Can't Get a Google Ranking? These 5 Questions You May Be Asking Every Day

Anyone running a website cares about Google. But after months of effort, traffic just won't go up—you've written content, built backlinks, so what's the real problem? I've summarized the most frequently asked questions and will address them all at once.

1. Why did my Google search ranking suddenly drop?

Don't panic first. Google's algorithm updates frequently, and ranking fluctuations are often temporary. But if your rankings keep dropping, the most common reasons are: content being deemed low-quality, slow site loading, or being overtaken by competitors.

Also, a common issue many overlook: is your site using a lot of duplicate content? Google's requirements for content originality are getting stricter. If you publish the same article on multiple sites or mass-copy others' content, it's only a matter of time before you get penalized.

2. Will Google penalize AI-written articles?

This is the most sensitive question right now. Google officially says they don't penalize AI content itself, but rather "low-quality content written for SEO." In practice, however, articles that are entirely AI-generated with no human editing are no different from spam in Google's eyes.

I've seen people use seo123 to batch-produce articles and directly post them on dozens of sites, only to have all of them de-indexed two months later. What went wrong? Not the tool itself, but the lack of secondary processing. AI-generated content needs real cases, reworded sentences, and actual screenshots inserted to make it look like it was written by a human. seo123 can save you time on drafting, but you can't skip the review and modification step.

3. How to manage multiple sites without getting messy?

Many people have a dozen or even dozens of sites, each requiring logging into the backend, posting articles, and checking indexing—eating up an entire day. Tools like seo123 are designed to solve this: they unify all sites into one backend and allow one-click article posting. But there's a trap: if all your sites' content is highly similar, Google can easily identify the site group pattern and penalize all of them.

The right approach is: each site should have a distinct theme and style, with different content structures and keyword layouts. seo123 supports setting different writing templates for different sites—this feature must be used. Don't take shortcuts by using one template for everything.

4. Can tools like seo123 actually be used?

Yes, but with conditions. seo123 is positioned as "content automation," not just a tool for posting articles. Its core value lies in batch generation and unified distribution. For someone managing dozens of sites alone, it indeed saves a lot of time.

But you need to understand its limits: it can't help you get rankings, nor can it bypass Google's review. Content quality ultimately depends on the materials and edits you provide. If you directly post articles generated by it as-is, the results will be poor. I suggest using seo123 as a "draft generator" and spending at least 10 minutes manually adjusting each article.

5. Is one-click distribution to GitHub, Telegram, and blogs useful?

It's useful, but don't overestimate it. Many people think posting articles to multiple platforms will boost Google rankings, but Google doesn't care how many platforms you post on—it cares about backlink quality and content relevance. Syncing articles to GitHub and Telegram has the benefit of expanding your ecosystem, allowing readers to find you through different channels. But expecting this to directly improve your Google ranking is unrealistic.

What truly helps rankings is having articles appear on authoritative sites or being shared by popular people. Tools can help with distribution, but distribution doesn't equal ranking.

To sum up: The core of Google rankings has always been content and user value. Tools can improve efficiency, but they can't replace thinking. If you're just piling on quantity without focusing on quality, no automation system can save you.