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Official statement

Google Panda targets low-quality content that adds no real value for users. Authors should consult the quality questions recommended by Google to evaluate their content.
3:26
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 50:53 💬 EN 📅 21/01/2016 ✂ 14 statements
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📅
Official statement from (10 years ago)
TL;DR

Google Panda penalizes low-quality content that does not provide real value to users. The algorithm is based on a series of qualitative questions recommended by Google for authors to self-evaluate their output. This means that a website can no longer rely solely on volume: each page must demonstrate tangible expertise and precisely meet search intent.

What you need to understand

What is Google Panda and why does it still matter?

Google Panda, initially deployed as an algorithmic filter, has been integrated into the core of the main algorithm. Its role remains unchanged: to identify and devalue low-quality content that does not meet user expectations. Unlike manual penalties, Panda acts automatically and continuously.

Impacted sites see their organic visibility drop sharply, sometimes by 50 to 90%, without any notification in Search Console. The filter analyzes quality at the entire domain level, meaning that mediocre sections can drag down the whole site. Recovery often requires several months after corrections.

What exactly does Google mean by 'low-quality content'?

Google does not define quality by technical metrics, but by user perception. Weak content lacks depth, repeats information already available elsewhere, or fails to demonstrate any particular expertise. Signals include short visit duration, high bounce rates, and lack of shares or backlinks.

Automatically generated content, ultra-short articles without substance, traffic-driven satellite pages, or aggregations without added value are particularly targeted. The filter also detects sites that prioritize quantity over quality, producing dozens of superficial articles instead of a few in-depth analyses.

What quality questions does Google recommend?

Google has published a list of 23 questions that every creator should ask themselves before publishing. These questions cover expertise, originality, depth, and trustworthiness. Some of the most critical ones are: 'Would you trust the information presented?', 'Was this content written by an expert or a passionate individual on the topic?', 'Does the content provide substantial value compared to other pages in search results?'.

These questions are not just mechanical checkboxes. They reflect the human criteria a quality rater would apply when evaluating a site. A piece of content that honestly answers 'no' to several of these questions is at high risk of devaluation by Panda.

  • Demonstrated expertise: the author must prove their legitimacy on the topic discussed
  • Real originality: the content must bring an angle, data, or analysis not found elsewhere
  • Substantial depth: handle a topic in a thorough rather than superficial manner
  • User intent satisfaction: precisely meet what the searcher is looking for, not just tangentially
  • Careful user experience: clear presentation, smooth navigation, without excessive advertising clutter

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?

Absolutely. Sites hit by Panda all share a deficit of differentiation and depth. Post-penalty audits consistently reveal recycled content, 300-word articles lacking substance, or satellite pages created solely to capture long-tail traffic. Recovery only occurs after a major qualitative overhaul, never through simple technical adjustments.

However, there's still ambiguity around tolerance thresholds. How many low-quality pages can a domain contain before the whole is impacted? Google provides no figures. Observations suggest that beyond 30-40% of mediocre content, the risk becomes critical. [To be verified]: no official data confirms this ratio; it's an empirical extrapolation.

What nuances should be added to this guideline?

Google talks about 'added value' but never specifies how it is measured algorithmically. Behavioral signals (session time, pogosticking, organic clicks) play a major role, but their exact weighting remains opaque. Content that is technically excellent but presented in an off-putting way may fail.

The concept of contextual quality further complicates the equation. A 500-word article may be perfect for a simple informational query, but disastrous for a complex query requiring 3,000 words. Panda evaluates quality relative to the expectations of the query, not against an absolute standard. Content that is 'adequate' for a given SERP becomes 'low-quality' if the competition raises the bar.

In what cases does this rule not strictly apply?

News sites and third-party content aggregators appear to benefit from a certain tolerance. Google News values freshness and comprehensive coverage, even if each individual article only provides marginal value. Forums and question-answer sites also partially escape this, as their value lies in the diversity of contributions, not in uniform quality.

Utility pages (calculators, tools, comparators) are judged more on their functionality than on their textual content. A price comparison tool with 50 words of text but an impeccable user experience will not be penalized. Let's be honest: Google applies different criteria depending on verticals, without ever officially admitting it.

Note: A site can be affected by Panda even if each individual page seems correct. It's the overall impression that counts. A domain with 80% average content and 20% excellence will be judged globally mediocre. Mediocrity dilutes excellence, rarely the other way around.

Practical impact and recommendations

What concrete actions should be taken to avoid Panda?

First, conduct a thorough audit of your existing content. Identify pages that generate little traffic, have short visit durations, or high bounce rates over 80%. These pages are candidates for rewriting or removal. Use Google Analytics and Search Console to isolate the bottom 20-30% of content.

Next, apply the Google quality questions as a systematic evaluation framework. For each strategic page, honestly answer the 23 questions. If you receive more than 3-4 negative answers, the page needs a complete overhaul. Don’t just add 200 words: rethink the angle, structure, sources, and demonstration of expertise.

What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?

Never prioritize quantity over quality. Publishing 10 mediocre articles a week destroys more value than producing 2 excellent ones. Sites that recover post-Panda have all significantly reduced their production volume to focus on depth. An overloaded editorial calendar is a warning sign.

Avoid duplicate or nearly-duplicate content between your own pages. Panda penalizes internal cannibalization. If you address a topic from multiple angles, ensure that each page provides a genuinely distinct perspective. Superficial variations (changing 3 words in the title) are detected and penalized.

How can I check if my site meets Panda criteria?

Monitor your behavioral metrics in Google Analytics: average time on page, pages per session, bounce rate by section. A gradual decline in these indicators often precedes a Panda action. Cross-reference these data with Search Console to identify pages that are losing impressions and clicks without technical reasons.

Conduct real user tests. Ask people outside your company to review your content and evaluate it based on Google’s questions. Their perception is much closer to that of a quality rater than your internal analysis. If testers hesitate, don’t understand, or seek information elsewhere, you have a problem.

  • Audit all content with less than 30 seconds average time on page and more than 75% bounce rate
  • Systematically apply the 23 Google quality questions before any publication
  • Remove or merge redundant pages that cannibalize the same keywords
  • Demonstrate author expertise: detailed biographies, source citations, verifiable references
  • Compare your content to the top three organic results: if you’re not providing anything more, don’t publish
  • Measure the evolution of behavioral metrics monthly and act at the first signs of decline
Panda imposes a cultural overhaul: shifting from a mass production mindset to an editorial excellence mindset. Sites that excel post-Panda have all invested heavily in depth, demonstrated expertise, and real originality. These optimizations often require sharp expertise and an objective external perspective. If your team lacks resources or critical distance, hiring a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate compliance and recover visibility.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Panda est-il encore actif ou a-t-il été remplacé par d'autres algorithmes ?
Panda n'a jamais été désactivé. Il a été intégré à l'algorithme principal et fonctionne en continu, en temps réel. Ses critères se sont affinés mais son rôle de filtre qualité reste central.
Un site peut-il être partiellement touché par Panda ou est-ce toujours global ?
Panda évalue principalement au niveau du domaine entier, mais certaines sections particulièrement faibles peuvent tirer l'ensemble vers le bas. Une refonte ciblée des pages les plus problématiques peut parfois suffire à débloquer la situation.
Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer après une pénalité Panda ?
La récupération prend généralement entre 3 et 6 mois après correction complète. Panda réévalue les sites lors des mises à jour de l'algorithme principal, pas en continu, d'où ce délai incompressible.
Le contenu généré par IA est-il automatiquement considéré comme faible qualité par Panda ?
Non, Google juge le résultat final, pas la méthode de production. Un contenu IA bien édité, enrichi d'expertise et de sources, peut passer. Mais la plupart des contenus IA bruts manquent justement de profondeur et d'originalité, donc échouent aux critères Panda.
Faut-il supprimer complètement les pages faibles ou peut-on les améliorer ?
Les deux stratégies fonctionnent. Supprimer massivement du contenu médiocre (parfois 40-50% du site) donne souvent des résultats plus rapides qu'améliorer page par page. Priorisez : gardez et améliorez ce qui génère déjà du trafic, supprimez le reste.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms Content AI & SEO

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