Official statement
Other statements from this video 10 ▾
- 18:53 Pourquoi Google génère-t-il des titres en double dans la Search Console à cause de vos anciennes redirections ?
- 22:37 Les données structurées produit sans vente directe déclenchent-elles vraiment des rich snippets ?
- 25:59 L'AB testing peut-il vraiment pénaliser votre référencement naturel ?
- 28:19 Comment conduire des tests A/B SEO qui produisent des résultats fiables ?
- 37:17 Faut-il vraiment lister toutes vos URLs dans le sitemap XML ?
- 47:38 Pourquoi les liens désavoués restent-ils visibles dans Search Console malgré leur neutralisation ?
- 61:19 Comment lever une alerte malware Google sans sacrifier votre positionnement ?
- 67:20 Faut-il vraiment modifier la structure d'URL pour chaque territoire ou variante ?
- 69:48 Faut-il vraiment optimiser la structure de ses URL pour le SEO ?
- 85:27 La balise noindex fonctionne-t-elle vraiment quand Googlebot n'explore plus vos pages ?
Google states that a manual action requires complete resolution before regaining lost positions. In practice, addressing the penalty is only the first step: regaining favor often takes several months and demands a comprehensive strategic overhaul. Simple technical fixes are never enough to restore lost algorithmic trust.
What you need to understand
What is a manual action and why does Google take it?
A manual action occurs when a human reviewer at Google detects blatant violations of the guidelines. Unlike algorithmic penalties (Penguin, Panda), these sanctions are manual and documented in the Search Console.
The most common reasons? Artificial links, massive duplicate content, cloaking, hidden text, automatically generated spam. Google imposes these sanctions when the algorithm alone cannot neutralize obvious manipulation.
Why is simple technical correction not enough?
Cleaning toxic backlinks or removing problematic content lifts the manual action, surely. But restoring lost positions is a distinct and much longer process.
The penalized site has lost algorithmic trust. The quality signals accumulated before the sanction have been neutralized. It takes time to rebuild this trust from scratch, which requires consistent and healthy strategy.
How long does it actually take to recover?
The removal of the manual action via the Search Console typically takes a few days to two weeks after the reconsideration request. The real challenge begins afterward.
Field observations show recovery times between 3 and 12 months to regain comparable positions. Some sites never fully recover, especially in competitive sectors where others have taken their place.
- Technical resolution: disavowing toxic links, removing problematic content, correcting identified violations
- Reconsideration request: accurately documenting corrective actions in the Search Console
- Strategic rebuilding: developing a clean content and link-building strategy over a minimum of 6-12 months
- Constant monitoring: tracking recovery signals (crawls, indexing, positions) weekly
- Mandatory patience: accepting that the return will be gradual and not immediate after the sanction is lifted
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement really reflect the on-the-ground reality?
Yes and no. Google is correct about the need to resolve the manual action before any recovery. However, the phrasing "return to a healthy strategy" remains vague and underestimates the practical difficulty of the process.
In practice, I have seen sites that did everything right stagnate for 9 months before noticing any signs of life. Others never regained their original positions, even after a flawless cleanup. [To be verified]: Google provides no clear metrics on the rate of complete recovery post-sanction.
What factors really influence the speed of recovery?
The domain history carries significant weight. A site with 10 years of existence and a first sanction typically recovers better than a young domain already deemed suspicious. The nature of the violation also matters: a comment spam is forgiven faster than a hidden link network.
The industry plays a huge role. In finance or healthcare (YMYL), Google applies a zero-tolerance policy and recovery is systematically longer. A lifestyle blog statistically recovers twice as fast as a medical site after a comparable penalty.
Should you sometimes abandon the penalized domain?
A taboo but legitimate question. If the domain has undergone multiple manual actions or if the sanction affects 80% of the content, starting fresh on a clean domain may be more cost-effective.
I have seen cases where the cost of cleanup (disavowing 15,000 backlinks, rewriting 400 pages) far exceeded the budget for migration to a new domain with a clean strategy. Let’s be honest: Google never officially says "give up", but recovery data sometimes suggest this option.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do immediately after receiving a manual action?
Don’t panic, but act quickly. Sign in to the Search Console and read the entire notification. Google usually provides specific examples of violations: affected URLs, types of problematic links, detected patterns.
Document everything in a spreadsheet: each cited URL, each mentioned violation type, each identified suspicious backlink. This documentation will be useful for the reconsideration request and as proof of correction if Google contests your initial attempt.
How to effectively clean without losing the good with the bad?
The disavow file is not a weapon of mass destruction. Analyze each referring domain before disavowing it. A mediocre link is not necessarily a toxic link: focus on obvious patterns (link farms, PBNs, over-optimized anchors).
For content, favor rewriting over removal when possible. A page with 50 monthly visits deserves a second chance if you can turn it into original and useful content. Only remove pure spam and massive duplicate content with no added value.
What mistakes systematically block recovery?
First error: submitting a reconsideration request without really correcting the problem. Google rejects 70% of initial requests due to insufficient corrections. Each rejection extends the delay by a minimum of 2-3 weeks.
Second trap: continuing old practices alongside the cleanup. I have seen a site disavow 5,000 links while buying 200 defective backlinks the following month. Google detects these behavioral inconsistencies and automatically extends the observation period.
- Audit the entire link profile with a professional tool (Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush)
- Create a precise disavow file listing identified toxic domains and URLs
- Remove or rewrite content violating Google's quality guidelines
- Draft a detailed reconsideration request with proof of correction (screenshots, lists, actions taken)
- Implement a clean content strategy BEFORE reapplying for review
- Monitor the Search Console daily for 30 days after the request
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps Google prend-il pour répondre à une demande de réexamen ?
Peut-on récupérer ses positions exactes d'avant la pénalité ?
Faut-il supprimer tous les backlinks suspects ou seulement les désavouer ?
Une action manuelle affecte-t-elle tout le site ou seulement certaines pages ?
Peut-on avoir plusieurs actions manuelles simultanées sur le même site ?
🎥 From the same video 10
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 55 min · published on 28/07/2016
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