Official statement
Other statements from this video 2 ▾
Google requires that any reconsideration request begins with an explicit acknowledgment of the violations committed and a detailed account of the corrective actions taken. Vague or incomplete requests slow down processing by the quality team. Practically, this means documenting each identified infraction and proving that the cleanup has been done; otherwise, your request will be dismissed outright.
What you need to understand
Why does Google emphasize prior acknowledgment so much?
The logic is simple: Google does not want to waste time debating with site owners who deny the obvious. The quality team receives thousands of reconsideration requests each month, and filtering sincere cases from evasion attempts is costly in terms of human resources.
By requiring a detailed acknowledgment, Google forces the site owner to conduct a full audit themselves before submitting anything. This immediately eliminates requests where the webmaster hasn't truly understood what is wrong. If you can't precisely name your infractions, you probably haven't corrected them.
What does "clearly detailing corrective measures" mean in practice?
Google expects factual evidence, not promises. A statement like "We have removed all artificial links" is not enough. You need to list the affected domains, the number of disavowed backlinks, the modified URLs, the removed plugins; in short: be specific.
This requirement also reveals that Google will not do the work for you. Contrary to what some might hope, the reconsideration team will not investigate your site to identify your violations. Their role is limited to validating that what you claim to have corrected has indeed been corrected.
How does a vague request slow down processing?
When you send a generic request like "We think we have followed the guidelines," the team has to dig manually to understand what you have actually done. This multiplies the analysis time by three or four, pushing your case to the bottom of the pile.
Worse still, a vague request can lead to an automatic rejection without thorough examination. Google interprets a lack of precision as a signal of bad faith or incompetence. The result: you lose weeks or even months before you can submit a new request.
- Explicit acknowledgment of identified violations (no evasive phrasing)
- Precise documentation of corrective actions with supporting evidence (screenshots, lists, logs)
- Total transparency regarding the scope of the problem and the methods employed to solve it
- Structured format that facilitates quick reading by Google's quality team
- Clear commitment to future compliance with the guidelines without any doublespeak
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement align with field practices?
Yes, and that is even an understatement. Experiences show that poorly crafted reconsideration requests are rejected in 80 to 90% of cases. Google is not bluffing when it speaks of the need for precision. I have seen sites remain penalized for a year simply because the owner refused to admit they had bought backlinks.
What is less mentioned is that Google is likely using your admissions as training data to improve the automatic detection of violations. By precisely describing your black hat techniques, you indirectly help Google refine its algorithms. Ironic, but strategically logical on their part.
What nuances should be added to this guideline?
The first nuance: admitting does not mean spilling everything. If you have identified three types of violations but Google has only penalized one, focus on that one. Avoid pointing out issues that the algorithm has not yet detected; you would be shooting yourself in the foot.
The second nuance: the concept of "violation" is sometimes subjective. Some borderline cases (mass guest blogging but editorialized, for example) may be interpreted differently depending on the reviewer. In these gray areas, adopt a humble tone without overly berating yourself. [To verify]: Google has never published a clear grading scale for human reviewers, so their margin of appreciation remains opaque.
In what cases might this rule not fully apply?
There are situations where you have been penalized without having committed an intentional violation. Typically: massive negative SEO or a shady service provider who acted without your agreement. In this case, "recognition" becomes tricky. You must explain the context without denying the technical reality of the infractions.
Another exception: algorithmic penalties that do not go through Search Console. Some traffic drops resemble manual penalties but are not. In these cases, you have nothing to "admit" since there has been no manual action by Google. The problem is that many SEOs confuse algorithmic filters and manual penalties and send unnecessary reconsideration requests that clog up Google’s teams.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do before submitting a reconsideration request?
Start with a thorough audit of all dubious practices from the last 12 months at a minimum. List each non-editorialized backlink, every link exchange, every PBN, and every suspicious automation. Even if you think some practices are borderline, document them.
Then, correct everything that can be corrected. Remove artificial links at the source when possible, disavow the others via the Disavow file. Clean up duplicate content, remove doorway pages, delete hidden text. Keep a timestamped record of each action (screenshots, CSV exports, server logs).
How to structure the request to maximize approval chances?
Structure your request in three distinct blocks: (1) Acknowledgment of violations with precise typology, (2) Detailed description of corrective actions with evidence, (3) Formal commitment to future compliance with guidelines. Use short paragraphs and bullet points to facilitate quick reading.
Include quantifiable data wherever relevant: "427 disavowed backlinks from 38 domains," "removal of 94 auto-generated pages," "removal of plugin X installed on [date]." The more precise, the more credible. Absolutely avoid marketing jargon or empty phrases like "we commit to following best practices."
What critical mistakes should be avoided?
Never downplay the extent of violations. If you've bought 500 backlinks, don't say "a few sponsored links." Google has the data; they know the extent. Lying or downplaying leads to immediate rejection and undermines your credibility for future requests.
The second fatal error: submitting a request before actually correcting the issues. Some webmasters think they can save time by sending the request while they're still cleaning up. The result: automatic rejection and a prolonged wait before they can resubmit. Google checks, and they check thoroughly.
- Comprehensive audit of the last 12 months with documentation of all dubious practices
- Effective correction of 100% of identified violations with timestamped evidence
- Updated Disavow file submitted at least 48 hours before the reconsideration request
- Structured writing in three blocks (acknowledgment, actions, commitment) with quantifiable data
- Verification that the penalty is indeed manual (Search Console notification) and not algorithmic
- Review by a third party to avoid ambiguous or defensive formulations
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il attendre entre deux demandes de réexamen si la première est rejetée ?
Dois-je admettre des violations que Google n'a pas explicitement mentionnées dans la notification ?
Le fichier Disavow suffit-il comme preuve de correction pour les backlinks toxiques ?
Peut-on déléguer la rédaction de la demande de réexamen à un prestataire externe ?
Que se passe-t-il si Google rejette la demande sans explication détaillée ?
🎥 From the same video 2
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 3 min · published on 24/04/2009
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.