Official statement
Other statements from this video 9 ▾
- 6:17 Pourquoi vos pages techniquement parfaites n'apparaissent-elles pas dans Google ?
- 7:20 Pourquoi Google recommande-t-il JSON-LD pour le balisage de données structurées ?
- 7:54 Faut-il vraiment mettre à jour son sitemap offres d'emploi régulièrement pour ranker ?
- 9:20 Pourquoi les erreurs 503 peuvent-elles détruire votre crawl budget ?
- 12:52 Comment Google affiche-t-il désormais les avis et salaires dans les résultats d'emploi ?
- 19:32 Le balisage d'offres d'emploi sans données de localisation : valide ou pas ?
- 23:45 Pourquoi Google pénalise-t-il le balisage structuré sur vos pages de résultats internes ?
- 44:12 Pourquoi le balisage schema emploi ne garantit-il pas votre positionnement dans les résultats ?
- 49:47 Faut-il vraiment enrichir ses données structurées avec tous les champs disponibles ?
Google penalizes sites that misuse structured markup or publish content that does not comply with its guidelines by completely disabling the display of rich results. The penalty can be reversed through a reconsideration request, but only after all identified issues have been fully corrected. This statement reminds us that rich snippets are not a guaranteed right, but a revocable privilege at any time.
What you need to understand
Why does Google disable markup instead of penalizing organic rankings?
Google's strategy is targeted: to disable rich results without affecting traditional organic positioning. This approach allows the punishment of abuse without penalizing the entire site.
The logic is pragmatic. A site can have quality content while manipulating its markup to gain unearned rich snippets. Google therefore separates the two aspects: crawling and indexing continue normally, but enriched displays disappear from the SERPs.
What types of abuses trigger these sanctions?
The most frequent violations involve deceptive Schema.org markup. A classic example: adding fake rating stars, publishing misleading FAQs that do not exist on the page, or marking up content invisible to the user.
Google also detects incompatibilities between markup and actual content. If your Schema states a product is in stock for €50 while the page shows €75 or out of stock, you are in violation. The markup must accurately reflect what the user sees.
How does the reconsideration process work after a penalty?
The procedure requires a complete correction of identified issues before any request. Google does not lift sanctions based on promises of future improvement. You must first clean up your markup and then precisely document the changes made.
The processing time varies greatly. Some requests receive a response in a few days, while others may wait several weeks. The quality of your documentation matters: explain factually what has been corrected, without vague language or generic excuses.
- Targeted sanction: only rich results disappear, not the organic ranking
- Conditional reversibility: reconsideration request possible only after complete correction
- No guaranteed timeframe: processing times range from a few days to several weeks
- Documentation required: you must prove changes with concrete examples
- Precautionary principle: Google prefers to disable questionable markup rather than display misleading information
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with practices observed in the field?
Absolutely. Field feedback confirms that Google prioritizes selective deactivation over global algorithmic penalties. I have observed dozens of cases where rich snippets disappeared overnight without any visible impact on traditional organic traffic.
What stands out is the speed of execution. Unlike traditional manual actions that generate notifications in Search Console, markup deactivation can occur without prior warning. You discover it by noticing a sharp drop in CTR for certain queries.
What gray areas remain in this policy?
The definition of "non-compliant content" remains vague. Google does not publish a comprehensive list of sanctionable violations. Some cases are obvious (fake ratings, hidden FAQs), others are subject to interpretation.
Take customer reviews: how many are needed to legitimately mark up an AggregateRating? Google does not provide a numerical threshold [To be verified]. Some sites with 3-5 reviews retain their stars, while others with 20+ lose them. Consistency seems to vary by sector.
In what cases does recovery fail despite corrections?
Reconsideration requests often fail due to lack of specificity. Sending a generic message like "We have corrected our markup" is not enough. Google wants specific URLs, before/after comparisons, and annotated screenshots.
Another trap: correcting the markup without fixing the underlying content. If your marked-up FAQ remains misleading even with technically valid Schema.org, you will recover nothing. Both technical and editorial compliance is required simultaneously.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should be prioritized in audits to avoid these sanctions?
Start with an audit of markup/content consistency. Each structured element must match exactly what the user sees. Use Google's rich results testing tool, but also conduct human checks page by page.
Focus on high-risk Schema types: Product, Review, Recipe, FAQ. These categories are closely scrutinized as they directly influence purchasing decisions. A price discrepancy, inflated rating, or artificial FAQ can trigger a deactivation.
How to effectively document a reconsideration request?
Structure your request in three parts: precise identification of issues, corrective actions with evidence, validation post-correction. For each penalized URL, provide annotated before/after screenshots and the corrected markup source code.
Include tests validated by the official Google tool. Show that the markup now passes all checks without errors or warnings. Add a factual explanation of the changes: "Removal of 12 FAQs not present in the visible content" is more effective than "Overall quality improvement".
What mistakes should absolutely be avoided when making corrections?
Don't remove all your markup in panic. Google penalizes specific abuses, not the principle of Schema.org itself. Keep legitimate markup, removing only what poses problems.
Avoid partial corrections. If you fix 80% of the penalized pages while leaving 20% problematic, your request will be denied. Google requires total compliance before reactivating anything. One uncorrected example is enough to invalidate the entire approach.
- Check the exact correspondence between Schema.org and visible content on 100% of marked pages
- Test each type of rich result with the official Google tool before submission
- Document each modification precisely with URL, screenshots, and source code
- Wait for full validation of all corrections before making the reconsideration request
- Monitor positions and CTR post-correction to measure the actual impact of recovery
- Set up monthly markup checks to prevent regressions
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Une sanction sur le balisage affecte-t-elle le positionnement organique classique ?
Combien de temps faut-il pour récupérer les résultats enrichis après correction ?
Peut-on être sanctionné sans notification dans Search Console ?
Faut-il supprimer tout le balisage Schema.org en cas de sanction ?
Que se passe-t-il si la demande de réexamen est rejetée ?
🎥 From the same video 9
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h00 · published on 14/12/2017
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.