Official statement
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- 7:27 Comment Google indexe-t-il le contenu caché derrière un paywall ou un lead-in ?
- 11:11 Les paramètres UTM peuvent-ils vraiment créer du contenu dupliqué dans Google ?
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Google states that native ads that lack clear directives and contain dofollow links expose websites to manual actions. This means that all sponsored content must be clearly identified and marked with the appropriate rel attributes (sponsored, nofollow). The catch? Google does not specify the tolerance thresholds or exact criteria that would trigger human intervention, leaving a dangerous margin for interpretation.
What you need to understand
What qualifies as non-compliant native advertising according to Google?
A native advertisement is sponsored content that blends seamlessly into the editorial flow of a site without visually distinguishing itself from standard articles. Google accepts this format as long as two rules are followed: clear identification of advertising and proper link marking.
The issue arises when these contents pass for pure editorial. No mention of 'Sponsored', 'Partnership', or 'Advertisement', and links that are dofollow passing PageRank. Google sees this as manipulation of rankings, period.
Why does Google place so much emphasis on link attributes?
Because every dofollow link in sponsored content skews the relevance signals that Google uses to rank pages. If a news site sells 50 sponsored articles per month with dofollow links, it's artificially injecting juice into the algorithm.
Google introduced rel="sponsored" specifically for this scenario. The attribute allows declaring the commercial nature of the link without completely devaluing it (contrary to what many still think about nofollow). However, its adoption remains timid, with many publishers reverting to the old nofollow reflexively.
What does a manual action actually involve?
A manual action is a penalty imposed by a human reviewer from Google after examining the site. Unlike automatic algorithmic adjustments, it requires corrective action from your end and a request for reconsideration.
The effects vary from partial devaluation of certain pages to total deindexation of the site in severe cases. The Search Console explicitly notifies the problem, but recovery can take weeks or even months, even after corrections.
- Clearly identify all sponsored content with a visible mention before the content
- Use rel="sponsored" or alternatively rel="nofollow" on all commercial links
- Never mix editorial and advertising content without a clear visual distinction
- Document your advertising practices to prove good faith in case of an audit
- Regularly check via the Search Console for any notifications of manual actions
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Yes and no. Google does indeed penalize sites for disguising native ads; this is documented. However, the consistency of enforcement remains random. Major sites continue to publish poorly marked sponsored content without facing visible penalties, while smaller players get hit for similar infractions.
The reality? Google intervenes mainly when a site reaches a critical volume threshold or when a spam report is filed. Small sites with 2-3 sponsored articles per year go under the radar. [To be confirmed]: no official data specifies this threshold, making the enforcement of the rule unpredictable.
Is rel="sponsored" really enough to avoid a penalty?
On paper, yes. In practice, Google also considers the overall context: the ratio of editorial to sponsored content, the quality of paid content, and thematic relevance. A site filled with poorly written advertorials using rel="sponsored" may still face consequences if Google believes it primarily exists to sell links.
The sponsored attribute does not grant you unlimited immunity. It's just one signal among many. If your site only produces low-quality sponsored content, the algorithm will eventually devalue everything, manual action or not.
What are the blind spots of this directive?
Google says nothing about unpaid editorial partnerships that include dofollow links. Nor about co-written content with brands without a direct monetary exchange. The line between legitimate editorial collaboration and native advertising remains blurry.
Another glaring silence: the criteria for 'clarity' of advertising indication. Does a 'In partnership with' mention in small gray font at the bottom of the page pass or not? Google does not provide technical specifications. This deliberate ambiguity leaves a margin for interpretation that becomes a risk for publishers.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you audit your existing sponsored content?
Start by identifying all content published for payment (money, products, services). Use a spreadsheet with columns: URL, date, visible advertising mention (yes/no), link attribute used, volume of outgoing links. Scan your site with a crawler (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl) to detect suspicious external link patterns.
Next, check the visibility of the advertising indication. It must appear BEFORE the content, in a legible font size, in the user's language. An English mention on a French site won't pass. A 'Sponsored' label buried in a dropdown menu won't either.
What strategy should you adopt for new partnerships?
Require a contractual clause in your agreements with advertisers: all outgoing links will carry rel="sponsored" without exception, and the content will be clearly labeled. Negotiate upfront, not after publication. Refuse all requests for 'just a little' dofollow links; they do not exist.
Create a dedicated template for your sponsored content with automatic indication in the header, slightly different background color, or distinctive border. The goal is for the user to know within 0.5 seconds that they are reading commercial content without searching.
What should you do if you've already received a manual action?
Don't panic, but act quickly. Correct ALL the incriminated content: add mentions, change link attributes, remove content without editorial value. Document each modification in a file to attach to your reconsideration request.
Write a factual and humble reconsideration request: acknowledge the mistake, explain the corrections made, detail your new procedures to avoid recurrence. Avoid convoluted justifications; Google has seen it all. A response time of 2 to 6 weeks is normal.
- Complete audit of sponsored content with a detailed tracking file
- Add a clear and visible advertising mention on each paid content
- Replace all dofollow links with rel="sponsored" in commercial links
- Implement a distinct visual template for sponsored content
- Draft an internal editorial policy defining rules for paid publication
- Monthly checks on the Search Console to catch any new notifications
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Faut-il utiliser rel="sponsored" ou rel="nofollow" pour un lien dans un article sponsorisé ?
Une mention 'Contenu sponsorisé' en pied de page suffit-elle ?
Les échanges de liens éditoriaux entre sites thématiques sont-ils concernés ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer d'une action manuelle sur publicités natives ?
Un site peut-il publier uniquement du contenu sponsorisé sans risque ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 49 min · published on 05/10/2017
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