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The idea that author authority affects Google rankings dates back to 2009. That's when Google was granted the so-called agent rank patent, and it openly disclosed the news in a release that authorship matters for SEO.

In 2011, the authorship markup was added, allowing the publisher to use either HTML5 or XFN standards to mark authors (HTML5, rel="author"), and respectively (XFN, rel="me"). That enabled Google to pinpoint articles of the same author everywhere on the Web.

It's been 12 years since 2011, so you should be asking yourself, Does authorship still matter for Google and SEO?

Google's Original Authorship Idea

Three years after the release, John Mueller announced on Google+ (which also no longer exists, just like original authorship), the official end of tracking data using rel="author" or rel="me". Because authorship was closely linked with Google+, its eventual decline contributed to abandoning the project.

And although there have been over 100 failed Google products, Google always looks to improve the search engine algorithm, and ideas like adding authorship tend to stick as a good part of article publishing. So, did it replace author tracking with something else?

Does Authorship Still Matter to Google?

Google continually optimizes its algorithm and uses privately contracted raters in the form of evaluating pages that would pop up during certain queries. After the release of SQRG—the Google Search Quality Rater Guidelines (2018)—those contractors had to abide by certain rules.

One of the major guidelines of the release determined the need for a page to have expertise, high authority, and trustworthiness.—or the well-known acronym EAT.

The Raters Guidelines have been updated several times over the years to match the basic principle of EAT. In October 2021's changelog, you can see that tracking content creators—previously called authors—is back in the game:

October 2021 update in Google's SQRG changelog

Following up on the same document, in points 2.6 and 6.6, on page 39, you can see that if there is limited information about the content creator (author), it often leads to the webpage's losing its position in the search rankings.

In an interview with Article-Writing.co, Will Bagnall, SEO expert and founder at SUSO Digital, said he thinks that in purely algorithmic terms, authorship doesn't make a significant difference to Google.

However, having a trustful persona who signs the given article under his or her name can be beneficial for other factors (e.g., conversion rate). He says that a content piece that indicates its author will inspire more confidence than one that doesn't indicate an author.

Segmenting SEO performance by the author isn't necessary. An author is only one part of the authority and expertise of a website.

Different Types of Websites Require Different Author Info

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How Author Authority Affects Search Rankings

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of David Tile

David Tile is the founder and CEO of Article-Writing.Co, a Toronto-based thought leadership content marketing firm.

LinkedIn: David Tile

Twitter: @davidtile