Official statement
Other statements from this video 1 ▾
Google states that the value provided to users takes precedence over the formal uniqueness of content for e-commerce sites. Unique content without practical utility is no longer sufficient for good positioning. The challenge is to define what 'added value' truly means in a context where product sheets often share the same technical information: size, weight, color, composition.
What you need to understand
Is Google really letting go of the requirement for content uniqueness?
No, and that's the subtlety. Google is not saying that uniqueness no longer matters. It is reframing the priority: the formal originality of a text does not guarantee that it is useful. Many e-commerce sites have long produced 'unique' descriptions by simply rewriting supplier data, without offering anything new to the user.
What Google is pointing out is the tendency to write for the sake of writing, to paraphrase to escape duplicate content without questioning whether this rewriting truly serves anyone. The real question becomes: what does this page offer that others do not? A comparison table? An accurate size guide? A detailed customer experience report?
What does Google mean by "added value"?
Google intentionally remains vague about the practical definition of this concept, and that is a problem. Added value can manifest in multiple ways: enriched technical data, usage context, personalized recommendations, quality visuals, explanatory videos, detailed FAQs based on real customer questions.
The trap is believing that a unique text of 300 words filled with keywords constitutes value. For Google, value is now measured by behavioral signals: time spent on the page, bounce rate, interactions, additions to cart. If users find what they are looking for quickly and act accordingly, the page has value. If the 'unique' text is never read, it has none.
How does this statement fit into the evolution of algorithms?
This position aligns directly with the Helpful Content Update and Google's growing obsession with measurable user satisfaction. The algorithm is becoming less binary: it is no longer 'duplicate = penalty', but 'useless content = invisibility', whether it's duplicated or not.
For e-commerce sites managing thousands of references, this is a seemingly comforting development. But beware: Google is not saying that you can copy and paste without consequences. It states that if you copy a supplier description but enrich it with truly useful complementary content, the page can still perform well. Unique content remains a lever, but it is no longer sufficient if it offers nothing.
- Value outweighs formal uniqueness: a unique but hollow text loses out to partially duplicated but useful content.
- Behavioral signals count more: Google measures utility by actual user engagement.
- Enrichment is key: visuals, FAQs, usage guides, structured customer reviews provide more than a reformulated paragraph.
- Duplicate content is not absolved: Google does not recommend mass duplication without contribution.
- Specific e-commerce context: this statement addresses product catalogs, not editorial content where originality remains central.
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with observed practices in the field?
Yes and no. In competitive niches, it is indeed observed that pages with partially duplicated content but enriched with structured data, customer reviews, and quality visuals can outperform pages with 100% unique text but lacking interactive elements. The problem is that this rule does not apply uniformly across sectors.
For high-stakes commercial queries, Google still heavily favors established brands, even if their content is standardized. A small e-commerce business that relies solely on value without working on uniqueness risks being crushed by players with overwhelming domain authority. [To be confirmed]: Google does not provide any metrics to objectively measure this 'value' it promotes, leaving SEO in uncertainty.
What nuances should be added to this official discourse?
The first nuance: this statement clearly targets standardized product catalogs (electronics, fashion, equipment), not editorial content or personalized services. On an SEO blog, a copied-and-pasted article from elsewhere will never have enough 'value' to compensate for the lack of originality.
The second nuance: Google talks about 'value for the user', but does not specify how it measures it concretely. Core Web Vitals, session time, organic CTR, and conversion rate can all play a part, but no official document weighs these signals. We remain in interpretation, which is frustrating for those wanting to optimize factually.
In which cases does this rule not apply?
This does not apply when you are in direct competition with giants that have both authority AND enriched content. In this case, uniqueness becomes an essential differentiator. If Amazon and Cdiscount already have all the structured data, all the reviews, all the product variants, your only room for maneuver remains the unique editorial content: buying guides, detailed comparisons, customer experiences.
It also does not apply to purely informational content. A blog article, a service landing page, an institutional page must be unique. Google does not forgive duplication in these types, regardless of the supposed 'value'.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do concretely on product sheets?
First action: audit your low-engagement pages. Identify those with a high bounce rate, low session time, few additions to cart. These are the ones that lack value, whether they have unique content or not. Then, enrich them: add FAQs based on real customer questions, incorporate demonstration videos, provide size or compatibility charts.
Second action: if you have thousands of references and writing unique content for each is impossible, prioritize pages with high traffic potential. Use tools like Google Search Console to identify pages that already receive impressions but few clicks, or those ranking on pages 2-3. These are your priority targets for enrichment.
What mistakes should be avoided at all costs?
Do not just paraphrase the supplier description thinking it creates value. Google and users detect this kind of hollow content. If your 'unique rewrite' does not provide any additional information, it is worthless. Better to have a short description complemented by rich elements than a lifeless reformulated chunk.
Do not overlook structured data. A product sheet with Schema.org Product implemented correctly, marked customer reviews, and structured product variants will always have an advantage over a page with unique but technically poor text. Google reads the code as much as the visible text.
How can you check if your site is really providing value?
Analyze your behavioral metrics in GA4 and Search Console. If your e-commerce pages have an average session time of less than 30 seconds and a bounce rate above 70%, it is a clear signal that perceived value is low. Cross-reference this data with SEO positions: well-ranked but unengaging pages risk dropping during the next updates.
Also test the impact of your enrichments. Add FAQs to 10% of your product sheets and measure traffic and conversion evolution over 3 months. If you notice an improvement, scale it up. E-commerce SEO remains an empirical work, especially when Google is vague about its criteria.
- Identify low-engagement pages via GA4 and Search Console
- Enhance product sheets with FAQs, videos, comparison tables, customer reviews
- Correctly implement structured data Schema.org Product
- Prioritize high traffic potential pages for optimization
- Measure the impact of enrichments over 3 months before generalizing
- Never paraphrase without providing new information
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Un contenu dupliqué peut-il bien se positionner s'il apporte de la valeur ?
Comment Google mesure-t-il concrètement la valeur d'une page ?
Faut-il arrêter de rédiger du contenu unique sur les fiches produits ?
Cette règle s'applique-t-elle aux contenus éditoriaux et blogs ?
Quels enrichissements prioriser sur une fiche produit à faible trafic ?
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 10/12/2012
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