Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 2:09 Faut-il vraiment éviter les redirections 301 vers la page d'accueil ?
- 5:16 Faut-il enregistrer son domaine pour 10 ans pour mieux ranker ?
- 7:20 Faut-il créer une URL unique pour chaque couleur de produit ?
- 19:42 Les avis clients manuellement sélectionnés peuvent-ils générer des rich snippets ?
- 21:25 Faut-il vraiment bloquer toutes les pages de recherche interne en noindex ?
- 25:58 Les bugs HTML nuisent-ils vraiment au référencement de vos pages ?
- 37:12 Les commentaires de vos utilisateurs plombent-ils votre SEO sans que vous le sachiez ?
- 39:35 Les pages noindex impactent-elles vraiment le budget de crawl ?
- 44:45 Passer à HTML5 améliore-t-il vraiment votre positionnement Google ?
- 48:47 L'expérience utilisateur influence-t-elle vraiment le référencement Google ?
- 69:37 Les liens en pied de page peuvent-ils déclencher une pénalité Google ?
- 73:24 Une pénalité levée efface-t-elle vraiment toute trace pour le SEO ?
- 93:48 Les rapports Search Console montrent-ils vraiment toutes vos données structurées ?
Mueller confirms that lifting a Penguin penalty triggers temporary fluctuations due to adjustments from other Google algorithms. The site regains its 'clean' link profile, but all ranking systems need to recalculate its legitimate position. Specifically, fluctuations should be monitored for 4-8 weeks, and any abrupt interventions that could confuse signals should be avoided.
What you need to understand
What does Penguin actually change about a site's profile?
Penguin acts as an algorithmic filter that downranks or ignores low-quality backlinks. When a site is affected, Google neutralizes part of its link graph: over-optimized anchor texts, PBN networks, and poor directories disappear from the PageRank calculation.
Once the penalty is lifted — because you have cleaned up your profile or Google has recrawled the disavows — these links exit purgatory. The engine then reintegrates valid signals while permanently discarding toxic ones. However, this trust reassessment doesn’t happen instantly.
Why do other algorithms need to 'adjust'?
Google uses hundreds of signals to rank a page: organic CTR, dwell time, content freshness, topic authority, E-E-A-T, Core Web Vitals. Penguin only controls links. When the backlink profile changes suddenly, all other systems perceive the site differently.
Concrete example: your site was selling 'running shoes' with 200 toxic exact-match anchors. Penguin ignores them. Your apparent topic authority drops. Then you disavow, Penguin lifts, and suddenly you regain 80 natural links from running blogs + media. Content and relevance algorithms must recalculate if you truly deserve page 1 or page 3.
How long do these temporary fluctuations last?
Mueller mentions 'temporary fluctuations' without providing a precise window. Field observations show that 4 to 8 weeks are typically enough to stabilize positions, provided that crawling and indexing are smooth.
Some sites experience weekly spikes during this period: +15 positions on Monday, -10 on Thursday, +8 the following week. This is a sign that Google is testing different weightings of your signals. If fluctuations persist beyond 12 weeks, look for a structural issue elsewhere.
- Penguin downgrades toxic links, but does not affect other ranking signals.
- Removing the penalty reintegrates good links and triggers a multi-algorithm recalculation.
- Fluctuations typically last between 4 and 8 weeks, sometimes longer depending on the site's size.
- During this phase, avoid any major changes (redesign, migration, large content push) that could complicate analysis.
- Monitor Search Console and your logs to ensure Google is recrawling key pages.
SEO Expert opinion
Does Mueller's explanation align with field observations?
Yes, but it simplifies a process that varies enormously among sites. Small sites (fewer than 500 pages) often recover in 3-4 weeks. Large e-commerce or media sites with 50,000+ URLs can take up to 3 months to stabilize, because recrawling is slower and the link graph is more complex.
One point Mueller does not address: some sites never regain their pre-Penguin level, even after the lift. Why? Because toxic links masked structural weaknesses — thin content, poor UX, catastrophic bounce rates. Once the crutches are removed, the site reveals its true value. [To verify] on your own historical organic traffic: if you were on page 1 solely because of 300 purchased exact match anchors, the removal of Penguin won’t save you.
Which algorithms really play a role during these fluctuations?
Mueller remains vague about the 'other algorithms.' In practice, we mainly observe the impact of RankBrain (which adjusts positions based on CTR and user behavior), Core Updates (if one occurs during your fluctuation period, good luck), and systems related to E-E-A-T for YMYL sectors.
Concrete example: a health site penalized by Penguin cleans its links, the penalty lifts, but Google continues to test if E-E-A-T signals are strong (expert authors, medical citations, .edu/.gov backlinks). If these signals are weak, the site stagnates even after the lift. This misleads many SEOs: they think Penguin was the only problem, while it was hiding other flaws.
Should you intervene during the fluctuation phase?
No. This is the worst mistake we frequently see. The client panics because their site swings between page 2 and page 1, and requests a backlink push or an urgent content overhaul. The result: you dilute the signals that Google is currently analyzing.
The only relevant action during this phase: monitor server logs to ensure Googlebot is crawling your key pages, and check Search Console for any indexing errors. If Google isn’t recrawling, trigger it manually via the Indexing API or by updating your sitemaps. But in terms of content and link building, remain in observation mode.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do immediately after lifting Penguin?
First, activate a daily tracking of positions for your strategic keywords (at least the top 20 queries). Use SEMrush, Ahrefs, or Sistrix with daily reports, not weekly. You need to see real-time oscillations to distinguish a normal fluctuation from a structural drop.
Then, check in Search Console that the number of impressions and clicks isn’t crashing. A healthy fluctuation involves positions moving but a stable or slightly increasing CTR. If your impressions drop by 40% all at once, it’s no longer a 'temporary fluctuation', it’s another issue (partial deindexing, cannibalization, simultaneous Core Update).
What mistakes should you avoid during the stabilization period?
First mistake: panicking and launching an aggressive link-building campaign to 'compensate' for fluctuations. You will pollute the signal that Google is analyzing. If the engine sees 50 new backlinks arriving in 2 weeks post-Penguin lift, it will suspect manipulation.
Second mistake: massively altering existing content to 'boost' fluctuating pages. Google is recalculating your relevance alongside your current link profile. If you change 30% of your titles and metas during this time, you introduce an additional variable. Stay subtle: fix blatant errors but don’t overhaul anything.
How can you effectively monitor this transition phase?
Set up a weekly dashboard with these KPIs: average positions for top 10/20 queries, organic traffic segmented by landing page, Googlebot crawl rate (via logs), Search Console errors. The goal is not to react to every micro-variation but to detect any abnormal trend.
If after 8 weeks positions continue fluctuating up/down by 10+ places each week without converging, two hypotheses arise: either your sector is ultra-competitive and your competitors are active, or you have a lingering technical issue (duplicate content, cannibalization, loading time). Audit thoroughly.
These post-Penguin adjustments require sharp expertise in log analysis, signal correlation, and reading algorithmic patterns. If you lack internal resources to closely monitor this transition, hiring a specialized SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and accelerate stabilization by identifying the right levers at the right moments.
- Activate daily position tracking for strategic queries
- Weekly check Search Console (impressions, clicks, indexing errors)
- Analyze server logs to confirm recrawling of key pages
- Avoid launching ANY link-building campaigns for 6-8 weeks post-lift
- Steer clear of any massive changes to content or structure
- Document fluctuations in a dashboard to identify patterns
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il attendre après un désaveu pour que Penguin se lève ?
Les fluctuations post-Penguin peuvent-elles faire chuter le site plus bas qu'avant ?
Faut-il relancer du netlinking pendant la phase de fluctuations ?
Comment savoir si les fluctuations sont dues à Penguin ou à un Core Update ?
Un site peut-il retrouver exactement son trafic d'avant Penguin ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h09 · published on 07/10/2016
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.