Official statement
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Google states that it is better to improve your own site rather than report cheating competitors. However, the platform offers reporting tools for blatant cases. This position emphasizes the effectiveness of focusing on your own strategy rather than competitive monitoring, but leaves the actual effectiveness of manual actions against spam unclear.
What you need to understand
What exactly does Google say about cheating sites?
John Mueller’s official position is clear: focus on your own site. This statement implies that reporting competitors should not become your strategic priority.
Google implicitly acknowledges that some sites violate the rules and achieve results. But rather than encouraging a reporting war, the firm directs attention towards continuous improvement of your own assets. Reporting tools exist, but Google does not guarantee a time frame or action.
Why does Google favor this approach?
There are two main reasons. First, the scale of the web makes it impossible to process all reports quickly by hand. Secondly, Google wants to prevent SEOs from spending their time hunting down cheaters instead of creating quality content.
This strategy also protects Google from accusations of arbitrary manual processing. By emphasizing algorithms and self-improvement, the platform shifts part of the web policing responsibility away from itself. The underlying message is that our systems will eventually catch the fraudsters.
In what cases can you still report?
Google mentions dedicated tools without specifying exactly which ones. It probably refers to the spam form in Search Console, reporting hacked content, or unnatural link reports.
Reporting remains relevant for cases of negative SEO targeting you directly, phishing using your brand, or massive and obvious spam networks. But for a competitor buying a few backlinks, energy is better spent elsewhere.
- Focus your energy on enhancing your content, technique, and authority rather than on competitive monitoring.
- Reporting tools exist, but Google does not guarantee any timeframe or action following a report.
- Reserve reports for cases of massive spam, negative SEO targeting you, or violations against your brand.
- The algorithm will eventually catch cheaters according to Google, even if the timing remains unclear.
- Imitating bad practices exposes your site to lasting manual or algorithmic penalties.
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement really reflect the reality on the ground?
Partially. In hyper-competitive markets, it is observed that cheating sites often end up being caught. But the delay can be several months, even years, during which they capture traffic and revenue.
[To be verified] The claim that "the relevant teams review" reports remains vague. No public figures on processing rates, average times, or actual effectiveness. Practitioner feedback shows very variable results depending on the sectors.
What biases does this Google position mask?
Google benefits from SEOs focusing on content creation rather than hunting down cheaters. This reduces the burden on their manual teams and feeds their index with fresh content.
Another rarely discussed point: cheating sites that generate advertising traffic bring revenue to Google through AdSense or Display. Even if Google denies any influence, the economic incentive exists. The reality is that some spams remain online for a long time without visible action.
In what cases does this recommendation become counterproductive?
In very narrow niches where 2-3 players dominate through aggressive practices, ignoring competition could condemn you to page 2. In such cases, meticulous documentation and reporting are necessary, while also working on other levers (voice search, featured snippets, long-tail keywords).
Another situation is targeted negative SEO attacks. If someone massively points toxic links to your site, disavowing and reporting become priorities. Waiting for the algorithm to understand could cost you critical positions.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely when a competitor is clearly cheating?
First step: confirm that it’s indeed cheating and not just a strategy you hadn’t identified. Use Ahrefs, Semrush, or Majestic to analyze their link profile. Look at the domain's age, content quality, and E-E-A-T signals.
If it’s indeed blatant spam (link farms, massively generated content, cloaking), document with timestamped screenshots and archive the pages via Archive.org. Then focus 80% of your time on your own site and a maximum of 20% on reporting.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Don’t spend weeks obsessively monitoring your competitors. Some SEOs spend more time analyzing others' backlinks than creating their own. It is counterproductive.
Another trap: partially imitating dubious techniques thinking "just a little." Negative SEO by association exists. If Google identifies a PBN network and you have a few links from that network, you are impacted even if it wasn’t your main strategy.
How can you ensure your approach is healthy in the long term?
Regularly audit your link profile using Google Search Console and third-party tools. Ensure that your backlink growth is natural and gradual, not in suspicious stair-step patterns.
Test the resilience of your strategy: if Google were to remove all your directory or press release links tomorrow, would your traffic collapse? If so, diversify. A healthy link profile mixes editorial links, business citations, press mentions, and backlinks from legitimate partners.
- Document fraudulent practices with timestamped captures and archives before any reporting.
- Limit competitive monitoring time to a maximum of 20% of your overall SEO effort.
- Use the spam form in Search Console only for blatant cases.
- Never partially replicate a dubious technique thinking you can limit the risk.
- Audit your own link profile quarterly to detect any contamination.
- Diversify your backlink sources to avoid relying on a single type of link.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il à Google pour traiter un signalement de spam ?
Signaler un concurrent peut-il se retourner contre mon propre site ?
Quels outils utiliser pour détecter les techniques de spam chez un concurrent ?
Est-ce que Google pénalise vraiment tous les types de liens achetés ?
Vaut-il mieux investir dans du contenu ou dans des backlinks qualitatifs ?
🎥 From the same video 7
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h07 · published on 05/05/2017
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