Official statement
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- 3:50 How should you handle duplicate content when managing multiple distinct entities?
- 4:25 Should you duplicate your content for every local establishment or consolidate it on a single page?
- 6:18 How can massive DMCA removals destroy the ranking of an entire website?
- 6:18 Can mass DMCA takedowns really harm a site's ranking?
- 7:18 Should you favor a subdomain or a subdirectory for hosting your AMP pages?
- 7:22 Where is the best place to host your AMP pages: subdomain, subdirectory, or parameter?
- 8:25 Does the canonical tag really work if the pages are different?
- 8:35 Should you really remove rel=canonical from your paginated pages?
- 10:04 Can scraping really devastate the SEO of a low-authority site?
- 11:23 Does the server's IP address still influence local search rankings?
- 11:45 Does your server's IP address still impact your local SEO?
- 13:39 Are clickable images without an <a> tag really invisible to Google?
- 13:39 Can a link without an <a> tag pass on PageRank?
- 15:11 How does Google really index your AMP pages when there's a noindex?
- 15:13 Does a noindex tag on an HTML page really prevent the indexing of its associated AMP version?
- 18:21 How long does it take to recover after a complete manual action?
- 18:25 How long does it take to recover from a Google manual action?
- 21:59 Should you include keywords in your domain name to rank better?
- 22:43 Should you really index your robots.txt file in Google?
- 24:08 Why does Google Cache display your page differently from the actual rendering?
- 25:29 DMCA or disavow: Why does Google prefer one over the other to handle duplicate content and toxic backlinks?
- 28:19 Does crawl rate really impact rankings on Google?
- 28:19 Is your server holding back Google’s crawl more than you realize?
- 31:00 Are social signals really useless for Google ranking?
- 31:25 Do social profiles really improve Google rankings?
- 32:03 Do multiple social profiles really boost your SEO?
- 33:00 Are link directories truly overlooked by Google?
- 36:14 Should you enable HSTS immediately when migrating a domain to HTTPS?
- 42:35 Why do review stars take so long to show up on Google?
- 52:00 Does stock level really influence the ranking of your product listings?
Google overlooks links from directories where you submit your own content because they don’t reflect any genuine editorial recommendation. This statement confirms what SEOs have observed for years: automated backlinking tactics have become ineffective. Essentially, this means you should focus your efforts on link acquisition strategies that generate real mentions, not mass submissions.
What you need to understand
Why does Google treat directories differently from other backlink sources?
Google's stance is straightforward: a link is only valuable if it represents an editorial recommendation. When you submit yourself to a directory, you control the content, the anchor text, and the description. No third party has verified your relevance or quality.
Directories used to easily manipulate PageRank. You would create a listing, add your keywords in the anchor text, and that was it. That era is over. The algorithm has evolved to detect these patterns of automated or semi-automated submissions.
What constitutes a 'true' backlink according to this logic?
An authentic editorial link meets several criteria: someone chooses to mention your site without you having controlled the source page's content. The writer decides on the anchor text, context, and location of the link. There is editorial thought behind it.
Self-submitted directories do not meet any of these criteria. You fill out a form, validate it, and your link appears. No one has assessed your content before creating the link. This lack of validation is precisely what nullifies the backlink’s value.
Does this rule apply to all directories without exception?
Mueller specifically discusses directories where you submit yourself content. The nuance is important. Some directories operate with strict editorial validation, a manual selection process, or active curation.
If a directory rejects 80% of submissions and applies rigorous editorial criteria, it is closer to a traditional media outlet. But let’s be honest: most SEO directories accept everyone with just a form or a payment.
- Self-submitted links are ignored because they do not constitute an editorial recommendation
- Content control by the submitter nullifies the value of the link
- Some curated directories may still hold value if they apply genuine editorial selection
- Pattern detection of mass submissions is now automated by Google
- The effort invested in general directories is better spent elsewhere
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Absolutely. SEOs testing backlink strategies have long noticed that directory campaigns no longer shift the needle. You can submit your site to 100 directories and see no movement in the SERPs.
What still works is contextual backlinking: mentions in articles, editorial links earned through quality content, citations from relevant thematic sources. General directories have not entered this category for years.
Are there exceptions to this general rule?
Yes, and this is where nuance comes in. Not all directories are created equal. A highly specialized directory within your industry, with an active community and strict moderation, can still provide indirect value.
I’m not talking about direct SEO value via the link, but about qualified traffic, industry recognition, discoverability. If a potential customer consults this directory to find a service provider, your presence makes sense. But don’t count on the link to boost your ranking. [To verify]: Can Google differentiate a curated directory from a spam directory? Probably yes, through behavioral signals (bounce rate, time spent, etc.), but the exact mechanics remain opaque.
Should you delete all your existing directory links?
No, that would be a waste of time. Google says it ignores these links, not that it penalizes them. Your backlink profile can contain hundreds of worthless links without causing any issues.
The energy spent on cleaning ignored links is better invested in acquiring new quality editorial links. Focus on what adds value, not on what doesn’t. The only exception concerns clearly spam or illegal directories that could trigger a manual action, but that’s marginal.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if you've invested time in directories?
Immediately stop any ongoing submission campaigns. Your time is your most valuable resource, and self-submitted directories do not generate any measurable return in terms of ranking.
Redirect your efforts towards strategies that work: creation of linkable content, digital press relations, editorial partnerships. One contextual link from an industry media is worth more than 50 directory listings.
How do you identify directories that still have utility?
Ask yourself three simple questions. First: are my potential customers using this directory to find service providers? If yes, being present makes sense for business reasons, not SEO.
Second: does the directory apply strict editorial selection? If anyone can sign up in 5 minutes, the answer is no. Third: does the platform generate measurable qualified traffic to your site? Check your analytics. If a directory sends you 2 visitors a year, your listing is pointless.
What alternatives should you prioritize to build a solid backlink profile?
Content marketing remains the most effective lever. Create resources that other sites will want to cite naturally: industry studies, original infographics, free tools, in-depth analyses. These assets generate spontaneous links without you needing to ask for them.
Digital PR strategies also work: identify journalists covering your topic, offer them exclusive angles, become an expert source. A link from a recognized media outlet has measurable impact, unlike a directory.
These optimizations require time, expertise, and a long-term strategic vision. If you lack internal resources or want to accelerate your results, hiring a specialized SEO agency will provide personalized support and proven methods to build a robust, sustainable backlink profile.
- Stop any submission campaigns to general directories
- Audit existing directories to identify those generating qualified traffic
- Invest in creating linkable content (studies, tools, resources)
- Develop relationships with industry media and influencers
- Measure the real impact of each backlink through analytics and ranking tracking
- Prioritize editorial quality over the quantity of links
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Google pénalise-t-il les sites qui ont des liens d'annuaires ?
Les annuaires locaux comme Google Business Profile sont-ils concernés ?
Comment Google détecte-t-il qu'un lien provient d'un annuaire auto-soumis ?
Un annuaire payant a-t-il plus de valeur qu'un gratuit ?
Faut-il désavouer les liens d'annuaires existants ?
🎥 From the same video 32
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h00 · published on 27/07/2018
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