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2014 is shaping up to be the year of significant adoption and impact of Google Authorship.

Beyond just being a social network, Google+ serves as a platform for authors to verify their contributions to a specific publishing domain. Rel=author markup allows publishers to post an author's Google+ profile code to confirm who wrote the piece. The two sides match up and voilà! The result is bidirectional verification that an article was authored by a specific person.

Trust Placed in Authors

Now, Google knows with assurance who produced the content, not just where it is published, and that leads to something transformational in the search world.

Since Google's inception, it has ranked and displayed content based on trust signals of the publishing domain (overarching trust signals for domain trust has been link volume and quality). Historically, an article has been trusted and therefore ranked because of where it had been published.

Today, we find ourselves with a mechanism to authenticate author signatures. Google can choose to trust an article based on who wrote it, not just where it is published.

Once a large enough pool of verified authors and associated content exists, new ways of determining the relative trust and influence of an author emerge. Authors who publish frequently on trusted domains and garner significant engagement on those posts establish author-based trust signals.

Welcome to the unfolding world of Author Rank!

Eric Schmidt, chairman of Google, stated that the true cost of remaining anonymous may one day be irrelevance. The introduction of the who, coupled with the where, is the most fundamental addition to the Google equation since the company's inception.

"Within search results, information tied to verified online profiles will be ranked higher than content without such verification, which will result in most users naturally clicking on the top (verified) results," said Schmidt. "The true cost of remaining anonymous, then, might be irrelevance."

The 'Where' Is Still Important—It's Just Not Everything

The trust of the domain is still absolutely critical. Links will continue to play an important role in determining domain trust—and thereby search results. Matt Cutts, Google's head of search quality, even recently disclosed that Google has an internal test algorithm that does not use links—and its results are inferior in quality.

The key here is that a new additional fundamental component (the who) is integral in ascertaining the trustworthiness of a document.

What About Links?

In terms of contribution to organic search success, it's reasonable to expect that links are destined to eventually take second seat to authenticated digital signatures.

Think of links as invisible strings that connect tangible elements like blogs, videos, images, and pages of content. Those strings are destined to carry less weight in the algorithms that generate search results, while the pieces they connect carry more weight, especially if they contain digital authenticated signatures that have a history of trust.

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In Google Authorship, the 'Who' Overtakes the 'Where'

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Tom Rusling

Tom Rusling is the general manager at iAcquire, a content marketing agency.

LinkedIn: Tom Rusling

Twitter: @TomRusling