Official statement
Other statements from this video 14 ▾
- 0:32 Faut-il vraiment rediriger toutes les versions HTTP vers HTTPS pour éviter les backlinks incohérents ?
- 7:21 Faut-il vraiment arrêter d'optimiser pour les facteurs de classement Google ?
- 8:26 Les sitelinks échappent-ils vraiment à tout contrôle SEO ?
- 8:26 Les sitelinks sont-ils vraiment pilotables par le SEO ou reste-t-on à la merci de l'algorithme ?
- 11:43 Pourquoi Googlebot bloque-t-il l'accès à votre site et comment y remédier ?
- 13:26 Fetch as Google suffit-il vraiment pour diagnostiquer les blocages de Googlebot ?
- 13:52 Les tendances de recherche tuent-elles votre visibilité organique ?
- 16:00 Combien de liens peut-on placer dans un article de blog sans risquer une pénalité Google ?
- 17:09 Les descriptions dupliquées en pagination affectent-elles vraiment le classement ?
- 18:00 Faut-il vraiment vérifier toutes les versions de votre domaine dans Search Console ?
- 28:17 Comment Google indexe-t-il réellement des millions de pages ?
- 31:03 Les signaux sociaux influencent-ils vraiment le référencement naturel ?
- 36:31 Faut-il vraiment supprimer du contenu pour éviter Panda ?
- 52:58 Pourquoi Google a-t-il supprimé les photos d'auteur des résultats de recherche ?
Google claims it does not penalize identical product specifications, provided that the additional content offers real user value. This statement alleviates concerns around duplicate content in e-commerce. Essentially, using manufacturer technical sheets is fine as long as you enhance the page with reviews, comparisons, buying guides, or relevant usage context.
What you need to understand
Why does this statement change the game for e-commerce?
Historically, the issue of duplicate content has terrified online stores. Thousands of retailers sell the same products with the same supplier descriptions. The fear of penalties drives some to artificially rewrite perfectly clear specs just to differentiate from competitors.
Google cuts to the chase: identical technical specifications are not penalizing duplicate content. An iPhone 15 Pro has 256 GB of storage, period. Rewriting "memory capacity of two hundred fifty-six gigabytes" adds nothing for anyone. What matters is what you add around these specs.
This position implicitly acknowledges that some content must be factual and standardized. Google aims to understand if your overall page deserves to rank, not to count how many sites list the power consumption of a hairdryer.
What exactly does Google mean by "additional content that adds value"?
Here's where it gets murky. Google does not precisely define this threshold of added value. We can extrapolate from the Quality Raters Guidelines: detailed comparisons, usage guides, authentic testimonials, real-life product photos, compatibility charts.
A site that merely pastes manufacturer specs without adding anything remains vulnerable. Not necessarily to an algorithmic penalty, but to a simple lack of preference in the results. If ten sites display the same bare specs, Google will naturally favor the one that offers genuine editorial content as well.
The nuance is crucial: absence of penalty does not guarantee good ranking. You won't be penalized, but you also won't be favored.
Does this rule only apply to pure technical specs?
Google specifically mentions "product specifications." This refers to objective technical data: dimensions, weight, compositions, measurable characteristics. Generic supplier marketing descriptions probably do not fall into this category.
Copying a promotional text like "This revolutionary product will offer you an unparalleled experience" over 200 words remains classic duplicate content. Google makes a reasonable exception for factual data, not a license for editorial laziness.
- Identical technical specs do not trigger a penalty if the rest of the page adds value
- Added value remains the decisive criterion for ranking, even without penalties
- Generic marketing descriptions likely do not benefit from this tolerance
- Absence of sanctions does not guarantee good positioning when compared to more content-rich competitors
- Google evaluates the page as a whole, not each block of content in isolation
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, but with important nuances. Well-positioned e-commerce sites that reuse manufacturer specs indeed always have significant differentiating content. Amazon, Cdiscount, or Boulanger do not rank on empty product sheets, even if they copy official specs.
Conversely, minimalist affiliate sites with only duplicated specs have never performed well, even before this clarification. They are not necessarily penalized in the algorithmic sense; they are simply invisible because Google finds better options elsewhere. The distinction between active penalty and simple non-preference remains difficult for practitioners to delineate.
What are the gray areas that Google does not clarify here?
The first vague point is: what ratio of specs to unique content is acceptable? Google states that the additional content must add value, but quantifies nothing. Is 100 words of specs + 50 words of reviews sufficient? Should you aim for 30% minimum unique content? [To verify] using your own ranking data.
The second gray area is the very definition of "specifications". Are the marketing bullet points provided by brands specs or promotional content? Google leaves this open to interpretation. In practice, consider only measurable technical data as specs: anything that pertains to marketing arguments should be rewritten.
The third inaccuracy is: what about aggregators and comparators? These sites massively reuse identical specs across thousands of products. Google seems to tolerate them if they add sorting, filtering, and comparison features. But where do you draw the line between a helpful aggregator and a content farm? [To verify] on a case-by-case basis according to your niche.
In what cases might this rule not apply as expected?
Be cautious with purely affiliate sites without real expertise. Google may decide that a site which only copy-pastes specs with two lines of generic reviews does not add sufficient value, even technically not penalized. The concept of Helpful Content takes precedence over the technical absence of duplication.
Also beware of massive reissues at scale. A site with 10,000 product sheets comprised of 95% identical specs available on 50 other sites may trigger an overall algorithmic reevaluation of the site's quality. Google increasingly assesses the average quality of an entire site, not just page by page.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can you effectively structure a product sheet to maximize this tolerance?
Organize your sheets into clearly identified blocks. Technical specs in a dedicated table or list, properly marked in schema.org Product. Unique editorial content in separate sections: enhanced descriptions, usage guides, buying tips, comparisons with similar products.
This structure allows Google to easily differentiate duplicated factual data from original content. Avoid mixing specs and marketing arguments in the same paragraph; it confuses the algorithmic analysis. A pure specs block + a pure editorial block = a clear signal for the bots.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid with this new understanding?
Do not fall into the trap of artificial textual over-optimization. Some SEOs might want to "spin" or paraphrase the specs to create cosmetic differences. This is counterproductive: you degrade clarity for the user without fooling Google, and you risk introducing factual errors.
Another common mistake is to assume that a sheet with specs + 3 generic lines like "excellent product, good value for money" constitutes value-added content. Google has enough behavioral data to spot shallow content. Aim for a minimum of 150-200 words of genuinely informative editorial content per sheet.
Finally, do not ignore E-E-A-T signals under the pretext that specs are tolerated. A site without demonstrated expertise that reuses specs will remain less effective than a recognized industry player, even with the same level of technical duplication.
How to audit your site to check for compliance with this Google logic?
Run a crawl and identify your pages with a similarity rate over 70% with other sites. For each, manually distinguish the specs part from the editorial part. If unique content represents less than 20-25% of the total volume, prioritize enriching these pages.
Monitor your engagement metrics by page type: time on page, bounce rate, scroll depth. Sheets that perform poorly in engagement despite traffic likely signal too light content. Google incorporates these signals in its assessment of added value.
- Visually and structurally separate technical specs from unique editorial content
- Aim for a minimum of 150-200 words of original and informative content per product sheet
- Implement schema.org Product markup to clearly identify structured data
- Enrich with differentiating elements: original photos, demo videos, comparison tables
- Regularly audit the unique content / duplicate content ratio on your top pages
- Never artificially paraphrase specs to create false differentiation
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Puis-je reprendre intégralement les specs fournisseurs sans risque de pénalité ?
Quelle quantité de contenu unique faut-il ajouter aux specs pour être dans les clous ?
Les descriptions marketing fournisseurs bénéficient-elles de la même tolérance que les specs ?
Comment Google différencie-t-il specs et contenu éditorial sur une page ?
Un site avec uniquement des specs dupliquées sera-t-il pénalisé ?
🎥 From the same video 14
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 50 min · published on 28/08/2014
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