Plugin Support
Laca
(@lacadev)
Hi @garp200555
Let me clarify a few things about Google’s review guidelines:
- Trustindex is considered a third party provider – this means we can technically provide structured data (
schema markup) about your business reviews.
- The rule about “self-serving reviews aren’t allowed” means that you cannot manually create or write reviews yourself and then place them into schema markup as if they were independent user reviews.
- Even if everything is implemented correctly, it’s always Google’s decision whether to show the review stars (rich snippets) in search results or not.
So, using Trustindex you are not violating the guidelines, but you should be aware that the final display is up to Google.
Kind regards,
Laca from Trustindex
Hi Laca,
Thanks for the reply. I’m looking at Google’s docs and they seem to contradict parts of your explanation. Google defines self-serving as “a review about entity A placed on the website of entity A — either directly in their markup or via an embedded third-party widget,” and says it won’t display review snippets for LocalBusiness/Organization in those cases. It also says “Don’t aggregate reviews or ratings from other websites.” Could you clarify how TrustIndex’s JSON-LD for third-party reviews on a business’s own pages aligns with these rules? Thanks
Hi TrustIndex team
Any updates on my previous message ?
thanks
Plugin Support
Laca
(@lacadev)
Hi @garp200555
Sorry for the late reply!
According to Google’s guidelines on rich snippets for reviews, displaying aggregated or listed reviews on a website does not trigger star ratings in search results when the schema type is set to Organization or LocalBusiness. However, all other structured data and the presence of rich snippets still positively contribute to SEO.
There is a less clear area when the schema type is set to Product and the Organization is included as the Manufacturer. In such cases, the review details may appear in search results. We’ve made this option available under the Company Settings page upon client request. It is, however, the user’s responsibility to ensure that their business legitimately qualifies as a Product category.
While this approach is increasingly being used across the industry, we have not seen or found any reports of Google penalizing such usage.
Kind regards,
Laca from Trustindex