Negative articles, outdated pages and unwanted content — de-indexed from Google, or removed across Google, Bing and Yahoo. Discreet, secure, and tracked in your private order dashboard.
›
›
Per-link pricing with volume savings: 5 links save 5%, 10 links save 10%. After checkout, you send us the links through your secure order dashboard — nothing sensitive over email.
Google de-indexing is the process of removing a webpage from Google’s search index so it no longer appears in search results, even though the page still exists on the internet. The page stays live at its original address — but the 90%+ of people who search on Google can no longer find it.
For most reputation problems, that distinction barely matters. A negative article that nobody can find through search has lost almost all of its power to damage you. De-indexing is therefore the fastest, most discreet way to neutralise harmful content without ever contacting the publisher or starting a legal dispute.
Google does not host the web — it keeps an index of it: a constantly updated catalogue of pages it shows in results. De-indexing removes a page from that catalogue. The original website is untouched; what changes is its visibility.
Pages leave Google’s index through several legitimate mechanisms: the publisher adds a noindex instruction, the content qualifies under one of Google’s removal policies (personal information, explicit imagery, copyright and others), the page becomes outdated or unreachable, or a valid legal request is processed. A professional de-indexing service identifies which mechanism applies to your specific link and executes it correctly — which is precisely what we do.
A page can usually be removed from Google when it contains personal information, violates a Google content policy, is outdated or no longer live, infringes copyright, or when the source can be persuaded to de-index it. Most negative articles, blog posts, forum threads and directory listings fall into an actionable category.
When it works: exposed personal data (addresses, ID numbers, financial details), defamatory or policy-violating content, outdated pages, duplicate or scraped content, and most mid-tier publications.
When it’s harder: recent, accurate reporting by major news organisations on matters of public interest, court records, and government publications. We assess every link before work begins — if a link can’t be actioned, we tell you up front rather than take your money.
There are five established routes, and choosing the right one per link is most of the craft:
1. Source removal — the publisher deletes or amends the page. Strongest outcome, but publishers often refuse.
2. Policy-based removal — Google’s own tools remove content that breaches its policies (personal information, explicit content, copyright).
3. De-indexing at source — the page stays up, but a noindex instruction takes it out of search.
4. Legal removal — court orders and statutory rights (such as right-to-be-forgotten requests in some jurisdictions).
5. Suppression — when removal isn’t possible, positive content is built to outrank the negative result.
Our service assesses your links and applies the route — or combination — most likely to succeed, and you follow progress in your order dashboard.
Removal (or de-indexing) makes a result disappear from Google; suppression pushes it down by ranking positive content above it. Removal is definitive and ideal when a link qualifies. Suppression is the strategic fallback for links that can’t be removed — typically major-outlet news — and doubles as proactive reputation building.
The two work best together: de-index what can be de-indexed, then occupy page one with content you control. If you need the suppression side, our Brand Protection & ORM service and guaranteed editorial placements are built for exactly that.
From checkout to confirmation, everything happens inside your private client dashboard:
Step 1 — Order securely. Choose a package above and check out. Your client dashboard and order number are created instantly.
Step 2 — Send your links. Paste the URLs into your order’s private message window — links are never handled over email.
Step 3 — Assessment & execution. Our ORM team verifies each link is actionable and applies the correct removal route, posting progress updates to your order.
Step 4 — Confirmation. You receive confirmation in your dashboard once the links no longer appear in search results.
De-indexing removes the link from Google’s search results — the page still exists but is no longer found through Google. Full Search Removal extends this across Google, Bing and Yahoo for complete major-engine coverage.
In most cases, yes. Once a page is de-indexed or removed it stops appearing in results, and recurrence is rare. Because Google’s index is dynamic, we monitor actioned links and re-action any that resurface.
Most Google de-indexing completes within 7–21 days of receiving your links, depending on the type of source. You can follow progress in your private order dashboard.
Google rarely removes accurate news articles on request alone. However, articles can often be de-indexed when they contain personal information, breach a Google policy, are outdated, or when the publisher can be persuaded. Each article is assessed individually before work begins.
You cannot delete your name from Google entirely, but the individual pages that mention you can be de-indexed one by one, and positive content can be built to dominate the remaining results. Most clients combine both approaches.
Yes. Professional online reputation management uses entirely legitimate methods — Google’s own removal processes, publisher outreach, legal requests where applicable, and SEO. It is a standard service used by companies and individuals worldwide.
After checkout, open your order from the confirmation page or your account dashboard and paste the URLs into the private message window. Your links are never handled over email.