Official statement
Other statements from this video 18 ▾
- 1:05 Do unique images really impact your visibility in Google Images?
- 1:35 Do images really affect your ranking in web search results?
- 2:08 Are image alt attributes truly critical for your Google SEO?
- 3:40 Why does Google crawl pages but not index them?
- 4:44 Can you really use French text in image geotags for local SEO?
- 6:13 Should you really submit for indexing after fixing your structured data?
- 7:20 Can you really aggregate third-party reviews on your site without risking a penalty?
- 11:41 Is voice search really a standalone ranking factor?
- 13:25 How can you manage age interstitials without blocking Google’s indexing?
- 15:27 Do Google Ads Quality Scores Really Affect Your Organic Ranking?
- 17:20 Do outbound links really improve your page rankings?
- 19:31 Should customer reviews in JavaScript be marked up with structured data?
- 24:06 Why do your JavaScript pages take weeks to get indexed?
- 27:57 Does Googlebot's crawling from the United States really hurt your loading speed?
- 29:35 Should you use removal tools during a site migration?
- 33:29 Redirects or Canonicals: What’s the Real Difference for Category Transfers?
- 45:44 Does mobile-first indexing truly require strict parity between mobile and desktop?
- 56:48 How can you outperform dominant competitors in SEO without exhausting yourself on ultra-competitive queries?
Google explains that inconsistencies in Knowledge Panels arise from contradictions between the various sources consulted by the algorithm. It is the responsibility of the SEO professional to correct structured information across all third-party platforms, including Wikipedia. This statement places the workload entirely on the webmaster without specifying the relative weight of each source or the update timelines.
What you need to understand
What is a Knowledge Panel and how does Google populate it?
The Knowledge Panel is the information box that appears on the right side of search results for certain brand or entity queries. Google aggregates data from multiple sources: the internal Knowledge Graph, structured data from the official website, Wikipedia, Wikidata, social media, and public databases.
Unlike a traditional snippet, the Knowledge Panel synthesizes information without necessarily pointing to a single source. The algorithm cross-references signals and prioritizes what it deems most reliable. The problem arises when two credible sources contradict each other; Google may randomly display one or the other, or worse, mix incompatible elements.
Why do inconsistencies between sources cause issues?
Imagine a company that has moved its headquarters. If the official website indicates the new address via Schema.org but Wikipedia still mentions the old one, Google faces a conflict. Depending on the freshness of the crawled data and the algorithmic trust given to each source, the Knowledge Panel may display the outdated address.
Another common case is company founding dates. One site may claim a date through structured data, while Wikipedia, often seen as authoritative, mentions a different one. Google does not always favor the official site. It aggregates, sometimes awkwardly.
What does it really mean to ensure consistency?
Mueller does not provide an exhaustive list of sources to monitor. He explicitly mentions Wikipedia, confirming its weight in the Knowledge Graph. But one should also consider Wikidata, verified social profiles (Google Business Profile, LinkedIn, Facebook), professional directories, and industry databases.
Consistency involves strict governance of the digital identity. Every change in corporate information must be reflected everywhere simultaneously. A single omission on one platform is enough to create a contradictory signal that Google can exploit against your interests.
- Consistently check Wikipedia and Wikidata whenever legal or factual information changes.
- Align Schema.org structured data with third-party sources before deploying it.
- Monitor official social profiles and correct them if necessary.
- Use the Knowledge Panel suggestion tool to report errors directly to Google.
- Regularly audit public databases that may feed into the Knowledge Graph.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
Yes, but it lacks transparency on source arbitration. It is indeed observed that Wikipedia holds considerable weight, sometimes more than structured data from the official site. However, Google does not publish any clear hierarchy. A site can have perfect Schema.org markup and still have its Knowledge Panel contradicted by an outdated but well-sourced Wikipedia page.
The real issue is the lack of a guaranteed timeline. Correcting Wikipedia is not enough: Google must recrawl, reassess the trust of the source, and then regenerate the Knowledge Panel. This process can take weeks or even months. In the meantime, the client sees incorrect data and the SEO professional has no means to force an update.
What nuances should be added to this recommendation?
Mueller places the responsibility entirely on the webmaster, as if all sources were controllable. However, Wikipedia is edited by an independent community. If a contributor refuses a change, you are blocked. The same goes for Wikidata, which imposes strict sourcing rules. [To verify]: Does Google have a mechanism to weigh sources controlled by the entity itself?
Another point: Mueller does not mention cases of conflict of interest. A brand may legitimately want to promote certain information that Wikipedia deems non-neutral. Google does not always rule in favor of the entity involved, which creates unsolvable tensions. An SEO professional needs to know when to refrain from modifying Wikipedia and to favor other channels.
In what cases does this rule not apply?
Some Knowledge Panels are entirely generated automatically from public databases (e.g., postal codes, weather data, exchange rates). Correcting your site will have no impact if Google only consults data from INSEE or the Central Bank. It is essential to identify the primary source and act at that level.
Another exception involves ambiguous entities. If multiple companies have the same name, Google may merge or mix their data. In this case, the inconsistency does not arise from a factual error but from a disambiguation problem. It is then necessary to strengthen distinguishing signals: SIREN identifier for France, precise address, explicit structured data.
Practical impact and recommendations
What steps should be taken to correct an erroneous Knowledge Panel?
First, identify the source of the error. Compare the Knowledge Panel data with that from your site, Wikipedia, Wikidata, Google Business Profile, LinkedIn, and Facebook. Note each divergence in a table. This diagnostic phase takes time but is essential for targeting corrections.
Next, prioritize Wikipedia and Wikidata if these platforms are the source of the problem. Create a Wikipedia account, study the writing conventions of the relevant category, and find reliable secondary sources to support your modification. Never change without external justification: a link to your site will not be sufficient. Prefer news articles, official documents, and institutional databases.
What mistakes should be avoided when correcting third-party sources?
Avoid spamming Wikipedia with promotional content. The community immediately detects interested modifications. If your alteration is reverted, discuss it on the article’s discussion page rather than forcing it. An editorial conflict will cost you more time than it saves.
Also, do not just correct the most visible source. If you change Wikipedia but leave Wikidata outdated, Google may continue to pull data from Wikidata. Check all structured sources: DBpedia identifiers, Freebase (obsolete but sometimes still used), OpenCorporates for businesses.
How can you verify that corrections have been recognized by Google?
Use the modification suggestion tool directly in the Knowledge Panel (the “Suggest a change” button). Google will often ask you to prove that you represent the entity. This channel is faster than waiting for the natural recrawl.
Then, monitor the Knowledge Panel with tracking tools. Some SEO software offers alerts regarding Knowledge Panel changes. Alternatively, set up weekly manual monitoring. Note each change in a dated log to assess the effectiveness of your corrections.
- Audit all third-party sources that may feed into the Knowledge Graph (Wikipedia, Wikidata, Google Business Profile, social media).
- Correct inconsistencies while adhering to editorial rules of each platform (external sourcing for Wikipedia).
- Align Schema.org structured data from the official site with corrected information from third-party sources.
- Use the integrated suggestion tool in the Knowledge Panel to directly report errors to Google.
- Monitor Knowledge Panel developments over several weeks to measure the impact of corrections.
- Document each modification in a tracking journal to facilitate future audits.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Combien de temps faut-il pour que Google mette à jour un Knowledge Panel après correction des sources tierces ?
Dois-je corriger Wikipedia même si mon site affiche les bonnes données structurées ?
Puis-je modifier Wikipedia uniquement pour corriger mon Knowledge Panel ?
Que faire si mon Knowledge Panel affiche des informations d'une autre entreprise homonyme ?
Existe-t-il un moyen de forcer Google à privilégier mes données structurées plutôt que Wikipedia ?
🎥 From the same video 18
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 30/11/2018
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.