Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 1:37 Les commentaires de blog sont-ils vraiment un levier SEO exploitable ?
- 5:13 Les commentaires influencent-ils vraiment le classement dans Google ?
- 6:58 Pourquoi Google ne distingue-t-il pas les requêtes vocales dans la Search Console ?
- 12:03 La qualité prime-t-elle vraiment sur le volume en SEO ?
- 15:01 Les extraits enrichis marquent-ils la fin du trafic organique traditionnel ?
- 24:48 Comment hreflang permet-il de gérer le contenu dupliqué entre pays ?
- 27:42 Comment Google indexe-t-il vraiment vos images pour Google Images ?
- 36:11 Le rendu dynamique tue-t-il votre crawl budget Google ?
- 39:21 Les sitemaps accélèrent-ils vraiment l'indexation des mises à jour ?
- 41:11 Un site répertoire peut-il ranker sans contenu unique ?
- 61:45 Pourquoi Google continue-t-il d'exécuter du JavaScript même quand vous utilisez du SSR ?
Google confirms that an optimized internal linking structure, combined with descriptive anchors, can guide the engine to deep pages rather than the homepage for certain queries. In practice, even if your homepage receives the most backlinks, a good internal linking strategy can redistribute thematic relevance. The challenge: proving to the algorithm which page deserves to rank for which term, without relying solely on raw PageRank.
What you need to understand
Why does the homepage often monopolize rankings?
The homepage mechanically captures most external backlinks. Logos in footers, corporate citations, directories: everything naturally points to the root of the domain. As a result, it accumulates PageRank and Google perceives it as the most 'important' page of the site.
The problem? This raw authority does not guarantee thematic relevance. A SaaS company selling three distinct products will see its homepage rank for transactional queries while a dedicated page converts better. Google hesitates, lacking clear signals.
How does internal linking influence the distribution of relevance?
Each internal link transmits PageRank but more importantly, semantic context. A descriptive anchor — let’s say 'SEO technical audit' — pointing to a page /services/audit/ sends two signals: this page deserves some juice, and it deals with this specific subject.
Multiply this signal from 10, 20, 50 pages of the site, and Google understands that /services/audit/ is the internal reference on this theme. The homepage, even if more powerful in raw PageRank, loses semantic specificity. The algorithm then prefers the targeted page for specialized queries.
What does a truly descriptive anchor look like in practice?
Forget about 'click here' or 'learn more'. A descriptive anchor uses the exact vocabulary of the target query or a close synonym. Example: 'Google Analytics 4 training' instead of 'our analytics training'.
The trap: over-optimization. Varying formulations is essential — 'learning GA4', 'advanced Analytics course' — to avoid manipulation patterns. Google detects cloned anchors and may downgrade the signal.
- Internal PageRank dilutes: each link leaving a page shares its juice among all its destinations.
- Contextual anchors weigh more than generic anchors or repeated footer links throughout the site.
- The link's position in the DOM matters: a link in the main content beats a link in the sidebar or footer in terms of signal value.
- Thematic consistency amplifies the effect: a link from a related page (same cluster) transmits more relevance than a link from an off-topic page.
- The volume of internal links to a page indicates its strategic priority: Google deduces it deserves more crawl attention and weight in the index.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with real-world observations?
Absolutely. Hundreds of tests show that you can boost a deep page by enhancing its internal linking, even without new backlinks. I've seen product pages jump from position 15 to top 3 simply by adding 20 contextual links from blog posts with targeted anchors.
But — and this is where Mueller remains vague — the effect heavily depends on the overall trust of the domain and the competitiveness of the query. In a saturated market (insurance, credit), internal linking alone does not work miracles without fresh backlinks. [To be verified]: Google never quantifies the relative weight of internal links vs. external backlinks.
What limits does this strategy face in reality?
First pitfall: PageRank dilution. If your homepage points to 150 links in the footer, each receives crumbs. Adding 10 contextual links to your priority page in the main content changes the game — but only if you clean up the footer.
Second limit: the signal-to-noise ratio. A site that over-optimizes all its anchors in exact match triggers algorithmic filters. The key is balance: 60-70% of varied descriptive anchors, 30-40% of branded or generic anchors to maintain a natural profile.
In what situations does this approach fail despite everything?
When the content of the target page is too weak. You can send 100 internal links to a 200-word page without added value: Google will understand the intent but will not rank an empty shell. Internal linking amplifies; it does not create relevance ex nihilo.
Another failure case: sites with a flat architecture where all pages are one click away from the homepage. Paradoxically, too much linking kills the linking. Google no longer sees hierarchy, so it cannot identify the priority pages. It requires thematic silos and differentiated click depth.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you prioritize auditing on your current site?
Start by identifying your underperforming strategic pages: those that convert well but rank on pages 2-3, or that have solid content but little visibility. Cross-reference Search Console (impressions without clicks) with your business objectives.
Next, map the existing linking with Screaming Frog or Oncrawl: which pages receive how many internal links, with which anchors. Identify imbalances: homepage with 500 incoming links, flagship product page with 8.
How to restructure linking without breaking everything?
Create thematic hubs: a pillar page per keyword cluster, receiving links from the homepage AND from all satellite pages in the cluster. The satellites link to each other and rise to the hub. Classic but effective silo architecture.
Optimize anchors progressively: first replace 'learn more' with semi-descriptive anchors ('discover our technical SEO methodology'), then refine towards more targeted anchors. Track positions weekly to detect any over-optimization.
What mistakes block the effect of internal linking?
Anchor cannibalization: 10 pages mutually linking with the same exact anchor create noise. Google no longer knows which to prioritize. Solution: differentiated anchors by source page, even if targeting the same goal.
Non-crawlable JavaScript links: if your menus or contextual links load in JS after the initial DOM, Google may ignore them. Check in Search Console (URL inspection) that your links appear in the rendered HTML.
- Identify 5-10 underused priority pages in Search Console (high impressions, low CTR)
- Audit the number of internal links received by these pages vs. the homepage (target ratio: at least 30% of homepage volume)
- List 20-30 candidate pages to insert contextual links to your priorities (editorial content, guides, FAQs)
- Write varied descriptive anchors (minimum 3 formulations per target page) and integrate them naturally into the existing content
- Clean up footers and sidebars: limit to 10-15 links maximum, favor corporate pages (legal mentions, contact)
- Track position changes over 60-90 days via segmented rank tracker by priority page
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de liens internes faut-il vers une page pour influencer son classement ?
Les liens footer ou sidebar comptent-ils autant que les liens dans le contenu ?
Peut-on sur-optimiser les ancres de maillage interne comme on sur-optimise les backlinks ?
Le maillage interne peut-il compenser un déficit de backlinks externes ?
Faut-il privilégier la profondeur de clic ou le nombre de liens internes ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h01 · published on 05/04/2019
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