Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 1:10 Does duplicate content really harm organic search rankings?
- 3:44 Should you really merge similar pages to avoid a doorway penalty?
- 4:20 Are 301 redirects and canonical tags truly equivalent methods for consolidating your SEO signals?
- 7:01 Could technical problems truly explain why you're not ranking?
- 9:51 Why does Google classify some pages as soft 404 when they return a 200 status?
- 12:48 Do old 301 redirects really hurt your SEO?
- 15:36 Does Google truly consider hidden mobile content in its indexing?
- 20:27 Do you really need a sitemap for a small, stable site?
- 22:17 Can using local characters in URLs harm your SEO performance?
- 24:39 Can you really display a radically different mobile navigation from desktop without risking your SEO?
- 25:12 Does Google really use an SEO sandbox to filter new websites?
- 31:01 Should you really redirect your outdated AMP pages?
- 36:04 Should you include the current URL in the breadcrumb trail to boost your SEO?
- 37:31 Is the DMCA truly effective against abusive duplicate content?
Google claims that the Top Stories carousel relies on traditional organic ranking signals, without manual intervention. For an SEO, this means that no specific processing or additional criteria apply: your natural position determines your presence in this enriched module. The challenge then becomes maximizing your overall authority and relevance, rather than chasing a magic formula specific to Top Stories.
What you need to understand
Is Top Stories really an extension of organic ranking?
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. On paper, Mueller's assertion holds up: the sites that dominate Top Stories are indeed those that already rank well organically. The same players are present, with the same authority patterns.
However, in practice, some media outlets enjoy disproportionate visibility in this carousel compared to their traditional organic performance. [To be confirmed]: sites with an average DR (40-50) sometimes appear ahead of giants (DR 80+) that outrank them on non-news queries. This suggests that freshness and editorial velocity can temporarily compensate for a lack of raw authority.
What nuances should be added to this official position?
The very definition of “normal organic ranking” is problematic. Google never specifies whether this includes or excludes certain contextual adjustments. For example, on a news query, the algorithm naturally boosts recent content through the QDF (Query Deserves Freshness) signal.
So yes, Top Stories uses organic signals, but these signals themselves are weighted differently depending on the nature of the query. Saying that there’s “no manual interference” is strictly true, but this does not mean there is no algorithmic tuning specific to news context. The nuance is fine but critical for a practitioner looking to understand where to invest their efforts.
In what cases does this rule not apply completely?
First case: local news sites. Google seems to sometimes favor regionally relevant but less authoritative media, even if their overall organic ranking is mediocre. This aligns with the “organic” logic but reveals an exaggerated weight on proximity signals.
Second case: hyper-volatile queries (breaking news, live events). During the first hours of an event, ultra-rapid rotations in Top Stories can sometimes be observed, with sites appearing and disappearing within minutes. This suggests an algorithm that tests and adjusts in near-real-time, which exceeds the usual understanding of “normal organic ranking”.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely to appear in Top Stories?
Forget the idea of a specific “Top Stories” optimization. Focus on your overall authority: solid backlink profile, coherent internal linking, enhanced E-E-A-T. If your site doesn’t naturally rank in the top 10 on classic queries in your industry, it won’t rank in the news carousel either.
Next, work on editorial velocity. There's no point in publishing just anything to be fast, but you need a workflow that allows you to produce comprehensive and sourced content within 30 to 60 minutes following a major event. This requires streamlined internal processes, ready templates, and active monitoring.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?
First mistake: sacrificing depth for speed. An article published 10 minutes after the event but shallow, without analysis or sources, will not stand against a slower but more comprehensive competitor. Google values freshness, but not at the expense of quality.
Second mistake: believing that schema tags or AMP formats will compensate for a lack of authority. These elements help with readability and display but do not create magic ranking. If your site has a DR of 20 and you are up against DR 70+, no markup will change the outcome. First, work on the fundamentals.
How can I check if my site is well-positioned to benefit?
Test your ranking capability on recent queries in your industry. Take a news event that is less than 48 hours old and check if you appear in the top 20 organic results. If not, your authority or thematic relevance is insufficient.
Then, analyze your site's crawl speed. Google must revisit your critical pages (homepage, news sections) at least every hour. If your crawl budget is low and Googlebot only comes back every 2-3 days, even an excellent article will have no chance of appearing in Top Stories. Check in Search Console the crawl frequency on your strategic URLs.
- Audit the overall authority of the domain (DR, link profile, backlink quality)
- Measure the crawl speed on news sections (Search Console)
- Test organic ranking on recent queries in the industry
- Optimize the editorial workflow to publish comprehensive content within 60 minutes
- Enhance E-E-A-T signals (identified authors, cited sources, demonstrated expertise)
- Monitor the performance of competitors present in Top Stories and identify their strengths
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Est-ce que le format AMP est obligatoire pour apparaître dans Top Stories ?
Un site sans section actualité peut-il apparaître dans Top Stories ?
La fraîcheur du contenu suffit-elle à compenser un manque d'autorité ?
Pourquoi certains médias apparaissent systématiquement dans Top Stories et pas d'autres ?
Comment mesurer l'impact de Top Stories sur mon trafic ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 23/02/2018
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