What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

One should not blindly concentrate on impressions, clicks, and rankings, but rather position their site according to their business objectives and provide value to users. The goal is to align the site with the right queries for the business.
3:40
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 1h03 💬 EN 📅 15/10/2020 ✂ 26 statements
Watch on YouTube (3:40) →
Other statements from this video 25
  1. 2:16 Why do your Search Console data only tell part of the story?
  2. 12:12 Is it true that mobile-first indexing completely overlooks your site's desktop version?
  3. 14:15 Why does the mobile-first indexing verification delay cause temporary discrepancies in Google’s index?
  4. 14:47 Should you show the same number of products on mobile and desktop for mobile-first indexing?
  5. 20:35 Can a minor redesign really trigger a Page Layout penalty?
  6. 23:12 Is it true that CLS isn't a ranking factor yet—should you still optimize it?
  7. 24:04 How does Google reassess a site's overall quality when the top pages remain well-ranked?
  8. 27:26 Do Links Without Anchor Text Really Hold Value for SEO?
  9. 29:02 Why do some pages take months to be reindexed after changes?
  10. 29:02 Should you really use sitemaps to speed up the indexing of your content?
  11. 31:06 Can an incomplete or outdated sitemap really harm your SEO?
  12. 33:45 Can you really host your XML sitemap on an external domain?
  13. 34:53 Does each language version really need its own self-referencing canonical?
  14. 37:58 Does structured breadcrumb really enhance your SEO ranking?
  15. 39:33 Do HTML breadcrumbs really enhance crawling and internal linking?
  16. 41:31 Does domain age and the choice of CMS really influence Google rankings?
  17. 43:18 Are backlinks really less important than we think for ranking on Google?
  18. 44:22 Does Google really ignore hidden content instead of penalizing it?
  19. 45:22 Is it really necessary to be 'significantly better' to climb the SERPs?
  20. 47:29 Are URLs with # really invisible for Google SEO?
  21. 48:03 Do URL fragments really disrupt the indexing of JavaScript sites?
  22. 50:07 Do words in the URL really still have a true impact on Google rankings?
  23. 51:45 Is it really necessary to list every keyword variation for Google to understand your content?
  24. 55:33 Paired AMP: Is it really the regular HTML that matters for indexing?
  25. 61:49 Does a sudden drop in traffic always signal a quality issue?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Mueller reminds us that maximizing impressions and clicks is not a goal in itself — what really matters is the alignment between targeted queries and your actual business objectives. A site can gain visibility for queries without commercial value while stagnating in revenue. The challenge is to refocus the SEO strategy on the quality of traffic rather than the sheer volume of vanity metrics.

What you need to understand

Why does Google downplay the importance of visibility metrics?

Mueller points to a common drift: optimizing for KPIs disconnected from business. An e-commerce site generating 500,000 monthly impressions for informational queries but converting at 0.2% illustrates the problem — the dashboards shine, but revenue stagnates.

This statement aligns with the idea that Google values contextual relevance: a good ranking for a poorly aligned query creates a bad user experience, increases the bounce rate, and dilutes the overall performance of the site. The engine prefers a site that precisely meets a query's intent over a generalist that accumulates positions without coherence.

What does it actually mean to "align the site with the right queries"?

It means mapping queries according to their business value, not based on their search volume. A B2B SaaS might find it more worthwhile to rank for a query with 200 monthly searches that indicates purchase intent than for a query with 20,000 monthly searches but purely informational.

Alignment comes from a detailed analysis of actual conversion paths: which queries precede a signup? Which generate demo requests? This approach requires cross-referencing Search Console data with conversion analytics — and this is where many SEO strategies fail, due to lack of instrumentation.

Does this approach change the way we measure SEO success?

Yes, radically. Post-click engagement metrics become central: qualified session duration, conversion rates by landing page, revenue per organic session. The Search Console alone is no longer sufficient — it shows what happens on the site, not what visitors do once there.

A site might see its impressions drop by 30% after a strategic refocus while its organic revenue increases by 40%. This is counterintuitive for a client used to visibility reporting, but consistent with Mueller's logic: less traffic, better qualified, more profitable.

  • Distinguish visibility metrics from business performance metrics — impressions ≠ ROI
  • Map queries by their conversion value, not their raw volume
  • Instrument the conversion funnel to identify high-value queries
  • Accept a traffic decrease if it comes with an increase in conversion rate
  • Refocus content on purchase intent rather than capturing everything indiscriminately

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with best practices observed on the ground?

Yes, and it echoes what has been observed since the rise of Helpful Content Updates: Google penalizes sites that accumulate generic content to cast a wide net. Hyper-targeted niche sites often outperform generalists that dilute their expertise over too many topics.

But be careful — [To be verified] — Mueller does not specify how Google measures this "alignment" in its algorithms. It is suspected that behavioral signals play a role (bounce rate, session duration, pogosticking), but Google never explicitly confirms the weight of these metrics. A site can indeed rank for poorly aligned queries if its technical structure is impeccable and its backlinks are strong.

In what cases does this logic reach its limits?

For media or editorial sites with an ad-based model, maximizing impressions remains a legitimate goal — revenue depends on page view volume. Mueller's recommendation mostly applies to transactional sites (e-commerce, SaaS, lead generation) where conversion is key.

Another edge case: top-of-funnel strategies that use informational content to feed the funnel. A B2B site might intentionally rank for queries distant from purchase to build an audience — as long as the full journey to conversion is measured, not just the initial click.

What are the interpretational mistakes to avoid?

Do not conclude that "SEO is pointless if it doesn't convert". Impressions and clicks remain indicators of site health — a sudden drop signals a technical or algorithmic issue. The challenge is not to elevate them to ultimate goals.

Another trap: believing that one can ignore high-volume queries on the grounds that they don't convert directly. An informational query can generate awareness, return traffic, backlinks — all indirect performance levers. Queries should be segmented by their role in the funnel, not excluded binary.

Warning: This statement can serve as an excuse for SEO agencies to justify stagnation in traffic. Always demand a correlation between the evolution of positions and the business KPIs — if traffic drops without conversions rising, it’s a red flag, not a strategy.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you audit the alignment of queries/business objectives for your site?

Start by exporting all queries from the Search Console over the past 12 months and cross-reference this data with your conversions (via Google Analytics 4 or your CRM). Identify queries that generate long sessions, multiple page views, and most importantly, conversions.

Next, segment the queries into three categories: high value (direct or qualified conversion), intermediate value (strong engagement, nurturing potential), low value (curiosity-driven traffic, high bounce rate). This classification becomes your prioritization grid for content optimization and internal linking.

What concrete actions result from this analysis?

For high value queries that are poorly positioned, strengthen the semantic targeting: enrich the content, improve the titles and meta descriptions, adjust Hn tags to fit the intent. For those already well positioned, optimize the conversion rate of the landing page (CTA, simplified funnel, social proof).

For low value queries that drain crawl budget and dilute authority, three options: deindexing if the content adds no value, merging with similar pages to concentrate link equity, or radically transforming the content to refocus on a more qualified intent. Keep only what serves the business or thematic authority.

How can you avoid falling into the vanity metrics trap?

Impose a hybrid KPI in your reporting that weighs visibility and conversion: for example, a composite score that integrates average positions, qualified organic traffic (sessions > 1 min) and conversion rates. This forces a balance between volume and quality.

Set up alerts for performance discrepancies: if a query rises in position but its bounce rate explodes, it's a signal that the content doesn’t match the intent. Conversely, a query stable in position with a rising conversion rate indicates optimal alignment — dig deeper into this vein.

  • Export Search Console queries and cross-reference with conversions over 12 months
  • Segment queries into high/mid/low business value
  • Enhance content and internal linking for underperforming high value queries
  • Deindex or merge pages that drain crawl budget without ROI
  • Create a dashboard that weighs visibility AND conversion, not just impressions
  • Set alerts for discrepancies in position/bounce rate to detect misalignments
Aligning queries/business is not a one-time audit; it's an iterative process that requires fine instrumentation and regular trade-offs. These optimizations, while seemingly simple in theory, often require sharp technical expertise and a deep knowledge of analytics tools. For structures lacking internal resources, engaging a specialized SEO agency helps to structure this approach and avoid costly mistakes — particularly regarding deindexing or overhauling high-traffic content.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Doit-on complètement ignorer les métriques d'impressions et de clics en SEO ?
Non, ces métriques restent des indicateurs de santé du site et de visibilité. L'idée est de ne pas en faire des objectifs finaux, mais de les corréler systématiquement aux conversions et aux revenus pour mesurer la vraie performance.
Comment identifier les requêtes mal alignées avec mes objectifs business ?
Croisez les données Search Console avec vos analytics de conversion. Les requêtes à fort trafic mais taux de conversion faible ou rebond élevé sont souvent mal alignées — elles drainent du crawl budget sans ROI.
Une baisse de trafic organique est-elle toujours un mauvais signe ?
Pas nécessairement. Si elle résulte d'un recentrage stratégique sur des requêtes à haute valeur et s'accompagne d'une hausse du taux de conversion ou du revenu par session, c'est un signe positif d'alignement.
Les sites média doivent-ils aussi appliquer cette logique ?
Partiellement. Pour un modèle publicitaire, le volume de pages vues reste crucial. Mais même dans ce cas, maximiser l'engagement et la récurrence (taux de retour, pages par session) améliore la monétisation.
Quels outils permettent de mesurer cet alignement requêtes/business ?
Google Analytics 4 couplé à la Search Console, enrichi d'un CRM si vous gérez des leads. Les outils SEO comme Semrush ou Ahrefs aident à identifier les requêtes, mais seuls vos analytics internes mesurent la vraie valeur business.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO

🎥 From the same video 25

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h03 · published on 15/10/2020

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.