Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 0:39 Le HTTPS booste-t-il vraiment votre SEO ou est-ce un mythe ?
- 1:11 Le mobile-first indexing cache-t-il un facteur de classement mobile spécifique ?
- 2:18 Pourquoi tester votre site sur smartphone révèle-t-il des problèmes invisibles sur desktop ?
- 3:52 Le responsive est-il vraiment au même niveau que les URL mobiles séparées en SEO ?
- 5:58 Le responsive design améliore-t-il vraiment votre classement Google ?
- 9:09 Les outils Webmaster et PageSpeed Insights sont-ils vraiment indispensables pour le SEO mobile ?
- 13:42 Pourquoi bloquer CSS et JavaScript dans votre robots.txt peut ruiner votre référencement mobile ?
- 18:02 Les interstitiels mobiles ruinent-ils vraiment votre indexation Google ?
- 22:08 Le passage en HTTPS améliore-t-il réellement le classement de votre site ?
- 24:36 Les redirections mobile incorrectes peuvent-elles faire chuter votre visibilité sur Google ?
- 25:58 HTTPS ne booste que 1% des résultats : faut-il vraiment s'embêter avec le certificat SSL ?
- 39:38 Les backlinks issus de sites pénalisés nuisent-ils vraiment à votre référencement ?
- 41:48 Faut-il vraiment soumettre à nouveau son fichier de désaveu après une migration HTTPS ?
Google announces a speed-oriented refresh of Penguin: the goal is to reflect changes on a site faster in rankings. For SEOs, this means that disavowing toxic backlinks or cleaning up a link profile should yield results more quickly. It remains to be seen if 'faster' means weeks or months — the uncertainty persists.
What you need to understand
Why is Penguin so slow to react?
Historically, Penguin operates on refresh cycles. Unlike Panda, which has integrated into the core algorithm, Penguin requires a manual recalculation of link signals to update penalties or lift sanctions. As a result, cleaned up sites sometimes wait six months to see the impact.
This latency is an operational nightmare. A client invests in a massive disavowal of spammy links, corrects their link profile, and waits. Without feedback, it's impossible to know whether the actions are effective or if the site remains under algorithmic penalty.
What does this announced refresh change?
Google is talking about making the process faster. In practical terms, the idea is that changes — adding good links, removing bad ones, disavowing — will reflect in rankings with less delay. No specific promises are made, but the direction is clear: reduce the downtime between action and result.
Let's be honest: 'faster' remains vague. We don't know if that means cutting the wait from six months to two months, or from two months to two weeks. Google provides no SLA, no concrete metrics.
Does this mean Penguin becomes real-time?
Nothing in this statement mentions real-time. The term used is 'faster', not 'instantaneous'. A real-time algorithm would process each new link continuously, as modern PageRank does. Penguin seems to remain in an accelerated cycle logic, not in continuous monitoring.
The nuance is crucial for practitioners: this does not change the need to document cleaning actions with precise timestamps, nor to track traffic evolution over several weeks. The delay is reduced, but the wait does not disappear.
- Penguin still operates on refresh cycles, not in continuous real-time.
- Link profile changes (disavowal, cleaning) should reflect more quickly, with no guarantee of a specific timeframe.
- No official metrics on expected speed — 'faster' remains a vague goal.
- Thorough documentation of actions remains essential to trace cause and effect.
- No fundamental change in Penguin's logic, only an acceleration of the existing process.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes and no. Since the early iterations of Penguin, we have indeed observed irregular refresh cycles. Some sites recover in eight weeks, while others wait six months for the same type of action. This variability suggests that Google has never really mastered the rhythm of Penguin.
The announcement of an acceleration of the process aligns with the frustrations expressed by the SEO community. But caution: [To be verified] — there's no proof that this 'faster' version has ever been deployed at a large scale. John Mueller provides no timeline, no confirmation of actual release.
What nuances should be addressed?
The first nuance: speeding up Penguin does not mean making it infallible. An algorithm that runs faster can also propagate false positives more quickly. If the anti-spam filter mistakenly detects a suspicious pattern in your link profile, you could face penalties before you even have time to react.
The second nuance: Penguin's speed also depends on the crawling frequency of your backlinks. Google must first re-crawl the pages containing your links to notice their removal or disavowal. A site on a domain that is slow to be crawled will not benefit from a 'fast' Penguin if Google does not see the changes.
In what cases does this promise not apply?
If your site is under manual action, Penguin changes nothing. Manual penalties require a human reconsideration request via Search Console. Penguin only addresses algorithmic penalties related to links.
Another limitation: a naturally weak link profile cannot be fixed just by disavowing spam. If you remove 500 toxic links but are left with only 10 quality links, Penguin will not work miracles. The speed of the filter does not compensate for the lack of positive signals. The issue is that many sites hope that a cleanup will be enough — but without acquiring quality links, rankings stagnate.
Practical impact and recommendations
What concrete actions should I take if my site is under Penguin?
First action: conduct a comprehensive audit of the link profile. Use Search Console, Ahrefs, Majestic, Semrush to list all backlinks. Identify spammy domains, over-optimized anchors, and apparent link networks. Document each suspicious link with source, anchor, Trust Flow, context.
Second action: attempt direct contact. Send removal requests to the webmasters of the problematic sites. Keep track of each request (email, date, response). If there is no response after two weeks, proceed to disavow via Search Console. The disavow file should be clean, without excessive wildcards that could jeopardize legitimate links.
What mistakes should be avoided in the cleaning process?
Classic mistake: disavowing too broadly. Some SEOs panic and disavow entire domains (.edu, .gov) out of fear. Result: loss of valuable positive signals. Only disavow what is clearly manipulative: PBNs, link farms, spam comments, low-quality directories.
Another mistake: not monitoring post-disavow evolution. A disavow is not a fire-and-forget action. Monitor organic traffic, positions for your main queries, fluctuations in Search Console. Compare periods before/after with annotations in Google Analytics to trace causality.
How can I check if the cleaning is effective?
Set clear KPIs before starting. Note the average positions on 10 strategic queries, the weekly organic traffic, the number of pages ranked in the top 10. After the disavow, wait at least four weeks before drawing conclusions — even with a 'faster' Penguin.
Use the coverage and performance reports in Search Console to detect weak signals: increased click-through rates, improved impressions on certain queries, stabilization of rankings after a drop. If after eight weeks there is no positive movement, reassess your link profile — perhaps you missed toxic domains, or the problem is not linked to Penguin.
These optimizations can quickly become complex, especially on sites with thousands of backlinks or chaotic link histories. If you lack internal resources or the audits are too time-consuming, hiring a specialized SEO agency can speed up diagnosis and secure cleaning actions with proven expertise.
- Audit the entire link profile using at least two different tools.
- Contact webmasters for removal before disavowing.
- Document each action with date, tool used, targeted domains.
- Disavow only clearly manipulative links, avoid excessive wildcards.
- Monitor KPIs (traffic, rankings, impressions) for at least eight weeks post-disavow.
- Reassess the profile if no improvement after two months.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le fichier disavow doit-il être mis à jour régulièrement même avec un Penguin plus rapide ?
Combien de temps faut-il attendre pour voir l'effet d'un désavou avec ce nouveau Penguin ?
Penguin peut-il pénaliser un site qui n'a jamais fait de netlinking actif ?
Désavouer des liens légitimes par erreur peut-il nuire au classement ?
Faut-il désavouer tous les liens avec ancre exacte optimisée ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 59 min · published on 08/09/2014
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