Official statement
Other statements from this video 15 ▾
- 0:33 Faut-il vraiment mettre à jour les dates de vos flux RSS et sitemaps à chaque modification ?
- 1:01 Les flux RSS peuvent-ils vraiment accélérer l'indexation de vos pages modifiées ?
- 2:39 Le taux de crawl révèle-t-il vraiment la qualité de votre site ?
- 3:09 Le crawl lent de votre site révèle-t-il vraiment un problème de qualité ?
- 6:50 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment sans conséquence pour votre référencement ?
- 6:50 Le contenu dupliqué pénalise-t-il vraiment le référencement Google ?
- 11:08 Faut-il vraiment varier les ancres de liens internes pour éviter une pénalité ?
- 19:08 Faut-il vraiment noindexer le contenu faible des forums pour sauver leur visibilité Google ?
- 19:29 Faut-il vraiment noindexer le contenu de faible qualité sur les forums ?
- 37:34 Faut-il vraiment tout reconfigurer dans Search Console lors du passage HTTPS ?
- 41:17 Faut-il vraiment se compliquer la vie avec les liens d'affiliation ?
- 41:17 Faut-il vraiment complexifier la gestion technique des liens d'affiliation ?
- 44:00 Pourquoi Googlebot ignore-t-il vos images en lazy loading sous le pli ?
- 52:26 Faut-il vraiment raccourcir ses URL pour mieux ranker sur Google ?
- 57:40 Peut-on vraiment contourner la détection des liens artificiels par Google ?
Each Penguin update operates independently with evaluation criteria that may evolve from one version to another. A site spared by one wave may be penalized in the next, and vice versa. Google does not commit to any fixed schedule, although the goal is to speed up the pace of deployments.
What you need to understand
Does Penguin always evaluate the same criteria from one update to another?
No, and that's the crucial point of this statement. Each iteration of Penguin is standalone and may revise link evaluation parameters. Specifically, tolerance thresholds, suspicious link patterns, or signal weightings can change.
A link profile deemed acceptable during Penguin N may become problematic with Penguin N+1 if Google fine-tunes its detection of manipulative patterns. The opposite is also true: a penalized site may see its situation normalize if the evaluation criteria evolve or if the corrections made better match the new thresholds.
How long does a Penguin update deployment actually last?
Mueller confirms that the deployment takes several weeks, not just a few days. This slowness complicates diagnosis: it's impossible to know if a fluctuation observed in week 1 is due to Penguin or another algorithmic factor.
For a practitioner, this means monitoring trends for at least 4 to 6 weeks before concluding an impact from Penguin. Tracking tools that announce 'Penguin hit your site on the 15th' are thus largely speculative during the rollout period.
Does Google guarantee a regular update frequency?
No, and that's frustrating. Mueller states that Google is working to speed up the cycle, but no monthly or quarterly periodicity is assured. Historically, the intervals between two Penguin updates have varied from a few months to over a year.
This unpredictability poses a major operational challenge: after a disavowal of links or a profile cleanup, there's no way to know when the next refresh will allow the site to recover. Some sites have waited 9 to 12 months before a new iteration took their corrections into account.
- Each Penguin is independent: evaluation criteria can evolve from one version to another
- The deployment lasts several weeks: do not jump to conclusions based on traffic variations
- No fixed schedule: impossible to predict when the next refresh will happen
- A site can enter or exit penalty with each iteration based on the evolution of criteria
- Recovery time is unpredictable: a profile cleanup may remain invisible for months
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with real-world observations?
Yes, generally. Practitioners have indeed noticed Penguin penalty removals without any particular corrective action, simply because the evaluation criteria had evolved. Conversely, previously stable sites have been affected by later iterations.
What is more problematic is the total opacity about what exactly changes from one version to another. Google never communicates on threshold adjustments, newly detected patterns, or changes in weighting. As a result, we work in the dark. [To be verified] whether this independence of iterations also applies to Panda, as suggested by Mueller.
Is the multi-week delay a technical constraint or a choice?
It's difficult to determine. Officially, it's presented as a technical constraint: recalculating link signals for billions of URLs takes time. But one can rightly wonder if this gradual deployment also helps to smooth out SERP variations and avoid too abrupt disruptions.
An instant rollout would cause massive, visible position jumps, creating panic and frustration among webmasters. A staggered deployment makes fluctuations more gradual and less attributable to a single cause. This is more comfortable for Google in terms of communication.
Should I still use the disavow file during a Penguin period?
Let’s be honest: disavowing remains relevant, but its effectiveness depends on the next Penguin refresh, the date of which no one knows. If you disavow today and Penguin does not update for 6 months, you remain penalized for those 6 months.
The real question is: do you have the discipline to clean your profile proactively and continuously, without waiting for a penalty to strike? Because with criteria that shift in each iteration, what was acceptable yesterday may become toxic tomorrow.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do if your site experiences a traffic drop during a Penguin rollout?
First, don't panic immediately. Wait 4 to 6 weeks to confirm that the drop is indeed due to Penguin and not to typical algorithmic volatility. Cross-reference your Analytics data with Google Search Console to identify if the loss affects specific queries or the entire site.
If the drop is confirmed and your link profile shows suspicious signals (over-optimized anchors, network links, low-quality directories), prepare a methodical disavow file. But keep in mind that recovery will only be effective with the next refresh, the date of which you do not know.
How can you anticipate changes in criteria from one iteration to another?
It's impossible to predict precisely, but you can adopt a defensive posture. Focus on the natural diversity of your link profile: vary the types of referring sites, anchors, and editorial contexts. A profile that looks too much like an optimized pattern is more likely to be caught by successive adjustments from Penguin.
Also, monitor discussions among practitioners during rollouts. When a new iteration starts, SEO forums and groups often highlight common patterns among affected sites. These observations may give you clues about new thresholds or criteria being applied.
What strategy should you adopt while waiting for the next refresh?
During the interval between two Penguins, focus on acquiring quality editorial links. These new positive signals will not offset an existing penalty (Penguin isolates bad links, it does not calculate an average), but they will set the stage for future recovery.
At the same time, continue cleaning: remove or disavow problematic links as they arise. When Penguin updates, your profile will be already aligned with healthy practices, maximizing your chances of a quick recovery.
- Wait 4 to 6 weeks before attributing a traffic drop to Penguin
- Analyze your link profile via Search Console and third-party tools (Ahrefs, Majestic, Semrush)
- Prepare a disavow file if manipulative patterns are identified
- Diversify your link profile to limit risks during future iterations
- Continuously acquire quality editorial links without waiting for a penalty
- Monitor practitioner discussions during rollouts to detect new targeted patterns
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un site peut-il sortir d'une pénalité Penguin sans action corrective ?
Combien de temps faut-il attendre après un désaveu pour voir un effet ?
Penguin fonctionne-t-il désormais en temps réel ?
Faut-il désavouer tous les liens suspects ou seulement les plus toxiques ?
Les critères Penguin et Panda évoluent-ils de la même manière ?
🎥 From the same video 15
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 24/10/2014
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