Official statement
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- 1:07 Comment arrêter temporairement un site sans perdre son classement Google ?
- 4:17 Faut-il vraiment privilégier les lecteurs plutôt que les moteurs de recherche ?
- 7:29 Une date incorrecte dans les snippets nuit-elle vraiment au classement SEO ?
- 18:55 Comment Google gère-t-il réellement les URLs à paramètres et leur canonicalisation ?
- 27:33 Les blogs gratuits sont-ils un frein au référencement naturel ?
- 42:23 Faut-il vraiment du server-side rendering pour indexer une single-page application ?
- 47:17 Les liens artificiels depuis des sites satellites déclenchent-ils vraiment des actions manuelles de Google ?
- 54:06 Le Mobile-First Index impose-t-il vraiment une parité stricte entre versions mobile et desktop ?
- 55:50 L'infinite scroll tue-t-il l'indexation mobile si vous n'utilisez pas pushState ?
Google announces the global rollout of Rich Cards, an enhanced format that improves the presentation of search results for certain types of content like recipes. For SEOs, this means an opportunity to gain visibility in SERPs with a more attractive display. However, be aware that this format imposes strict technical constraints and only works for a handful of content types.
What you need to understand
What exactly are Rich Cards and how do they differ from other enriched formats?
Rich Cards are an enriched display format that relies on structured data markup. They allow Google to present certain information in visual card format in mobile search results, with images, ratings, and other metadata directly visible.
This format stands out from traditional rich snippets due to its horizontal carousel display, which is particularly well-suited for mobile. While a traditional rich snippet enhances a single result, Rich Cards can appear in a swipable series, creating a different user experience.
Why does Google limit this format to only certain types of content?
Google does not offer Rich Cards for all types of pages. At the time of this announcement, only a few types of structured content were eligible: recipes, movies, courses, and articles (according to the appropriate schema.org).
This restriction is due to the need to maintain consistency in display and ensure that the presented information meets specific criteria. Google prioritizes content where structured data adds immediate value to the user.
How does the global rollout impact multilingual sites?
The expansion to Japan and other markets means that multilingual sites can now benefit from Rich Cards across all their language versions. This opens up opportunities for e-commerce and editorial sites operating internationally.
For SEO practitioners, this means checking that Schema.org markup is correctly implemented on all language versions of the site. A common mistake is deploying structured data only on the main version, forgetting the local variations.
- Horizontal carousel format optimized for mobile, different from traditional rich snippets
- Eligibility restricted to certain types of content (recipes, movies, courses, articles)
- Global rollout requiring consistent implementation across all language versions
- Structured data mandatory according to the appropriate Schema.org vocabulary
- Strict technical validation through Google tools to ensure display
SEO Expert opinion
Does this announcement really mark a turning point for visibility in SERPs?
Let's be honest: the impact of Rich Cards remains limited to supported content types. If you manage a B2B professional services site or a traditional corporate blog, this format probably doesn't concern you directly.
However, for recipe sites, streaming platforms, or educational websites, the opportunity is real. Field tests show that Rich Cards can increase click-through rates by 15 to 30% on mobile when they actually display. Context matters here.
What are the concrete limits that Google does not mention here?
Google rarely communicates on the actual display rates of enriched formats. A properly marked-up page does not automatically achieve Rich Card display. [To be verified] The exact triggering criteria remain opaque, but it has been observed that content quality and site popularity play a role.
Another point that is rarely mentioned: Rich Cards can sometimes cannibalize your CTR if the user obtains essential information directly in the SERP without clicking. For a recipe with cooking time and rating displayed, the bounce rate to the site may increase if the user finds the offering insufficient.
In what cases can this format be counterproductive?
If your business model relies on advertising display and requires on-site traffic, Rich Cards raise questions. They allow users to consume information without visiting or to conduct a stricter prior screening.
For some recipe sites, there is a noticeable decline in overall traffic despite better visibility, as Google displays enough information for users to choose another option from the carousel. Competition intensifies within the enriched format itself.
Practical impact and recommendations
How to correctly implement Rich Cards on your site?
The first step: verify that your content type is eligible for Rich Cards. Check Google's official documentation on supported structured data types. If you manage recipes, use the Recipe schema with all recommended fields (prepTime, cookTime, recipeIngredient, nutrition, etc.).
Next, implement JSON-LD markup in the head of your pages. This format is now favored by Google as it clearly separates structured data from HTML content. Avoid microformats or RDFa unless there are major technical constraints.
What technical errors prevent you from obtaining enriched display?
The most common error: marking up information that is not visible on the page. Google requires a strict match between the markup and the displayed content. If you indicate a rating of 4.8/5 in the Schema but no rating appears visually, it is considered misleading.
Another classic pitfall: inconsistent or missing values. For a recipe, if you forget the image field or indicate an absurd preparation time (2 minutes for beef bourguignon), Google may refuse the enriched display without explicit notification.
Should you prioritize Rich Cards in your overall SEO strategy?
This depends on your industry and your goals. If you operate in an eligible field with high visual competition (recipes, movies, training), implementation becomes a priority. The visibility gain justifies the technical investment.
For others, focus first on the fundamentals: content quality, technical performance, user experience. Traditional structured data (Organization, Breadcrumb, Article) already provides solid value without the complexity of Rich Cards.
- Check the eligibility of your content type for Rich Cards through Google's documentation
- Implement complete JSON-LD markup with all mandatory and recommended fields
- Test the display with Google's Rich Results Test tool
- Ensure strict consistency between structured data and visible content on the page
- Monitor display and click rates in Search Console after deployment
- Deploy markup across all language versions for international sites
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les Rich Cards fonctionnent-elles sur desktop ou uniquement sur mobile ?
Puis-je forcer l'affichage des Rich Cards si mon balisage est correct ?
Les Rich Cards améliorent-elles directement le classement dans les résultats de recherche ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour voir apparaître les Rich Cards après implémentation ?
Que se passe-t-il si je modifie mon balisage Schema après validation ?
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