What does Google say about SEO? /

Official statement

Creating a YouTube video and then placing the exact text on a web page will not result in a duplicate content flag. One is a video, the other is text, which constitutes unique content. It's even recommended for accessibility purposes.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 21/08/2024 ✂ 20 statements
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📅
Official statement from (1 year ago)
TL;DR

Publishing the text transcript of a YouTube video on your website triggers no duplicate content penalty. Google considers video format and text format as two distinct and unique contents. This practice is even encouraged to improve accessibility.

What you need to understand

Does Google really differentiate between content formats?

Martin Splitt's statement settles a recurring question: format matters just as much as substance. A YouTube video and its transcript published on a web page are not perceived as duplicate content.

Why? Because the algorithm distinguishes between media types. A video requires a player, streaming, a YouTube context. Text, on the other hand, displays directly on the page. Consumption signals are radically different.

What is the accessibility argument invoked by Google?

Google justifies its position through accessibility—a lever often underestimated in SEO. Transcripts allow deaf users, people in noisy environments or without sound to access the content. They also facilitate quick navigation and visual scanning of content.

On the crawl side, the transcript gives Googlebot direct access to text without requiring complex video processing. It's a clear signal of thematic relevance.

Does this rule apply to all video platforms?

Martin Splitt explicitly mentions YouTube, but the principle holds for Vimeo, Wistia, or any video hosted elsewhere. What matters is the format difference, not the platform.

Be careful however: duplicating a transcript already published elsewhere as plain text would indeed create duplicate content. The logic only applies to video → text conversion.

  • Video format ≠ text format: Google treats them as two distinct entities
  • No risk of duplicate content penalty in this specific case
  • Transcription improves accessibility and facilitates crawling
  • The rule applies to all video platforms, not just YouTube
  • Duplicating a transcript already published as text remains problematic

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement reflect what we observe in the field?

Let's be honest: Google's position does match actual observations. Sites that publish transcripts of their videos generally experience no loss in visibility. Some even see gains—the transcript allows ranking on long-tail queries absent from the video alone.

The problem? Google remains vague on one crucial point: which version to prioritize in the SERPs when video and text target the same query. The statement affirms there's no duplication, but doesn't specify whether both formats can coexist on the first page for the same search. [To verify] based on your sector and your analytics observations.

What nuances should be applied to this rule?

First nuance: a verbatim transcript isn't always optimal for SEO. A video contains hesitations, repetitions, oral turns of phrase poorly suited to reading. Lightly rewriting to improve fluidity often enhances the experience—and retention signals.

Second nuance: if your transcript reproduces 100% of the text from an existing article, then you create a video from it, you reverse the logic. The question becomes: does your video provide genuine added value or is it just lazy recycling? Google tolerates transcription, but values enrichment.

In what cases does this rule not protect against duplication?

If you publish the same transcript on three different pages of your site, you create classic internal duplication. The protection only concerns the video ↔ text relationship, not text ↔ text.

Likewise, taking a transcript of a competitor's video published elsewhere exposes you to a copied content flag. The rule only covers your own video content.

Warning: this statement does not authorize you to scrape third-party YouTube transcripts to publish on your site. The principle only applies to your own productions.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you concretely do with this information?

First action: systematically transcribe your videos. Whether via automatic tools (YouTube Studio, Otter.ai, Descript) or manually, publish the text on the page where the video is embedded. This enriches the page, facilitates crawling and improves accessibility.

Second action: optimize the transcript. Don't settle for a raw copy-paste. Structure the text with intermediate headings, correct oral awkwardness, add relevant internal links. The transcript becomes real SEO content.

What mistakes should be avoided when implementing?

Mistake #1: hiding the transcript behind an accordion or tab invisible by default. Sure, it lightens the page visually, but Googlebot may interpret this as soft cloaking. Keep the text visible, or use an expand/collapse system without blocking JS.

Mistake #2: duplicating the transcript across multiple pages. If you republish the same video in three different articles, vary the transcripts or use a canonical to the main version.

Mistake #3: neglecting schema.org structure. A video with transcript deserves enriched VideoObject markup, explicitly mentioning the transcript in the "transcript" or "description" field.

How can you verify that the strategy is working?

Monitor organic traffic evolution on pages enriched with transcripts. Compare with video pages without text. Look at long-tail queries in Search Console: the transcript should surface expressions absent from the title and meta.

Also monitor engagement signals: time on page, bounce rate, scroll depth. A well-integrated transcript improves retention and reduces immediate exits.

  • Systematically transcribe all strategic videos
  • Lightly rewrite the transcript to improve fluidity
  • Structure the text with headings and internal links
  • Keep the transcript visible (not hidden by default)
  • Never duplicate the same transcript across multiple pages
  • Implement VideoObject schema with transcript mention
  • Monitor traffic evolution on long-tail query terms
  • Compare performance of pages with/without transcripts
Video transcription is not duplicate content—it's an underexploited SEO opportunity. It enriches your pages, captures additional queries and improves accessibility. The challenge? Integrating this practice consistently and structurally across your entire video ecosystem. If managing the technical aspects of these optimizations (schema, structure, avoiding internal duplication) seems complex to orchestrate alone, a specialized SEO agency can help you deploy a performant and Google-compliant transcription strategy.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je publier la transcription d'une vidéo YouTube concurrente sur mon site ?
Non. La règle ne protège que vos propres contenus. Reprendre la transcription d'une vidéo tierce constitue du vol de contenu et expose à une pénalité pour duplicate.
Faut-il publier la transcription sur la même page que la vidéo ou sur une page séparée ?
Idéalement sur la même page pour maximiser les signaux de pertinence et éviter le duplicate interne. Si vous créez une page séparée, utilisez une canonical ou variez suffisamment le contenu.
La transcription automatique de YouTube suffit-elle ou faut-il la corriger ?
La transcription auto comporte souvent des erreurs. Corrigez-la manuellement pour éviter les fautes qui nuiraient à l'expérience utilisateur et à la crédibilité de votre contenu.
Google favorise-t-il la vidéo ou la transcription dans les résultats de recherche ?
Ça dépend de l'intention de recherche. Pour une requête informationnelle, le texte peut ranker mieux. Pour une requête tutorielle, la vidéo est souvent privilégiée. Les deux peuvent coexister.
Dois-je baliser la transcription avec un schema spécifique ?
Oui, utilisez VideoObject en mentionnant la transcription dans le champ 'transcript' ou 'description'. Cela renforce la cohérence sémantique et améliore l'éligibilité aux rich snippets vidéo.
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