Official statement
Other statements from this video 12 ▾
- 3:11 L'App Indexing devient-il vraiment plus simple avec Android App Linking ?
- 4:14 L'app-indexing booste-t-il vraiment votre ranking Google ?
- 4:14 L'app-indexing booste-t-il vraiment le ranking de votre site mobile ?
- 8:01 Pourquoi Google impose-t-il le schéma HTTP pour l'app-indexing ?
- 9:01 L'App Indexing API améliore-t-elle vraiment le classement de votre application ?
- 11:41 Comment exploiter les données d'app-indexing dans Search Console pour booster votre stratégie mobile ?
- 15:37 App-indexing : quelles erreurs techniques bloquent votre visibilité dans les SERP mobiles ?
- 18:31 L'app-indexing peut-il gérer plusieurs langues avec un seul lien profond ?
- 23:56 Pourquoi les opérateurs de recherche sont-ils inutilisables pour l'app-indexing ?
- 37:36 Google va-t-il enfin partager les données de trafic de l'app-indexing iOS ?
- 37:58 Comment Google détecte-t-il et combat-il le spam d'app-indexing ?
- 45:05 Pourquoi Google interdit-il les murs de paiement et les pop-ups de connexion dans les apps linkées depuis la recherche ?
Google claims that the app-indexing API can enhance rankings provided that accurate data about user interactions is sent: titles of viewed pages and interaction duration. Essentially, this means that an app that does not report these metrics loses a potential ranking lever. The issue: Google remains vague about the actual weight of this signal and the levels of interaction considered significant.
What you need to understand
What exactly is the app-indexing API?
The app-indexing API allows Google to index content present in native mobile applications and provide deep links (deep links) directly in search results. When a user searches for content available both on the web and in a installed app, Google may prioritize opening the app instead of the browser.
This API requires a technical implementation from the developer's side: every screen of the app must be associated with an equivalent URL and communicate navigation information to Google. Without this integration, the app remains invisible in mobile SERPs.
Why does Google ask for interaction data?
Google aims to measure the quality of user experience in the app to refine its ranking algorithm. Interaction data (title of the viewed page, time spent) helps differentiate genuinely viewed content from a mere accidental opening.
The page title helps Google understand which specific content has captured attention, while the interaction duration provides a proxy of satisfaction. A duration that is too short may indicate disappointing or poorly targeted content, even if the user technically opened the app.
Does this ranking boost only apply to apps or also to the web?
The ranking boost mentioned here specifically applies to app-indexing results in mobile SERPs. It does not directly alter the ranking of a traditional website but influences the visibility of deep links that compete with web URLs.
If you have both a website and a native app offering the same content, a well-integrated app with strong interaction signals can capture traffic that would normally go to your site. This redistributes the audience between channels rather than increasing the overall volume.
- App-indexing API: requires a technical implementation to expose app content in SERPs
- Interaction data: page title and time spent serve as quality signals for ranking
- Ranking boost: pertains to deep links in mobile results, not directly to the website
- Deep links: allow direct opening of a specific screen of the app from Google results
- Web/app competition: a well-optimized app can divert traffic from the website to the native environment
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with observed practices in the field?
Let's be honest: app-indexing remains an underutilized area by the majority of app publishers. Few native apps invest in this integration, and even fewer send structured interaction data to Google. Mariya's statement confirms what is observed: without these signals, there is no boost.
However, the actual weight of this signal in the overall algorithm remains [To be verified]. Google does not specify a minimum threshold for interaction duration or the weight of the signal compared to other ranking criteria (domain authority, backlinks, semantic relevance). Is a page title and interaction duration sufficient against a competitor with better authority? No public data confirms this.
What nuances should we add to this claim?
The interaction duration is an imperfect proxy for quality. A 200-word article can be read entirely in 30 seconds, while a 10-minute video mechanically generates a long duration without guaranteeing real engagement. Google does not specify how it normalizes these differences in format.
Additionally, some apps (tools, calculators, dashboards) generate short but high-value sessions: the user gets the information in a few seconds and leaves the app. Penalizing these uses with a blind algorithm would be counterproductive. [To be verified]: no documentation explains how Google handles these edge cases.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
If your strategy relies solely on a responsive website without a native app, this statement does not directly concern you. The app-indexing API is specific to iOS and Android native apps, not to progressive web apps (PWAs) or standard mobile sites.
Some sectors (niche e-commerce, local media, B2B sites) have no economic interest in maintaining a native app. In this context, investing in app-indexing rather than in mobile site optimization would be a strategic mistake. Focus on Core Web Vitals and the mobile experience of the site.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you have a native app?
First step: audit your current implementation of the app-indexing API. Ensure that each key screen of your app exposes a corresponding URL and that deep links work correctly from Google results. Use the app URL testing tool in the Search Console to identify indexing errors.
Next, integrate user interaction tracking. You need to send Google the title of the viewed page and the interaction duration through the dedicated API. Be careful: comply with GDPR regulations and obtain user consent before transmitting this behavioral data to Google.
What mistakes to avoid during implementation?
Do not confuse open duration with actual interaction duration. If the user opens the app and then switches to another task without closing the application, the timer should not continue to run. Google expects a measurement of active engagement time, not background time.
Also, avoid sending generic page titles ("Home", "Content", "Page 1") that do not help Google understand the actual topic. Each title should be descriptive and consistent with the title tag of the equivalent web URL to ensure semantic coherence between the app and the site.
How to measure the impact of these optimizations?
Monitor the evolution of impressions and clicks on your deep links in the Search Console (Performance > Apps section) after integrating interaction data. A ranking boost should result in increased visibility in mobile SERPs for queries targeting your app content.
Also, compare the click-through rate (CTR) between web results and app results for the same queries. If the app captures an increasing share of clicks, this validates that the interaction signal indeed improves the ranking of deep links compared to competing web URLs.
- Audit the current implementation of the app-indexing API and correct indexing errors
- Integrate tracking of active interaction duration (excluding background time)
- Send descriptive page titles consistent with web title tags
- Obtain GDPR consent before transmitting behavioral data to Google
- Monitor the evolution of impressions and clicks in the Search Console (Apps section)
- Compare app vs web CTR to measure traffic redistribution
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
L'API d'app-indexing fonctionne-t-elle pour les progressive web apps (PWA) ?
Quelle est la durée d'interaction minimale pour déclencher un effet positif sur le ranking ?
Faut-il envoyer les données d'interaction pour chaque utilisateur ou un échantillon suffit-il ?
Si mon site web et mon app proposent le même contenu, lequel Google favorise-t-il dans les SERP ?
Les données d'interaction envoyées à Google sont-elles soumises au RGPD ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 47 min · published on 29/10/2015
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