
E-E-A-T , Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness , is probably the most discussed and least understood concept in SEO. Every conference talk mentions it. Every agency claims to optimize for it. But most teams can’t explain what Google actually evaluates, how human quality raters assess it, or what specific changes improve E-E-A-T signals on a website.
The root of the confusion: E-E-A-T is not a ranking factor in the way that page speed or backlinks are. It’s a framework that Google’s human quality raters use to evaluate search results. Those evaluations inform Google’s algorithms , but E-E-A-T itself isn’t a score, a metric, or something you can directly optimize for in a technical sense.
What you can do is align your content, site structure, and brand presence with the signals that demonstrate E-E-A-T. This guide covers what those signals actually are , based on Google’s own Quality Rater Guidelines, not speculation.
What Are the Four Components of E-E-A-T?
Google added “Experience” to the original E-A-T framework in December 2022. Here’s what each component means in practice:
| Component | What Google’s Quality Raters Evaluate | Signals That Demonstrate It |
|---|---|---|
| Experience | Does the content creator have first-hand experience with the topic? | Personal anecdotes, original photos, product usage details, “I tested this” language, real-world results |
| Expertise | Does the creator have the knowledge or skill in the topic area? | Professional credentials, formal education, portfolio of work, depth of explanation, technical accuracy |
| Authoritativeness | Is the creator or website a recognized authority on the topic? | Backlinks from authoritative sites, brand mentions, industry citations, awards, speaking engagements |
| Trustworthiness | Is the page and website reliable and honest? | Accurate information, transparent about who’s behind the site, clear editorial policies, secure site (HTTPS), accessible contact information |
The hierarchy matters: Trustworthiness is the most important component. Google’s Quality Rater Guidelines explicitly state that “Trust is the most important member of the E-E-A-T family.” A page can have experience, expertise, and authoritativeness , but if it’s untrustworthy, the overall E-E-A-T assessment will be low.
How Do Google’s Quality Raters Actually Assess E-E-A-T?
Google employs thousands of human quality raters who evaluate search results using the Search Quality Rater Guidelines , a 170+ page document that Google publishes publicly. These raters don’t directly impact rankings. Instead, their assessments help Google’s engineering teams evaluate whether algorithm changes are producing better results.
What raters look at when assessing a page:
- Who created the content: Is there a named author? Can you find information about them? Do they have relevant credentials?
- Who is responsible for the website: Is there an “About” page? Contact information? A clear organizational identity?
- Reputation of the creator and website: What do external sources say about this person or organization? Reviews, news articles, Wikipedia entries, professional profiles.
- Content quality: Is the content accurate, comprehensive, and original? Does it provide value beyond what’s available elsewhere?
- Page purpose and how well it fulfills that purpose: Does the page do what it claims to do? Does it actually help the user?
The raters assign a “Page Quality” rating on a scale from Lowest to Highest. Pages with the lowest E-E-A-T signals , anonymous authors, no organizational transparency, inaccurate information, deceptive practices , receive the lowest quality ratings.
What Are YMYL Topics and Why Do They Require Higher E-E-A-T?
YMYL stands for “Your Money or Your Life” , topics where inaccurate information could directly harm a person’s health, financial stability, safety, or wellbeing. Google applies significantly higher E-E-A-T standards to YMYL content.
| YMYL Category | Examples | E-E-A-T Bar |
|---|---|---|
| Health and safety | Medical advice, drug information, mental health guidance | Extremely high , medical professionals expected |
| Financial advice | Investment guidance, tax information, insurance, loans | Very high , financial credentials expected |
| Legal information | Legal rights, immigration, contracts, regulations | Very high , legal expertise expected |
| News and current events | Political news, international events, science reporting | High , journalistic standards expected |
| Shopping/transactions | E-commerce, product pages, purchase flows | High , trust signals for transactions |
| Groups of people | Content about race, religion, gender, nationality | High , accuracy and sensitivity required |
If your site operates in a YMYL space, E-E-A-T isn’t optional , it’s essential for ranking. Google is measurably more selective about which sites appear in results for YMYL queries.
How Do You Demonstrate Experience on Your Website?
Experience , the newest E-E-A-T component , is about showing that the content creator has actually engaged with the subject matter firsthand. This is Google’s response to the flood of AI-generated content that can synthesize information without any real-world experience behind it.
Concrete ways to demonstrate experience:
- Original photography and video: Show the product you’re reviewing. Document the process you’re describing. Stock photos signal “I wrote about this but didn’t do it.”
- Specific details only practitioners know: Include details that come from doing, not just reading. “The third step took 45 minutes, not the 10 minutes the manual claims” is an experience signal.
- Results and outcomes: Share actual results , before/after data, performance metrics, real outcomes. “We implemented this for a client and saw a 34% improvement in crawl efficiency over 60 days” is an experience marker.
- Honest limitations and caveats: Experienced practitioners know what doesn’t work and when advice doesn’t apply. Acknowledging limitations signals real-world experience more than unconditional recommendations.
- Process documentation: Walk through the actual steps you took, including problems encountered and how you solved them. This level of detail is hard to fabricate.
“Experience is the hardest E-E-A-T signal to fake,” says Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital. “You can hire writers to produce expert-sounding content. You can build an impressive About page. But the specific, practical details that come from actually doing the work , the unexpected complications, the nuances that only emerge through practice , that’s what separates content that ranks from content that reads well but doesn’t perform.”
How Do You Build Expertise Signals Into Your Content?
Expertise signals tell both quality raters and algorithms that the content creator has genuine knowledge in the subject area. Here’s how to build these signals:
Author Pages and Bios
Every piece of content should have a named author with a dedicated author page. The author page should include:
- Full name and professional photo
- Relevant credentials and education
- Professional experience related to the topics they write about
- Links to published work, speaking engagements, and professional profiles (LinkedIn, industry associations)
- sameAs schema markup connecting the author entity to their profiles across the web
Content Depth Markers
Expert content looks different from surface-level content. These markers signal expertise:
- Technical terminology used correctly and explained clearly
- Multiple levels of explanation (simple → technical → practitioner-level)
- References to primary sources, not just other blog posts
- Original frameworks, models, or methodologies
- Acknowledgment of complexity and nuance rather than oversimplification
- Data-backed claims with sources cited
Editorial Review Process
For YMYL content, showing that content goes through an editorial or expert review process adds a layer of expertise credibility. Document this on your site:
- “Reviewed by [Expert Name], [Credential]” below the author byline
- A published editorial policy explaining your content creation and review process
- Dates for publication and most recent update
How Do You Build Authoritativeness for Your Brand?
Authoritativeness is the hardest E-E-A-T component to build because it’s primarily determined by external signals , what others say about you, not what you say about yourself.
Authority-building activities:
| Activity | Authority Signal It Creates | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Publishing original research | Other sites cite and link to your data | 3-6 months for citations to accumulate |
| Speaking at industry events | Conference pages link to speaker profiles; recorded talks become reference content | 6-12 months to build a speaking portfolio |
| Contributing expert commentary to journalists | Brand mentions and quotes in news publications | Ongoing , 1-2 placements per month |
| Earning Wikipedia mention | Strongest entity authority signal available | Requires genuine notability (not something you can force) |
| Industry awards and recognition | Third-party validation of expertise | Annual , apply strategically |
| Earning backlinks from topic authorities | Respected peers linking to your content signals authority transfer | Ongoing , proportional to content quality |
| Maintaining consistent brand entity | Same name, same claims, same facts across all web presences | Immediate , audit and align all profiles |
How Do You Build Trust Signals on Your Website?
Trust is the foundation of E-E-A-T. Without trust, nothing else matters. Here are the specific trust signals that Google’s quality raters look for:
Transparency Signals
- About page: Clearly explains who owns the site, their mission, and their team. Not a vague mission statement , real information about real people.
- Contact page: Multiple ways to reach the organization (phone, email, physical address). No “contact us” form with nothing else.
- Author attribution: Every piece of content has a named author with a link to their bio. Anonymous content is a trust liability.
- Editorial policy: Explains how content is created, reviewed, and updated. Especially important for YMYL sites.
- Disclosure statements: Affiliate relationships, sponsored content, and advertising are clearly disclosed where applicable.
Technical Trust Signals
- HTTPS: Non-negotiable. Any page without HTTPS fails basic trust requirements.
- Privacy policy: Required by law in most jurisdictions, and a trust signal for quality raters.
- Terms of service: Especially important for e-commerce and sites that collect user data.
- Secure payment processing: For e-commerce, visible trust badges, SSL seals, and clear refund/return policies.
Content Trust Signals
- Accurate information: Factual claims that can be verified against authoritative sources. A single major factual error can tank a page’s trust assessment.
- Citations and sources: Link to primary sources for data, statistics, and factual claims. “According to a study” without a link is weak. A direct link to the study is strong.
- Regular updates: Content with visible “last updated” dates that show ongoing maintenance. Outdated information , especially in fast-changing fields , is a trust problem.
- Honest tone: Content that acknowledges limitations, presents multiple perspectives where appropriate, and doesn’t make exaggerated claims.
What Does a Complete E-E-A-T Audit Look Like?
Here’s the audit framework we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital to assess and improve E-E-A-T signals across a website:
1. Author Audit
- Are all content pieces attributed to named authors?
- Do all authors have dedicated author pages with real bios and credentials?
- Do author pages have Person schema markup?
- Are authors’ credentials relevant to the topics they write about?
- Can authors be verified through external sources (LinkedIn, industry profiles, publications)?
2. Organization Audit
- Is there a comprehensive About page with real organizational information?
- Is Organization schema markup implemented with accurate data?
- Are there clear, accessible contact methods?
- Does the organization have consistent NAP (Name, Address, Phone) across the web?
- Is the organization mentioned on external authoritative sources?
3. Content Quality Audit
- Does content demonstrate first-hand experience where applicable?
- Are factual claims sourced and verifiable?
- Is content comprehensive for its topic?
- Does content provide unique value beyond what competitors offer?
- Is content regularly updated with visible “last updated” dates?
4. Trust Infrastructure Audit
- Is the site on HTTPS with a valid SSL certificate?
- Are privacy policy and terms of service present and current?
- Are affiliate and sponsorship relationships disclosed?
- Do e-commerce pages have visible trust elements (return policies, secure checkout, real reviews)?
- Is there an editorial or content policy published on the site?
5. External Authority Audit
- What do external sources say about the brand? (Search brand name + “reviews,” “complaints,” “scam”)
- Does the brand have a Wikipedia or Wikidata entry?
- Are there backlinks from authoritative sources on the brand’s topics?
- Are brand entities consistently represented across the web (Google Business Profile, social profiles, industry directories)?
- Is the brand cited in AI responses for relevant queries?
What E-E-A-T Improvements Have the Most Impact?
Not all E-E-A-T improvements are equal. Based on the patterns we’ve observed across multiple sites, here’s what tends to produce the most measurable ranking impact:
| Improvement | Impact Level | Implementation Effort | Timeframe to See Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adding named authors with real credentials to all content | High (especially YMYL) | Medium | 4-8 weeks after reindexing |
| Creating comprehensive About and Contact pages | Medium-High | Low | 4-6 weeks |
| Adding source citations to factual claims | Medium | High (retroactive) | 6-12 weeks |
| Implementing Person and Organization schema | Medium | Low-Medium | 4-8 weeks |
| Earning backlinks from topically authoritative sites | High | High | 8-16 weeks |
| Publishing original research and data | High | High | 12-24 weeks (long-term compounding) |
| Adding “last updated” dates and maintaining content | Medium | Medium (ongoing) | 4-8 weeks per updated page |
| Building external brand mentions and citations | Medium-High | High (ongoing) | 12-24 weeks |
How Does E-E-A-T Affect AI Search Visibility?
E-E-A-T signals don’t just affect Google’s traditional search results. They increasingly influence whether AI systems cite your content in generated responses.
AI systems evaluate source trustworthiness when deciding which sources to cite. The signals they use overlap heavily with E-E-A-T:
- Author recognition: AI systems trained on web data develop associations between authors and topics. Authors who consistently publish high-quality content on a subject become preferred citation sources.
- Source consistency: AI systems cross-reference information across multiple sources. Sites that consistently provide accurate, verifiable information become trusted sources that AI systems preferentially cite.
- Structural clarity: Content with clear definitions, structured data, and unambiguous statements is easier for AI systems to extract and cite accurately. Vague or hedging language gets passed over in favor of definitive, well-sourced statements.
- Entity authority: Brand entities that are well-established in knowledge graphs (Wikipedia, Wikidata, Google Knowledge Panel) receive a trust advantage in AI citation decisions.
The bottom line: building E-E-A-T for Google and building credibility for AI citation are the same project. The signals overlap almost entirely.
What Common E-E-A-T Misconceptions Should You Avoid?
These misconceptions lead to wasted effort and misaligned priorities:
- “E-E-A-T is a ranking factor.” It’s not. It’s a concept used by quality raters to evaluate results. There is no E-E-A-T score in Google’s algorithm. But the signals that demonstrate E-E-A-T (backlinks, content quality, author authority) do affect rankings through other algorithmic mechanisms.
- “We need to be an authority on everything.” No. E-E-A-T is evaluated per topic, not per site. A site can have excellent E-E-A-T for financial planning and poor E-E-A-T for medical advice , and that’s fine. Stay in your lane.
- “Adding an author name is enough.” The name alone is nearly worthless. What matters is the author’s verifiable presence across the web , publications, professional profiles, credentials, and the body of work associated with that name.
- “E-E-A-T only matters for YMYL.” YMYL has a higher bar, but E-E-A-T is evaluated for all content. Even a recipe blog benefits from E-E-A-T signals , experienced home cooks with proven recipes rank better than anonymous recipe mills.
- “We can optimize E-E-A-T overnight.” Authority and trust are built over time. You can fix transparency and author attribution quickly, but genuine authority , the kind that comes from external recognition , takes months or years to develop.
The Bottom Line
E-E-A-T isn’t a checkbox exercise. It’s a reflection of whether your website and content creators are genuinely trustworthy, experienced, and authoritative on the topics you cover. You can’t fake it with schema markup and author bios , though those things are necessary foundations.
The real work of E-E-A-T is the same work that builds a legitimate brand: hiring genuine experts, producing original work, earning recognition from peers, and maintaining accuracy and transparency across everything you publish.
Start with the audit framework above. Fix the transparency gaps first (About page, contact information, author attribution). Then build expertise signals into your content. Then focus on the long-term authority work , original research, industry recognition, and the external validation that comes from doing genuinely valuable work in your field.
The sites that perform best on E-E-A-T evaluations aren’t the ones optimizing for E-E-A-T. They’re the ones actually being trustworthy, experienced, and expert , and making sure that reality is visible to both humans and algorithms.
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