understands the equivalence. Creating three distinct pages for these terms risks creating duplicate or nearly duplicate content, which weakens your signal.
Another case: informative pages like guides or tutorials. If you write 'How to wear jeans well,' grouping several styles in a long page works better than spreading them across micro-pages. The search intent here is broad—the user wants an overview, not an ultra-specific answer.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you concretely do with this statement?
Start by auditing your current architecture. Identify catch-all pages that cover multiple sub-themes without diving deeply into any. Example: a 'Services' page that lists SEO, SEM, social media with three paragraphs each—a clear candidate for fragmentation.
Next, cross-reference with real search data. Use Search Console to see which long-tail queries generate impressions but few clicks. If 'vintage denim jacket for men' appears regularly but your generic 'jeans' page isn’t getting clicks, you've identified an opportunity for a specialized page.
What mistakes to avoid when fragmenting?
Do not create specialized pages without substantial content. A 200-word page on 'bootcut denim pants' brings nothing—it weakens your site. Aim for at least 800-1000 words with sections dedicated to features, usage tips, variations, FAQs.
Second classic mistake: fragmenting without reworking internal linking. If you split a parent page into ten child pages, ensure that the child pages link to each other and back to the hub page. Otherwise, you create orphaned silos that Google will crawl poorly.
How can I verify that my site is aligned with this logic?
Analyze your click-through rates in Search Console. A page that generates 1000 impressions but only 10 clicks is often too broad or misaligned with search intent. Fragment it into specialized pages and measure the evolution.
Use a semantic clustering tool to identify keyword groups that deserve their own page. If you see that 'men's denim jacket', 'women's denim jacket', 'children's denim jacket' each generate several hundred monthly searches, it’s a clear signal: three dedicated pages will perform better than a single 'denim jackets' page.
- Audit catch-all pages that cover multiple sub-themes without depth
- Cross-reference with Search Console data to identify underutilized long-tail queries
- Create specialized pages only if the search volume justifies substantial content (800-1000 words minimum)
- Rework internal linking to connect child pages with each other and back to the hub page
- Measure click rates before/after fragmentation to validate the impact
- Use a semantic clustering tool to identify high-potential keyword groups
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Faut-il toujours créer une page par mot-clé ?
Comment savoir si une page est trop diluée ?
Peut-on fragmenter une page qui rank déjà bien ?
Quelle profondeur d'arborescence est optimale ?
Cette logique s'applique-t-elle aux blogs et contenus informatifs ?
🎥 From the same video 38
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 52 min · published on 14/05/2020
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