Official statement
Other statements from this video 5 ▾
- 15:51 La balise canonical et le nofollow suffisent-ils vraiment à protéger vos contenus distribués ?
- 20:54 Les anchor texts optimisés en backlinks : quand Google passe-t-il à l'action contre les infractions ?
- 30:56 Faut-il vraiment abandonner les mots-clés généralistes pour des expressions plus précises ?
- 31:54 Le rendu JavaScript chez Google : combien de temps avant l'indexation réelle ?
- 34:22 Google peut-il vraiment filtrer automatiquement tous les mauvais backlinks ?
Google emphasizes that links in sponsored articles must be NoFollow to prevent ranking manipulation. This directive aims to clearly separate editorial content from paid content. In practice, applying NoFollow to all sponsored links may create issues in certain contexts where editorial relevance is genuine.
What you need to understand
Does Google Really Want to Ban All Link Juice in Sponsored Content?
Google's position is clear: links in sponsored articles should not be used to manipulate PageRank. This directive aims to distinguish between natural editorial content and paid content.
The search engine considers any unmarked paid link as an attempt to manipulate. The NoFollow tag (or rel="sponsored" since 2019) allows this commercial transaction to be flagged and cancels the transfer of PageRank.
What Challenges Does This Directive Present in Reality?
In reality, not all sponsored content is created equal. A detailed 2000-word article with qualitative analysis and multiple sources is vastly different from a clearly promotional 300-word article. Yet, Google imposes the same rule on both.
The distinction between paid content that is editorially relevant and disguised spam remains vague in this statement. Google provides no objective criteria to differentiate a sponsored article deserving of its link from a mere disguised backlink purchase.
How Does Google Detect Unmarked Sponsored Links?
The search engine uses several signals: the presence of legal mentions ("sponsored article", "partnership"), analysis of surrounding content, the source site's history, and temporal correlations between publication and payment.
Algorithms also spot suspect link patterns: repeated same anchors, same source sites, clustered link spikes. A discreet sponsored link may pass, but a campaign of 50 synchronized articles will trigger alerts.
- NoFollow or Sponsored tag required on all paid links to avoid penalties
- Google does not distinguish editorial quality in its general directive
- Detection based on algorithmic patterns and multiple contextual signals
- Real risk of manual penalty if a massive campaign is detected
SEO Expert opinion
Is This Directive Consistent with Observations on the Ground?
Yes and no. manual penalties for unmarked sponsored links do exist, especially on large-scale campaigns. Google's webspam teams actively target networks of paid articles.
However, on the ground, many high-quality sponsored links without NoFollow pass without sanctions. Google cannot technically detect all commercial exchanges, especially when they remain discreet and the content is genuinely relevant.
What Nuances Is Google Deliberately Overlooking?
The statement makes no distinction between qualitative native advertising and link farms. Should an article sponsored by a brand in a specialized media outlet, with real editorial value, really be treated as spam?
Google prefers a simple binary rule, even if it penalizes legitimate editorial practices. The search engine knows full well that some sponsored links provide genuine informational value, but it refuses to acknowledge this officially. [To be verified]: no public data demonstrates that Google actually applies differentiated detection based on editorial quality.
In What Scenarios Does This Rule Become Counterproductive?
A long-term editorial partnership between two specialized sites, with exchanges of expert content and contextual links, technically falls under this directive. Yet, such collaborations genuinely enrich the informational ecosystem.
Similarly, a guest expert publishing in a media outlet and securing a link to their professional site: if there is indirect compensation (visibility for content), should it really be NoFollow? The line becomes absurd.
Practical impact and recommendations
What Steps Should You Take With Ongoing Campaigns?
Your first instinct should be to audit all sponsored articles published in the last 12 months. Check for the presence of NoFollow or Sponsored on each outgoing link. If any dofollow links exist, assess the risk based on the campaign's visibility.
For discreet and high-quality campaigns, the risk of detection remains low. For massive campaigns or on high-visibility sites, immediately correct by adding the missing attributes or contacting publishers.
What Mistakes Should Be Avoided in New Content Campaigns?
Never launch a campaign of 20+ sponsored articles with identical optimized anchors. Google instantly detects these patterns. Vary anchors, space out publications, and diversify sources.
Also, avoid native advertising platforms that automate dofollow links. Some promise "SEO-friendly sponsored content" without NoFollow: this is exactly what Google targets. Contractually demand the Sponsored tag in editorial briefs.
How Can You Check the Compliance of Your Link Profile?
Use Google Search Console to extract all backlinks. Filter those coming from clearly sponsored articles (manual detection or via keywords "partnership", "sponsored" in the content). Check the rel attribute of each suspicious link.
For outsourced campaigns, request agencies to provide a comprehensive report of the attributes used. Never trust an agency that promises "white hat link building" without explicitly mentioning NoFollow/Sponsored on paid placements.
- Audit the last 12 months of sponsored links and correct missing attributes
- Contractually demand rel="sponsored" in all briefs for paid content
- Vary anchors, sources, and publication schedules to avoid detectable patterns
- Manually check link attributes in Search Console monthly
- Document each campaign to justify editorial intent in case of penalties
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Faut-il mettre nofollow sur tous les liens dans un article sponsorisé ou seulement sur le lien commercial principal ?
La balise rel="sponsored" est-elle équivalente à nofollow pour Google ?
Un échange de visibilité sans argent (guest post avec lien auteur) doit-il être en nofollow ?
Comment corriger des liens sponsorisés publiés il y a plusieurs mois sans nofollow ?
Quel risque réel encourt-on si quelques liens sponsorisés restent en dofollow ?
🎥 From the same video 5
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 35 min · published on 28/06/2017
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