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Official statement

In the case of a manual penalty, such as for inappropriate interstitials, it is important to correct the identified issues and submit a review request. Google can provide example URLs or explanations if necessary to help understand the penalty.
3:17
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 55:43 💬 EN 📅 30/05/2017 ✂ 14 statements
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Other statements from this video 13
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  8. 21:37 Les backlinks toxiques peuvent-ils vraiment détruire votre SEO ?
  9. 24:58 Pourquoi vos rich results chutent-ils sans que votre trafic ne bouge ?
  10. 26:02 Pourquoi Google cache-t-il certaines de vos pages dans les résultats de recherche ?
  11. 31:27 Les pop-ups mobiles tuent-ils vraiment votre référencement ?
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📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that in the event of a manual penalty, one must fix the issues and then submit a review request. The team can provide example URLs or explanations to aid understanding. In practice, the speed of execution and quality of the fix determine whether you recover your traffic or remain penalized for weeks.

What you need to understand

What exactly is a manual penalty?

A manual penalty occurs when a member of Google's quality team reviews your site and finds a violation of the guidelines. Unlike automated algorithm adjustments, a human has made the decision. You receive a notification in Search Console detailing the nature of the issue.

The inappropriate interstitials mentioned by Mueller are among the common violations: aggressive pop-ups, interstitials that obscure the main content, fake landing pages that redirect. This type of user manipulation often triggers a manual action.

Why does Google provide example URLs?

Not all webmasters immediately understand what the issue is. The provided example URLs serve as a diagnostic compass: you identify the common pattern among these pages and then apply it to the rest of your site.

The problem is that Google does not always give you a comprehensive report. The examples provided represent a sample, not a complete list. You must exercise editorial discernment to detect other occurrences.

Is the review request just a formality?

No. A hastily written request stating, “I’ve fixed everything” without evidence or details will result in a denial. Google expects you to explain what you identified, how you fixed it, and what preventive measures you are putting in place.

The professional tone matters: avoid arguments, victimization, or accusations. Factually describe your actions. Attach before/after screenshots if relevant. The more documented your request is, the faster the manual team can validate it.

  • Manual penalty: human decision notified in Search Console, not an algo adjustment
  • Example URLs: sample provided by Google, not an exhaustive list — it's up to you to generalize the pattern
  • Review request: must detail the corrective actions taken with concrete evidence
  • Processing time: variable depending on the team’s workload and the clarity of your request
  • Failure rate: high if you only fix part of the problem or if your request lacks substance

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Yes, but with a significant nuance: Google does not always provide detailed explanations. Some sites receive a terse notification stating, “user-generated spam” with no URL examples. Others get 3-4 example URLs that only represent a fraction of the real issue.

Mueller's promise that “Google can provide example URLs or explanations if necessary” sounds good, but in reality, there is arbitrariness. [To be verified]: there is no contractual guarantee on the level of detail provided, and some webmasters have to multiply requests for clarification.

What traps unnecessarily prolong the penalty?

The first trap: only correcting the example URLs without auditing the entire site. You submit a review request, Google detects other occurrences of the same issue, immediate denial. You’ve wasted 7-10 days for nothing.

The second trap: underestimating the burden of proof. Saying, “I removed the pop-ups” is not enough if you kept some on mobile. Provide concrete evidence: screenshots, snippets of removed code, a list of fixed URLs. The stronger your case is, the less time Google spends re-verifying.

In what cases does this process fail despite everything?

Some sites accumulate multiple types of penalties simultaneously: spam content, artificial links, cloaking. You fix the interstitials, but the penalty remains active because other violations persist. The Search Console notification sometimes only lists one reason when multiple apply.

Another case of failure: cosmetic fixes. Replacing a full-page interstitial with a sticky banner that is 60% height deceives no one. Google expects the user experience to be genuinely improved, not for an aesthetic workaround to mask the same intrusive behavior.

Attention: A denied review request can lengthen the processing time. Some sites wait 3-4 weeks between each attempt. Do not rush the request until you are sure you have corrected everything.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do immediately after receiving the notification?

First step: read the entire Search Console notification, note the example URLs, and identify the common technical or editorial pattern. Don’t just skim through. Print or export the report for reference.

Then, manually audit and use tools (Screaming Frog, custom crawl) all similar pages. If the penalty concerns mobile interstitials, test each page template on real mobile devices, not just in Chrome dev mode. UX issues often escape standard crawlers.

How do you write a review request that gets approved on the first try?

Structure it in three blocks: problem identification, detailed corrective actions, preventive measures. The first block proves you understood. The second lists each fix with evidence (screenshots, code diffs, URLs). The third explains how you prevent recurrence.

Avoid empty jargon like “we commit to following the guidelines.” Be factual: “We removed 347 instances of mobile interstitials across all product pages. Before/after screenshots attached. We disabled the responsible XYZ plugin and implemented weekly QA reviews.” The more concrete it is, the better.

What mistakes turn a temporary penalty into a prolonged disaster?

The classic mistake: continuing to publish content or backlinks while the penalty is active. You send contradictory signals. Google sees that the site continues to potentially produce spam while you claim to have fixed everything.

Another mistake: failing to document actions. You fix a complex issue, but three months later, it's impossible to prove what you did. If Google reopens the case or if a recurrence occurs, you're starting from scratch. Keep a detailed log of each modification with dates and responsible parties.

  • Read the entire Search Console notification and note all the provided details
  • Audit the entire site, not just the example URLs, to detect all occurrences
  • Fix both technically AND editorially, with documented evidence (screenshots, code, lists of URLs)
  • Write a structured review request: identified problem, applied fixes, future prevention
  • Wait for full validation before submitting the request — a denial extends the process by several weeks
  • Maintain a detailed log of all actions for future reference and traceability
Managing a manual penalty requires diligence, documentation, and transparency. Sites that recover quickly are those that thoroughly correct, accurately document, and communicate clearly. Others get bogged down in demand-denial cycles that paralyze traffic for months. If your internal team lacks experience with these procedures or if the technical complexity exceeds your resources, it might be wise to seek an SEO agency specialized in managing penalties. Personalized support often accelerates crisis resolution and avoids costly mistakes that unnecessarily prolong the sanction.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Combien de temps faut-il pour qu'une demande de réexamen soit traitée ?
Le délai varie entre quelques jours et plusieurs semaines selon la charge de l'équipe manuelle de Google et la clarté de votre demande. Une demande bien documentée avec preuves concrètes accélère généralement le traitement.
Peut-on recevoir une pénalité manuelle sans notification dans Search Console ?
Non. Toute pénalité manuelle génère une notification dans Search Console. Si vous constatez une chute de trafic sans notification, il s'agit probablement d'un ajustement algorithmique, pas d'une action manuelle.
Faut-il supprimer totalement les pop-ups pour lever une pénalité sur les interstitiels ?
Pas nécessairement. Google tolère certains interstitiels légaux (age-gate, cookies, login). Le problème concerne les pop-ups intrusifs qui masquent le contenu principal sans raison valable, surtout sur mobile.
Que se passe-t-il si ma demande de réexamen est refusée ?
Vous recevez une notification expliquant pourquoi. Vous devez corriger les problèmes résiduels identifiés, puis soumettre une nouvelle demande. Chaque refus rallonge le processus de plusieurs semaines.
Une pénalité manuelle levée garantit-elle un retour au classement précédent ?
Non. La levée supprime la sanction, mais ne garantit aucun retour automatique au positionnement antérieur. Votre site doit reconquérir ses positions via la qualité du contenu et les signaux classiques de pertinence.
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