What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 3 questions

Less than 30 seconds. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~30s 🎯 3 questions 📚 SEO Google

Official statement

To help users find and navigate an e-commerce site, all products sold must be clearly published, whether in-store, online, or both. This assists Google in indexing this information and presenting it to users searching for products to buy.
0:30
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 8:49 💬 EN 📅 20/10/2020 ✂ 15 statements
Watch on YouTube (0:30) →
Other statements from this video 14
  1. 1:00 Comment créer des pages produits performantes qui plaisent vraiment à Google ?
  2. 1:33 Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il autant sur les descriptions et spécifications produits détaillées ?
  3. 1:33 Les informations d'achat complètes sont-elles devenues un facteur de classement Google ?
  4. 1:33 Les avis clients sont-ils vraiment un critère de ranking Google ?
  5. 2:03 Pourquoi les données structurées produits sont-elles devenues incontournables pour ranker en e-commerce ?
  6. 2:15 Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il pour que vous téléchargiez TOUT votre inventaire sur Merchant Center ?
  7. 3:06 Merchant Center vs données structurées : qui gagne vraiment la bataille de la priorisation Google ?
  8. 4:08 Comment Google utilise-t-il la Search Console pour signaler les problèmes de données structurées ?
  9. 4:39 Les erreurs de données structurées bloquent-elles vraiment l'indexation de vos pages ?
  10. 4:39 Les avertissements de données structurées bloquent-ils vraiment l'affichage des résultats enrichis ?
  11. 5:41 Faut-il vraiment cliquer sur « Valider la correction » dans Search Console après avoir corrigé vos données structurées ?
  12. 5:41 Le Rich Results Test remplace-t-il vraiment la Search Console pour valider vos données structurées ?
  13. 7:15 Le CTR des pages produits est-il vraiment un levier SEO à optimiser en priorité ?
  14. 7:27 Pourquoi certaines fiches produits ne génèrent-elles aucun résultat enrichi dans Google ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that clearly publishing all products sold — in-store, online, or both — aids indexing and visibility in shopping searches. The direct implication: an incomplete or poorly structured catalog limits your crawl space and organic traffic opportunities. In practice, this means creating separate product pages even for items sold only in physical stores, as long as their availability is clearly indicated.

What you need to understand

Why does Google emphasize exhaustive catalog publication so much?

Google aims to map the actual commercial offer to better match shopping search intentions. A user searching for "light wood Scandinavian chair" doesn't want to land on a site that hides half its stock or only lists the most profitable products.

By indexing all products sold — online, in-store, or both — Google can present your complete offer in organic results, Google Shopping, and even in local searches under the "Nearby" tab. If you sell a product only in a physical store but don't create a dedicated page, you're missing out on that traffic.

What does it really mean to "clearly publish" a product?

This involves three technical requirements: creating a unique and crawlable URL for each product, structuring data with Schema.org Product, and explicitly indicating availability (in stock, out of stock, in-store only, on order).

Too many e-commerce sites hide references behind non-crawlable JavaScript filters or only create pages for products available for immediate delivery. Google can't index what it can't see. Catalog transparency becomes a signal of quality and relevance for the engine.

Does this recommendation also apply to multi-channel brands?

Absolutely. If you have a network of physical retail locations and an e-commerce site, Google wants you to publish the entire catalog, even if some products are only available in stores.

This allows users to discover your offer online before visiting a store and improves your visibility in local searches ("buying X near me"). The key is to clearly indicate the purchasing methods: in-store pickup, delivery, limited stock at certain locations, etc.

  • Create a unique product page for each item sold, regardless of the distribution channel
  • Structure your data using Schema.org Product and the attributes availability, offers, itemCondition
  • Clearly indicate purchasing methods (online, in-store, both) to avoid user confusion
  • Maintain pages even when temporarily out of stock, with an OutOfStock status instead of a 404 error
  • Link the online catalog to local inventories if possible, via Google Business Profile integrations or Merchant Center feeds

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices on the field?

Yes and no. On well-structured large e-commerce sites, the correlation between catalog completeness and organic visibility is clear. Sites that publish all their references — even those with low search volume — capitalize on long-tail opportunities and benefit from more regular crawling.

On the other hand, for small sites with a limited crawl budget, publishing thousands of low-value product pages (technical duplicates, minimal variations, products never in stock) can dilute authority and slow the indexing of priority pages. [To be verified]: Google does not specify how it prioritizes between completeness and content quality.

What nuances should be added to this recommendation?

Let's be honest: publishing is not indexing. Creating 10,000 product pages without unique content, consistent internal linking, and optimized title and meta tags is pointless. Google may index these pages, but they will never rank.

The real nuance is that quality beats quantity. A product page with a rich description, customer reviews, optimized images, and clear usage context will always outperform a skeleton page generated automatically. If you sell 5,000 references but only have the resources to optimize 500 pages, focus on those first.

When does this rule not strictly apply?

For luxury brands or premium retailers, publishing the entire catalog online may harm the scarcity strategy or high-end positioning. Some fashion houses purposely refuse to publish certain capsule collections or limited editions online to force customers to visit stores.

Similarly, for B2B distributors with complex technical catalogs, publishing thousands of references without contextual usage can generate unqualified traffic and burden the site without ROI. In such cases, it's better to publish rich category pages and buying guides, then offer access to the complete catalog upon request for quotes.

Warning: Do not confuse "publishing all products" with "creating duplicate content." If you sell the same product in multiple colors or sizes, create a single page with variants (Schema.org Product attributes) rather than 20 nearly identical URLs. Google values intelligent consolidation, not page inflation.

Practical impact and recommendations

What specific actions should be taken to implement this recommendation?

Start with a comprehensive audit of your catalog. Export the complete list of your products sold (across all channels) and compare it to the URLs indexed in Google Search Console. The gap reveals missing products, orphaned pages, or references hidden behind non-crawlable filters.

Next, structure your product data with Schema.org. Each page must include complete Product markup: name, image, description, sku, brand, offers (with price, priceCurrency, availability, url). For products sold only in stores, use the attribute availability="InStoreOnly" and add a link to the list of sales points.

What errors should be absolutely avoided in managing the online catalog?

Never delete a product page that ranked well, even if the product is permanently out of stock. Redirect it with a 301 to an equivalent product or a relevant category. A 404 error on a URL with historical traffic and backlinks is a waste of SEO potential.

Avoid also creating empty product pages (without description, image, or price) just to "check the completeness box." Google values content completeness, not the number of pages. An unoptimized skeleton page may be indexed but classified as "low-quality content," penalizing the entire site.

How can I check if my catalog is properly indexed and usable by Google?

Use Google Search Console to cross-reference three reports: Coverage (indexed pages vs submitted pages), Performance (impressions and clicks per product page), and Enhancements > Products (Schema.org markup errors). If product pages are discovered but not indexed, check crawl budget, internal linking, and content quality.

Also, test your product pages in the rich results test tool to validate the Schema.org markup. If Google doesn’t detect the Product structured data, your pages won't be able to appear in shopping carousels or rich snippets, even if they are indexed.

  • Audit the gap between the complete catalog and indexed pages in GSC
  • Create a unique and crawlable URL for each product sold (across all channels)
  • Mark all product pages with Schema.org Product (name, image, sku, offers, availability)
  • Clearly indicate purchasing methods (online, in-store, delivery, pickup) on each product sheet
  • Maintain out-of-stock pages with an OutOfStock status instead of deleting them
  • 301 redirect permanently discontinued products to equivalents or relevant categories
Publishing your entire product catalog — online and in-store — is a major SEO opportunity that is often underutilized. However, it requires a solid technical architecture, rigorous Schema.org markup, and a coherent content strategy. If implementing these optimizations seems complex to manage on your own, or if you handle a catalog of several thousand references, the support of a specialized e-commerce SEO agency could significantly accelerate your visibility growth and help you avoid costly mistakes in crawl budget and indexing.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Dois-je créer des pages produits pour des articles vendus uniquement en magasin physique ?
Oui, Google recommande de publier tous les produits, quel que soit leur canal de vente. Cela améliore l'indexation et permet aux utilisateurs de découvrir votre catalogue complet, même s'ils doivent se déplacer pour acheter.
Cette recommandation s'applique-t-elle aussi aux produits temporairement en rupture de stock ?
Absolument. Maintenir la page produit avec un statut de disponibilité clair (OutOfStock) préserve l'autorité de la page et évite les erreurs 404 qui nuisent à l'expérience utilisateur et au crawl.
Comment indiquer clairement qu'un produit n'est disponible qu'en magasin ?
Utilisez les balises Schema.org Product avec l'attribut 'availability' réglé sur 'InStoreOnly' ou 'PreOrder'. Ajoutez un message visible indiquant les modalités d'achat (retrait en magasin, liste des points de vente, etc.).
Un catalogue produit incomplet peut-il impacter mon crawl budget ?
Indirectement oui. Si Google constate que votre site ne publie qu'une fraction de votre offre réelle, il peut sous-estimer votre pertinence pour certaines requêtes shopping et réduire la fréquence de crawl des nouvelles pages produits.
Quels risques si je cache volontairement certains produits de mon catalogue en ligne ?
Vous limitez votre surface d'indexation, ratez des opportunités de trafic longue traîne, et créez potentiellement de la confusion si ces produits sont mentionnés ailleurs (réseaux sociaux, marketplaces, avis clients).
🏷 Related Topics
Crawl & Indexing E-commerce AI & SEO

🎥 From the same video 14

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 8 min · published on 20/10/2020

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.