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Official statement

Google does not provide specific names for various formats like carousels or galleries because they can evolve or group together based on algorithmic tests and adjustments.
24:54
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 58:11 💬 EN 📅 28/11/2019 ✂ 13 statements
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  7. 20:25 Comment la Search Console calcule-t-elle réellement la position moyenne de vos résultats enrichis ?
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  11. 41:00 Le test de compatibilité mobile de la Search Console est-il fiable ?
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📅
Official statement from (6 years ago)
TL;DR

Google intentionally avoids giving fixed names to SERP formats like carousels or galleries, as these elements constantly evolve according to algorithmic testing. For SEOs, this complicates precise targeting of rich results and imposes a more flexible approach to structured data markup. The key is to focus on the quality of structured data rather than aiming for a specific format.

What you need to understand

Is Google deliberately obscuring its SERP formats?

John Mueller's statement highlights a rarely openly acknowledged reality: Google does not want SEOs to target a particular SERP format. Carousels, galleries, product grids, or other display variations do not have official names in Google's technical documentation.

This is not an oversight. It is a deliberate strategy. By refusing to fix the nomenclature, Google maintains the freedom to merge, split, or modify these formats based on the results of its ongoing A/B tests. A carousel today may become a vertical list tomorrow, with no warning.

What does this mean for Schema.org markup?

Practically, this means that optimizing for "getting a carousel" is a doomed approach. The display format depends on multiple variables: query type, device, location, user history, ongoing tests.

What matters is the quality and consistency of your structured data. Google will pull from your Schema.org markup what it needs to generate the format it deems optimal at that moment. Your job is to provide rich, valid, comprehensive data — not to aim for a specific display.

Are SERP formats really unpredictable?

Not entirely. Some patterns remain observable: recipes often receive visual rich cards, products trigger shopping grids, events generate calendars. But these correlations are never guaranteed.

And that's where it gets tricky. Clients want firm promises about their SERP appearance. Yet Google promises nothing. It tests, adjusts, pivots. A site may lose its carousel overnight not due to a technical error, but because Google decided to test a different format for that query.

  • SERPS format names are not standardized by Google to maintain maximum flexibility in algorithmic evolutions.
  • Schema.org markup remains key, but it does not guarantee any specific display — only eligibility for rich results.
  • Formats evolve continuously through A/B tests that are invisible to webmasters, without prior communication.
  • Aiming for a specific format is counterproductive: it's better to optimize for the semantic richness of the structured data.
  • Google's documentation remains intentionally vague about the criteria triggering specific displays, to discourage overly targeted optimizations.

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement match what we see on the ground?

Yes, and it is frustrating. We regularly observe display variations for sites whose markup has not changed. A client may go from a horizontal carousel to a vertical list, then back to the carousel two weeks later — without any action on our part.

What Mueller doesn't explicitly say is that this instability creates an information asymmetry. Google knows exactly what tests it is conducting, which formats it is comparing, and what KPIs it is measuring. We are left guessing by analyzing thousands of SERPs. This opacity is strategic: it prevents SEOs from "gaming" the display.

Are there cases where this rule doesn't really apply?

The classic rich snippets (reviews, prices, product availability) remain relatively stable. When your Product markup is clean and you display 4.8 stars with 347 reviews, that data appears quite predictably.

The chaos mainly concerns complex aggregated formats: multi-entity carousels, product grids, enriched "People Also Ask" blocks, video snippets with timestamps. In these cases, Google juggles between multiple possible layouts, and the final choice is entirely out of your hands. [To be confirmed]: some observe a correlation between search volume for a query and format stability — high-traffic queries seem to benefit from more frequent testing.

Should we continue to monitor SERP formats despite this instability?

Absolutely. Even if you don't control the format, you must track the appearances of rich results. Losing a rich display can signal a technical issue (Schema error, disappearing content, partial de-indexing).

The trap would be to react to every micro-variation. If your carousel disappears for 48 hours and then returns, it's probably a Google test, not a bug on your side. However, a lasting loss (> 2 weeks) deserves investigation. Use tools like Search Console (Enhancements report) and SERP scrapers to distinguish normal fluctuations from real regressions.

Warning: Clients often confuse "loss of rich result" with "change in display format." The latter is outside your control. Educate them about this from the start to avoid unnecessary alerts.

Practical impact and recommendations

How to adapt your structured data strategy in the face of this volatility?

First rule: maximize your Schema.org coverage without limiting yourself to "mandatory" properties. The richer your markup, the more material Google has to feed any format it decides to test. For a product, specify not only the price and availability but also variants, dimensions, materials, and associated FAQs.

Second rule: cross-reference Schema types when relevant. A blog post about a recipe can include Recipe, Article, and HowTo. Google will draw from this richness according to the context of the query. Don't limit yourself by thinking "one type per page" — that's an outdated belief.

What KPIs to track if SERP displays become unpredictable?

Forget the "carousel acquisition rate" as the main metric. What matters is the eligibility rate for rich results (via Search Console) and, above all, the impact on CTR. A change in format can either improve or degrade your CTR — that’s what you should monitor.

Also track the average position of enriched URLs vs non-enriched ones. If your Schema pages perform better in ranking regardless of the display format, that's the signal that your markup effectively structures content for the algorithm. The display is merely a secondary consequence.

Should we stop promising visual results to clients?

Let’s be honest: yes. It is necessary to reframe expectations. Promise eligibility, not display. Explain that Schema markup enhances Google's understanding of content, which promotes ranking and may (but not always) trigger rich results.

Document appearances of enriched formats as bonuses, not as guaranteed deliverables. This approach safeguards both your reputation and your client relationship. It also prevents false alerts when Google pivots from a carousel to a list for internal testing reasons.

  • Implement all relevant Schema.org types for each page, beyond the strict minimum required
  • Validate markup with Google's Rich Results Test tool AND a third-party Schema.org validator
  • Monitor Schema errors via Search Console and correct within 72 hours maximum
  • Track CTR by page type (with/without rich results) to measure the real impact regardless of format
  • Document SERP display variations for a sample of key queries, including dates, to distinguish Google tests from technical regressions
  • Train clients/stakeholders on the instability of SERP formats to avoid unnecessary escalations
The absence of fixed nomenclature for SERP formats reflects Google's philosophy: rich and valid structured data, with display determined algorithmically. Adjust your strategy accordingly: aim for Schema completeness, not a precise visual output. If this complexity seems difficult to manage internally — between constant technical monitoring, multi-tool validation, and managing relevant KPIs — partnering with a specialized SEO agency can simplify the deployment and optimization of your structured data while securing long-term performance.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Google peut-il supprimer un carrousel sans que mon balisage Schema soit en cause ?
Oui, absolument. Google teste en permanence différents formats d'affichage pour une même requête. Ton balisage peut être parfait et pourtant le format changer du jour au lendemain suite à un test algorithmique.
Existe-t-il une documentation Google listant tous les formats SERP possibles ?
Non. Google documente les types de rich results éligibles (recettes, produits, événements, etc.) mais ne liste pas exhaustivement les variations d'affichage possibles, précisément pour conserver sa flexibilité d'évolution.
Si je cible un format spécifique de carrousel, est-ce une perte de temps ?
Oui. Mieux vaut optimiser pour la richesse et la validité de tes données structurées. Google décidera du format d'affichage selon des critères que tu ne contrôles pas (tests, device, contexte utilisateur).
Les formats SERP varient-ils selon les pays ou appareils ?
Oui, fréquemment. Un même balisage peut déclencher un carrousel sur mobile et une liste sur desktop, ou un format différent selon la géolocalisation, car Google adapte l'affichage aux comportements locaux.
Comment savoir si une perte de rich result est due à un bug technique ou à un test Google ?
Vérifie d'abord Search Console (rapport Améliorations) pour détecter des erreurs Schema. Si aucune erreur n'apparaît et que le balisage est valide, il s'agit probablement d'un test algorithmique. Une perte de plus de deux semaines mérite investigation approfondie.
🏷 Related Topics
Algorithms AI & SEO

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