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Official statement

It is acceptable to cover multiple topics on a website or blog as long as they are relevant to your audience and provide value. The key question: would your audience find this content useful by coming directly to you, or are you writing it only for search traffic?
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 21/10/2022 ✂ 21 statements
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Other statements from this video 20
  1. Pourquoi Google ne peut-il jamais garantir que vos utilisateurs atterriront sur la bonne version linguistique de votre site ?
  2. Faut-il bannir les redirections automatiques pour les sites multilingues ?
  3. Faut-il bloquer l'exécution JavaScript pour les SPA avec SSR ?
  4. Faut-il baliser les mots étrangers avec l'attribut lang pour le SEO ?
  5. Le contenu dupliqué entraîne-t-il vraiment une pénalité Google ?
  6. Le rel=canonical est-il vraiment pris en compte par Google ou juste une suggestion ignorée ?
  7. Les FAQ dans les articles de blog sont-elles vraiment utiles pour le SEO ?
  8. Hreflang est-il vraiment obligatoire pour gérer un site international ?
  9. Le cache Google a-t-il un impact sur votre référencement ?
  10. Les résultats de recherche localisés : comment Google adapte-t-il vraiment son algorithme selon les pays et les langues ?
  11. Le noindex est-il vraiment inutile pour gérer le budget de crawl ?
  12. Combien de liens peut-on vraiment mettre sur une page sans pénalité Google ?
  13. L'URL référente dans Search Console impacte-t-elle vraiment votre classement ?
  14. Le nombre de mots est-il vraiment inutile pour le référencement ?
  15. Faut-il s'inquiéter de réutiliser les mêmes blocs de texte sur plusieurs pages ?
  16. Google valide-t-il vraiment la traduction automatique sur les sites multilingues ?
  17. Les URLs bloquées par robots.txt mais indexées posent-elles vraiment problème ?
  18. Faut-il vraiment dupliquer le schema Organisation sur toutes les pages du site ?
  19. Les avis auto-hébergés peuvent-ils afficher des étoiles dans les résultats de recherche Google ?
  20. Pourquoi les fusions de sites Web génèrent-elles des résultats imprévisibles aux yeux de Google ?
📅
Official statement from (3 years ago)
TL;DR

Google confirms that a website can cover multiple topics without penalty, provided these topics are relevant to the target audience. The decisive criterion: would your content be useful to someone visiting your site directly, or are you creating it solely to capture organic traffic? This distinction between real value and opportunistic optimization remains the core principle of quality evaluation.

What you need to understand

Why does Google emphasize audience relevance rather than strict thematic consistency?

For years, SEO dogma insisted that a site focus on an ultra-specific niche to establish its thematic authority. Google nuances this position: what matters is relevance to your actual audience, not artificial thematic consistency.

In practice? A fitness blog can discuss nutrition, sports equipment, muscle recovery, and even mental health — as long as these topics legitimately interest readers who come for fitness content. The question isn't "are these topics in the same Wikipedia category," but "would my audience naturally expect to find this information here?"

How does Google distinguish between legitimate diversification and SEO opportunism?

Sassman's criterion is brutally simple: would you write this content if search traffic didn't exist? If someone typed your URL directly, would they find this topic logical on your site?

This is a reframing of the intrinsic value test — and it's harder to game than it seems. A plumbing site that suddenly publishes 50 articles on cryptocurrencies because it's trending doesn't pass this test. A renovation site that discusses plumbing, electrical work, insulation, and interior design does.

Does this position contradict the concept of thematic authority?

No — it reframes it. Thematic authority remains a factor, but Google now defines it by audience rather than rigid taxonomy. Your authority isn't determined by Wikipedia or academic classification, but by who you are to your visitors.

If you're perceived as a lifestyle reference for young parents, discussing childcare AND family finances AND home improvement isn't dilution — it's a coherent extension of your positioning.

  • Thematic diversity is permitted if it serves a defined audience, not if it chases opportunistic keywords
  • The decisive test remains: "would someone visiting directly find this content expected here?"
  • Thematic authority builds around an audience, not strict semantic categories
  • Google seeks to identify content created solely for organic traffic versus content that provides real value

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we observe in practice?

Yes and no. The best-ranking sites in competitive verticals remain ultra-specialized — think Healthline for health or NerdWallet for finance. Thematic diversity exists for them, but remains firmly anchored within a clear scope.

Conversely, we do see more generalist sites perform well — provided they've built strong editorial identity and loyal audience. The problem? This statement doesn't specify the threshold. At what point does diversity become problematic? [To verify]: Google has never provided a metric or indicator allowing practitioners to objectively measure whether your thematic diversity remains "relevant to your audience."

What risks does this vague directive pose for practitioners?

The danger lies in expansive interpretation. Many will read "you can cover multiple topics" and launch into opportunistic diversification, thinking it suffices to justify each topic with a tenuous link to the audience.

Let's be honest — the criterion "useful to someone visiting directly" is subjective and difficult to operationalize. Who decides this utility? Quality Raters, the algorithm, behavioral traffic? Google doesn't say. And that's where it breaks down: without measurable guardrails, this directive leaves the door open to both abuses and false positives.

Caution: This apparent flexibility doesn't mean anything goes. Sites that diversify too broadly without real coherence risk dilution of perceived authority and overall performance decline, even without explicit algorithmic penalty.

In what cases does this rule fail to protect against performance loss?

A site can technically respect this directive — audience-relevant content — yet see its rankings decline. Why? Because thematic competition remains fierce. If you expand into topics where ultra-specialized players already dominate, your generalist authority won't carry weight.

Concrete example: a travel site adding a "personal finances for travelers" section might find it coherent for its audience. But against NerdWallet or Investopedia on finance queries, it has no chance — even if Google doesn't penalize it for creating this content. Audience relevance doesn't equal ranking ability.

Practical impact and recommendations

How do you assess whether thematic diversification is relevant for your site?

Start by asking brutally: if Google disappeared tomorrow, would you publish this content? If the answer is "probably not," you're in opportunistic optimization territory.

Next, test audience coherence. Look at your repeat visitors, email subscribers, social followers — do these people legitimately expect to find this new topic from you? Analyze behavioral data: do users consuming your content A naturally browse content B? If sessions remain siloed, that's a red flag.

What mistakes should you avoid when expanding thematically?

Never create a thematic section in isolation with no navigation links to the rest of your site. That's an obvious red flag that this content exists solely to chase organic traffic. Google spots these disconnected silo structures.

Also avoid sudden, massive diversification. Moving from 100% fitness to 50% fitness / 50% nutrition in three months sends a signal of suspicious editorial pivot. Expansion should be gradual, tested, validated by real engagement before intensification.

  • Apply the direct value test: "would someone typing my URL find this topic logical?"
  • Analyze behavioral data to identify natural thematic extensions (pages viewed together, user journeys)
  • Verify that each new topic has a clear editorial link to your audience positioning
  • Avoid isolated thematic sections without interconnection to the rest of your content
  • Diversify progressively — abrupt expansion is a red flag for algorithms
  • Monitor engagement metrics (time on page, bounce rate, pages per session) on new content
  • Don't enter head-to-head competition with ultra-specialized players on their home turf

Thematic expansion is a legitimate strategy — but it demands rigor and editorial consistency. The risk of authority dilution or contradictory signals to algorithms is real.

These strategic decisions — identifying relevant thematic extensions, structuring architecture to preserve coherence, monitoring performance signals — are complex to navigate alone. A specialized SEO agency can support you through this analysis, cross-referencing behavioral data, competitive analysis, and gradual testing to validate each thematic extension without risking your existing authority.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Un site e-commerce peut-il avoir un blog traitant de sujets variés sans risque SEO ?
Oui, tant que ces sujets sont pertinents pour vos acheteurs. Un site vendant du matériel de camping peut parler randonnée, survie, météo, écologie outdoor — tout ce qui intéresse naturellement quelqu'un venant acheter une tente. L'important est que l'audience trouve ce contenu attendu, pas que tous les sujets appartiennent à la même catégorie produit.
Comment savoir si j'ai dépassé la limite de diversité thématique acceptable ?
Google ne donne aucun seuil chiffré. Surveillez vos métriques d'engagement : si les nouveaux contenus ont des taux de rebond élevés, aucune navigation vers le reste du site, et que seul le trafic organique les alimente, c'est un signal que vous êtes probablement dans l'opportunisme. Le comportement utilisateur est votre meilleur indicateur.
Est-ce que créer du contenu pour des requêtes à fort volume hors-sujet est désormais autorisé ?
Non. La directive de Google n'est pas un feu vert pour le keyword stuffing thématique. Si vous créez du contenu uniquement parce qu'un mot-clé a 50k recherches mensuelles, sans que ce sujet ait un sens pour votre audience réelle, vous restez dans la zone à risque.
Les sites d'actualités ou magazines généralistes sont-ils avantagés par cette position ?
Ils bénéficient effectivement d'une plus grande latitude, car leur positionnement éditorial même est d'être généralistes. Un journal peut légitimement parler politique, économie, sport, culture — c'est attendu. Mais un blog de niche qui veut imiter ce modèle sans avoir construit cette identité éditoriale large risque la dilution.
Faut-il séparer les sujets différents dans des sous-domaines ou sous-répertoires distincts ?
Non, pas nécessairement — et parfois c'est contre-productif. Si les sujets sont pertinents pour la même audience, les garder sur le même domaine renforce votre autorité globale. Séparer en sous-domaines ne vous protège pas d'une éventuelle perception de contenu opportuniste, et vous fait perdre les bénéfices de consolidation d'autorité.
🏷 Related Topics
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 21/10/2022

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