Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 1:06 Pourquoi Google ajuste-t-il ses algorithmes tous les jours sans nous prévenir ?
- 2:40 Pourquoi Google News envoie-t-il du trafic direct dans vos stats Analytics ?
- 5:18 La qualité du site suffit-elle vraiment à garantir un bon classement Google ?
- 9:19 Le temps de chargement influence-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 10:31 Le meta tag 'unavailable after' retire-t-il vraiment une page de l'index Google à date fixe ?
- 14:09 Faut-il encore un sitemap mobile séparé pour votre site en 2025 ?
- 14:11 Les rich snippets disparaissent-ils quand Google juge votre site de mauvaise qualité ?
- 16:56 Les liens NoFollow sont-ils vraiment sans impact sur votre SEO ?
- 22:58 Pourquoi vos données Search Console et Analytics ne correspondent-elles jamais ?
- 24:02 Faut-il vraiment ignorer les liens NoFollow issus d'attaques négatives ?
- 27:14 Faut-il arrêter de chercher le facteur de classement miracle qui fera monter votre site ?
- 38:01 Pourquoi un changement de site ralentit-il l'indexation de vos pages ?
- 42:23 Faut-il vraiment mettre à jour ses pages statiques pour rester visible dans Google ?
Google confirms the full deployment of Mobile-Friendly with some minor technical adjustments remaining. Mobile-optimized sites benefit from an advantage in mobile search results, but this criterion does not exclude non-mobile sites from the SERPs. In practical terms, it's a ranking factor among others, not a binary filter that eliminates stubborn sites.
What you need to understand
What does Google mean by 'favored but not exclusive'?
This wording deserves attention. Google asserts that mobile-friendly sites receive a boost in mobile search results, but non-optimized sites remain eligible for ranking. It's a ranking signal, not an eligibility criterion.
Specifically, if your content better meets the search intent than a mobile-friendly competitor, you can still rank even with a desktop-only site. The difference? You start at a disadvantage. Google applies a relative penalty rather than a harsh exclusion.
Why are we still talking about minor adjustments after deployment?
Google's algorithms never completely freeze. A 'completed' deployment means that the core of the update is in production, but teams continue to refine parameters by observing user behaviors and side effects.
These post-deployment adjustments typically correct edge cases: hybrid sites, specific content that triggered false positives, or scoring thresholds that need recalibration. For an SEO practitioner, this means that minor fluctuations in the weeks following the official announcement are normal and expected.
Was the term 'Mobilegeddon' justified in retrospect?
The industry dramatized the impact of this update with an apocalyptic nickname. The ground reality has been less catastrophic than expected for most sites. The biggest losers? Desktop-only e-commerce sites and media outlets that ignored Google's previous signals.
However, sites with unique content and little mobile-friendly competition have maintained their positions. The mobile-friendly signal acts as a tie-breaker when several results are equal in relevance. Less revolution, more gradual evolution of scoring.
- Mobile-friendly is a positive ranking factor, not an exclusion filter in the mobile SERPs
- Post-deployment adjustments are normal and correct edge cases detected in production
- The actual impact depends on the level of mobile competition in your niche
- Exceptional content can partially compensate for a mobile handicap
- The signal mainly acts as a decider between equally high-quality results
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field observations?
Yes, and it's rare for Google to be this transparent about the mechanics of a signal. Ranking tracking data confirms a measurable advantage for mobile-friendly sites, but no systematic collapse for others. Typically, non-optimized sites lose an average of 2-4 positions in competitive sectors.
What’s interesting is the notion of 'favored but not exclusive'. Google explicitly admits that a desktop site can still rank in mobile if its relevance outweighs the competition. In practice, this usually happens on niche queries or very specialized content where the mobile-friendly offering is low.
What nuances should be added to this statement?
First nuance: the weight of the mobile-friendly signal varies by search context. For transactional or local queries, the impact is much stronger than for complex informational searches. Google adjusts scoring based on the type of intent.
Second nuance: mobile-friendly does not equal mobile performance. Passing the basic test is not enough if your site loads in 8 seconds or if the UX is terrible. The signal captures basic technical adaptability, not the quality of the actual experience. Core Web Vitals and other UX metrics complete the picture.
What do 'a few minor adjustments' mean in practice?
This vague wording merits a [To be verified]. Google often uses this language to downplay post-update variations that can be significant for some sites. 'Minor adjustments' can last several weeks and create volatility in mobile SERPs.
For a practitioner, this means that a drop in mobile traffic within 3-4 weeks post-update does not necessarily warrant a complete overhaul. Wait for stabilization before drawing conclusions. If the loss persists beyond a month, then it is structural.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be prioritized when checking your site?
Start with the official Google Search Console Mobile-Friendly test. It's the absolute reference, not third-party tools. Test your main templates: homepage, category pages, product sheets, articles. A site can be partially mobile-friendly with problematic pages that drag down the overall scoring.
Next, analyze common configuration errors: undefined viewport, font too small, clickable elements too close. These technical details are detected by Googlebot Mobile and directly affect the signal. A poorly calibrated responsive CSS can suffice to make you lose the label.
What critical mistakes must be absolutely avoided?
First mistake: serving different content between desktop and mobile without correct configuration. If you maintain a separate version at m.example.com, the rel=alternate and rel=canonical annotations must be impeccable. Google hates content inconsistencies between versions.
Second frequent mistake: blocking CSS/JS resources in robots.txt. Googlebot Mobile must be able to render the page completely to assess its adaptability. Blocking these resources = guaranteed failure on the mobile-friendly test, even if your design is technically responsive.
How can you measure the actual impact on your mobile traffic?
Segment your organic traffic in Analytics: compare mobile vs. desktop performance before and after optimization. Pay particular attention to the bounce rate and duration of mobile sessions, which reveal whether the experience matches the technique.
In Search Console, filter data by device type and identify pages losing mobile impressions compared to desktop. It's a direct indicator that these pages are not passing the mobile-friendly filter or are suffering from other mobile UX issues.
- Test all critical templates with the official Google Mobile-Friendly tool
- Ensure that CSS and JS are not blocked in robots.txt
- Check consistency between mobile and desktop versions (content, links, structured data)
- Measure Core Web Vitals specifically on mobile (LCP, FID, CLS)
- Segment organic traffic by device in Analytics to detect mobile losses
- Monitor Mobile Usability errors in Search Console after each change
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site non mobile-friendly peut-il encore apparaître dans les résultats mobiles ?
Quelle est la différence entre mobile-friendly et mobile-first indexing ?
Le test Mobile-Friendly de Google est-il fiable à 100% ?
Faut-il privilégier un site responsive ou des versions séparées desktop/mobile ?
Les Progressive Web Apps (PWA) sont-elles considérées comme mobile-friendly ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 21/05/2015
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