Official statement
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- 4:39 Do duplicate mobile/desktop menus really hurt your SEO?
- 8:21 Should you really nofollow links between your branch pages?
- 8:41 Should you really feature your best-selling products in the main navigation?
- 9:07 Does incorrect structured data markup really hurt your SEO rankings?
- 10:20 Should you really place your key pages in the main navigation to rank better?
- 11:26 Does Google really ignore poorly marked structured data without penalizing the page?
- 13:01 Is it true that content hidden behind tabs is actually indexed by Google?
- 13:42 Is it true that content behind tabs is indexed in mobile-first?
- 14:36 Does Google really filter medical sites manually to ensure the quality of results?
- 16:40 Should you ditch Data Highlighter for JSON-LD?
- 20:09 Are nofollow links really ignored by Google for SEO?
- 20:19 Does Google really treat nofollow links to discover new sites?
- 22:42 Are JavaScript links without href really invisible to Google?
- 23:12 Why does Google ignore your poorly formatted JavaScript links?
- 29:55 Is high-quality content really enough to generate natural backlinks?
- 30:03 Is it true that Domain Authority is totally irrelevant for ranking on Google?
- 30:16 Why does Google consider links from image sites, classifieds, and free platforms to be spam?
- 38:17 Does Google really declare its user-agent while crawling?
- 43:06 Does Google really understand all video embedding formats for SEO?
- 44:12 Do blocked third-party cookies really affect your mobile traffic in Analytics?
- 51:11 Should you ditch the desktop version to solely optimize the mobile version?
Google recommends focusing your content on core pages rather than spreading it thin. The goal is to establish a clear hierarchy that enhances the relevance and authority of each page. In practical terms, this involves eliminating redundancies between pages and consolidating information to prevent your own URLs from competing with each other.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize content centralization?
The logic is simple: when multiple pages on the same site cover the same topic with minor variations, Google struggles to determine which one deserves to rank. As a result, your authority dilutes instead of concentrating.
This is particularly noticeable on e-commerce sites that create nearly identical product pages, or blogs that publish overlapping articles without a clear strategy. Each additional page on the same theme does not strengthen your positioning — it fragments it.
What exactly does a clear hierarchy mean?
A clear hierarchy means that each level of depth in your structure corresponds to a level of increasing specificity. The parent page covers the topic broadly, while the child pages delve into specific sub-themes.
For example, a pillar page on "home insurance" links to satellite pages on "student home insurance," "landlord home insurance," etc. Each satellite addresses a specific angle without repeating the generic content of the pillar page. This topic cluster logic is implicitly validated by Mueller.
What happens in case of significant overlap?
Overlaps create SEO cannibalization: multiple URLs compete for the same queries, and none really rises to the top. Google fluctuates between your pages depending on updates, causing stability in your ranking to suffer.
Worse yet, you dilute your link equity. The backlinks you gain spread across several URLs instead of consolidating the authority of one main page. The crawler wastes time indexing redundant content — a pure waste of crawl budget.
- Centralizing means concentrating information on fewer but more powerful pages
- The hierarchy should be thematic, not just structural within the hierarchy
- Overlaps weaken the relevance perceived by the algorithm
- The internal linking should reinforce this hierarchy by sending clear signals about which page is the reference
- Google values sites where it immediately understands which URL addresses which query
SEO Expert opinion
Is this recommendation really new?
Let’s be honest: no, it is not. The concept of pillar pages and thematic siloing has existed for years. What Mueller is doing here is simply confirming that Google continues to favor this approach.
What’s interesting -- and where it gets tricky -- is that he does not provide any metric to define what constitutes "significant overlap." [To be verified] 30% textual similarity? 50%? 70%? No numerical data. We are left with generic advice that allows each SEO to interpret based on their field experience.
In what cases does this rule not apply strictly?
For news or press sites, the logic changes. Publishing multiple articles on an event evolving over time is not redundancy — it’s editorial freshness. Google understands this contextual difference very well.
Similarly, for international or multilingual sites, having structurally similar content but adapted to each market remains relevant. The problematic overlap arises within the same language version, for the same audience, without any differentiating added value.
What are the pitfalls of excessive centralization?
Be careful not to fall into the extreme opposite: creating catch-all pages of 5000 words that attempt to address 20 different search intents. Google now prefers to match query and intent precisely.
A single page covering "car insurance," "motorcycle insurance," and "home insurance" will never perform as well as three distinct and targeted pages. Centralizing does not mean mixing everything up — it means avoiding unnecessary duplication within the same theme. A crucial nuance.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you identify overlaps on your site?
First step: crawl your entire site using Screaming Frog or Oncrawl. Export titles, meta descriptions, and H1s. Look for duplicates or near-duplicates — this is often the first sign of redundant content.
Next, move on to semantic analysis. Tools like Semji, Yourtext.guru, or even a good old custom TF-IDF can measure thematic similarity between your pages. Identify those targeting the same keyword clusters without bringing a differentiating angle.
What concrete actions should you take next?
You have three main options when faced with overlapping content. Merging: combine several weak pages into one strong page, then redirect with 301. This is the most radical and often the most effective solution.
Second option: differentiation. Revise each page to ensure it addresses a truly distinct angle or intent. This requires significant editorial effort but preserves the volume of URLs if your structure justifies it. Third option, rarer: outright deletion of pages without value, without redirection if they have never received traffic or backlinks.
How to structure an effective content hierarchy?
Start with your target queries and map them by intent. A generic query (head) = a pillar page. Long-tail queries = satellite pages. Internal linking should consistently link satellites to the pillar.
Use internal link anchors to enhance the hierarchical semantics. If your pillar page is about "running shoes," satellites on "women's running shoes" or "trail running shoes" should link to it with natural anchors including the generic term. This semantic cocoon logic sends clear signals to Google.
- Audit content similarities with a crawler + semantic analysis
- Identify cannibalized pages via Google Search Console (common queries across multiple URLs)
- Decide for each cluster: merge, differentiate, or delete
- Restructure internal linking to clarify the thematic hierarchy
- Redirect consolidated URLs and update incoming links
- Monitor position changes after consolidation (delay of 4 to 12 weeks)
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de pages peut-on fusionner sans risquer de perdre du trafic ?
Faut-il supprimer les pages à faible trafic même si elles ne se chevauchent pas ?
Le siloing strict est-il toujours pertinent en 2025 ?
Comment Google détecte-t-il un chevauchement de contenu entre deux pages ?
Une page pilier doit-elle forcément être longue pour être efficace ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 03/04/2020
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