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Official statement

For an entity to appear in rich results (e.g., mobile games), Google must recognize it as such across the entire web, not just on one site. No special markup is required; Google identifies entities by crawling and indexing the whole web.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:04 💬 EN 📅 24/07/2020 ✂ 20 statements
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Other statements from this video 19
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  2. 2:44 Le favicon influence-t-il vraiment le CTR dans les SERP ?
  3. 5:58 L'URL Inspection Tool garantit-il vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
  4. 10:13 Les avis négatifs sur des sites tiers pénalisent-ils vraiment votre référencement Google ?
  5. 12:50 Faut-il vraiment appliquer noindex sur tous les profils utilisateurs suspectés de spam ?
  6. 17:02 Faut-il vraiment désavouer les backlinks spam pointant vers vos profils noindexés ?
  7. 18:58 Faut-il encore utiliser le fichier disavow contre le spam UGC automatisé ?
  8. 22:22 Est-ce que la qualité du contenu source d'un backlink compte plus que son PageRank ?
  9. 22:51 Le PageRank est-il vraiment devenu un signal mineur dans l'algorithme de Google ?
  10. 30:53 Faut-il vraiment préférer un sous-répertoire à un sous-domaine pour son microsite ?
  11. 35:36 Faut-il vraiment séparer son site en sous-domaines thématiques pour le SEO ?
  12. 38:32 Les commentaires non modérés peuvent-ils déclencher SafeSearch et déclasser tout votre site ?
  13. 42:00 Les rich results peuvent-ils vraiment ranker au-delà de la page 1 ?
  14. 43:37 Pourquoi la position moyenne dans Search Console vous ment-elle sur votre visibilité réelle ?
  15. 45:39 Les impressions GSC sont-elles vraiment comptées si le lien n'est pas chargé ?
  16. 46:41 Faut-il vraiment transcrire vos podcasts pour les faire ranker sur Google ?
  17. 47:46 Pourquoi Google remplace-t-il le Structured Data Testing Tool par le Rich Results Test ?
  18. 50:52 Schema.org invisible : faut-il vraiment baliser ce qui ne génère pas de rich results ?
  19. 52:58 Pourquoi votre site reçoit-il encore 40% de crawls desktop après le passage en mobile-first indexing ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that no special markup is required for entity recognition — the engine identifies entities by crawling the entire web, not just your site. For an entity to appear in rich results, it must be recognized as such across the web. In practical terms: you can mark up as much as you want, if your entity doesn't have a significant presence elsewhere, it won’t trigger rich snippets.

What you need to understand

What does Google mean by entity recognition?

Google distinguishes between entity recognition and display in rich results. Entity recognition is the engine's ability to understand that a term refers to a person, place, concept, brand — in short, an identifiable and documented “thing”. This recognition occurs through crawling and indexing billions of pages, not just from your site.

Rich results (rich snippets, knowledge panels, etc.) are a layer of display that relies on this recognition. For an entity to trigger a rich display, Google must not only recognize it, but also assign it a sufficient level of trust and notoriety. And that’s where the problem lies: your local markup isn’t enough.

Why is my Schema.org markup not always taken into account?

Many SEOs mark up their pages with Schema.org (e.g., type Person, Organization, Product, etc.) hoping to trigger rich snippets. The problem? If the entity is not mentioned and validated anywhere else on the web, Google has no reason to trust it.

The engine cross-references the data: if you declare “Jean Dupont, CEO of StartupX” but no third-party site, no database, no reliable source mentions him, Google considers that this entity has no cross-web validity. Result: no knowledge panel, no rich snippet — even with perfect markup.

How does Google identify entities across the web?

Google relies on a knowledge graph powered by millions of sources: Wikidata, Wikipedia, public databases, authoritative sites, cross-references, semantic co-occurrences. When an entity appears consistently and recurrently across these sources, it is consolidated as a recognized entity.

That’s why marking up “my unknown startup” is useless if no one talks about it elsewhere. In contrast, an established brand or public figure is recognized automatically, even without markup — Google already has all the data needed to validate it.

  • Entity recognition does not depend on local markup, but on the cross-web presence of the entity.
  • Rich results require a strong trust in the entity — markup helps, but is not sufficient.
  • Google builds its Knowledge Graph by cross-referencing millions of sources, not by relying on a single site.
  • If your entity does not exist outside your site, it will probably trigger no rich display.
  • Correct markup remains useful for helping Google understand context, but it's not a guarantee of visibility.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, but with a significant nuance. It is indeed observed that non-marked entities achieve knowledge panels (e.g., personalities, established brands), while perfectly marked Schema.org sites trigger nothing. This validates Mueller's thesis: cross-web recognition takes precedence over local markup.

Except. In certain cases — particularly e-commerce products, events, recipes — Schema.org markup is almost essential for triggering rich snippets. Google isn't going to guess that a block of text contains an apple pie recipe if you don't indicate it. [To be verified]: Mueller here speaks of entities in a broad sense, not structured content types.

What nuances should be added to this statement?

Mueller's statement is deliberately vague about what constitutes an “entity.” He mixes two things: the identification of a named entity (person, place, brand) and the display of structured data (recipe, product, FAQ). These two mechanisms do not work in the same way.

For named entities (people, organizations, concepts), indeed, markup is not essential — Google relies on the Knowledge Graph. For structured content data (review, recipe, event), markup is often mandatory. In practical terms: don’t discard your Schema.org tags just because Mueller says “no special markup needed.”

In what cases does this rule not apply?

If you manage an e-commerce site with thousands of products, you must markup with Schema Product, Price, Review — otherwise, no chance of appearing in shopping rich snippets. The same goes for recipes, events, job offers: markup is a necessary condition.

On the other hand, if you're trying to create a knowledge panel for your three-month-old startup or your LinkedIn profile, markup will be useless as long as your cross-web presence is insufficient. Google does not trust a single source — it expects external validations. And it's logical: otherwise, anyone could declare themselves a “global expert” via homemade markup.

Note: Do not confuse “no markup necessary for entity recognition” with “no markup necessary for rich snippets.” These are two different things, and Mueller plays on this ambiguity.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do to ensure that an entity is recognized by Google?

First, build a cross-web presence. If you want a brand, person, or concept to be recognized as an entity by Google, it must be mentioned on reliable third-party sources: Wikipedia, Wikidata, news sites, industry databases, verified social profiles. The more diverse and authoritative the sources, the better.

Then, ensure semantic consistency: the entity's name, description, and attributes (role, location, field of activity) must be consistent across sites. Google cross-references the data — if your job title varies from “CEO” to “founder” to “consultant,” you complicate the entity's consolidation.

Should you still mark up with Schema.org?

Yes, absolutely. Schema.org markup helps Google understand context and intent, even if it's not a guarantee of rich display. Correctly marking up your site with Person, Organization, Product, etc., remains a good practice — it aids the engine and can speed up recognition.

But don’t rely solely on markup. If your entity lacks external validations, it will likely trigger nothing. Markup is a help, not a miracle solution. Use it as a complement to a strategy of cross-web notoriety, not as a substitute.

How can I check if my entity is recognized by Google?

Test a search for the exact name of your entity. If a knowledge panel appears on the right, bingo — Google has consolidated the entity. If nothing appears, it means your cross-web presence is insufficient. You can also test via Google Search Console: see if Google associates your site with known entities in the performance reports.

Another indicator: mentions in Google Discover or Google News. If your content appears associated with entities (e.g., “article about [Entity X]”), it means Google has made the connection. Otherwise, work on your external presence before focusing on markup.

  • Create or enhance your Wikidata page (and Wikipedia if eligible) to anchor the entity in the Knowledge Graph.
  • Ensure consistent mentions on authoritative sites: professional directories, media outlets, industry databases.
  • Markup your site with Schema.org (Person, Organization, Product, etc.) to facilitate contextual understanding.
  • Check for semantic consistency: name, role, and description must be identical everywhere.
  • Regularly test searches for the entity's name to check for the appearance of a knowledge panel.
  • Don’t rely solely on markup — prioritize a sustainable long-term cross-web notoriety strategy.
Google's entity recognition relies primarily on a validated presence across the web, not on isolated markup. Correctly marking up remains useful and recommended, but does not replace an external visibility strategy. If your entity does not exist outside of your site, it will likely trigger no rich results. These optimizations — creating Wikidata profiles, ensuring cross-platform semantic consistency, and developing a strategy for external mentions — can be complex to orchestrate alone, especially for developing brands or less-publicized profiles. If you want to structure a comprehensive approach and avoid costly time errors, enlisting a specialized SEO agency can significantly accelerate the recognition of your entities by Google.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le markup Schema.org est-il inutile pour la reconnaissance d'entité ?
Non, il reste utile pour aider Google à comprendre le contexte et faciliter l'indexation. Mais il ne suffit pas : sans présence cross-web, votre entité ne déclenchera pas de résultats enrichis.
Comment faire reconnaître une nouvelle marque ou personne par Google ?
Il faut construire une présence externe cohérente : mentions sur des sites d'autorité, création d'une page Wikidata, profils vérifiés, couverture médiatique. Le markup local seul ne suffit pas.
Pourquoi mon concurrent a un knowledge panel et pas moi, alors que mon markup est parfait ?
Parce que Google ne se fie pas au markup d'un seul site. Votre concurrent a probablement une présence cross-web plus forte, validée par des sources tierces fiables.
Les balises Schema.org sont-elles obligatoires pour les rich snippets produits ou recettes ?
Oui, dans ces cas précis, le markup est quasi indispensable. La déclaration de Mueller concerne surtout les entités nommées, pas les données structurées de contenu comme les produits ou recettes.
Comment vérifier si mon entité est dans le Knowledge Graph de Google ?
Cherchez le nom exact de votre entité sur Google. Si un knowledge panel apparaît à droite, c'est qu'elle est reconnue. Sinon, votre présence externe est insuffisante.
🏷 Related Topics
Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Mobile SEO

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