EDITOR’S NOTE: When trying to rank on Google it’s important to take E-A-T, or Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness, into consideration. In this article Yoast explains 5 helpful tips on how to improve your E-A-T. These tips include being transparent with your audience and linking clear sources. Creating unique content that stays up to date, and monitoring user-generated content. If you follow these tips and create high quality content, you will be rewarded by Google in the long run.
Want to snag those valuable top three spots in the SERPs? Show your expertise, authority, and trustworthiness to your readers and Google. Here’s how.
Google is always trying to make search results more useful and relevant to its users.
Just take a look at the Page Experience update that introduced core web vitals as ranking signals. Now, if your content isn’t fantastic as well as easy to use, it’s going to slip down the ranks.
It’s enough to drive any SEO pro insane.
Relax.
Stop chasing algorithm updates and trying to discern hidden meaning in Google’s announcements. (They don’t want you doing that anyway.)
Focus on producing good content that’s easy to access instead.
Make sure your readers E-A-T only the best.
Here’s how.
E-A-T stands for Expertise, Authority, and Trustworthiness.
It’s the guiding star of Google’s search evaluator guidelines and the three things they look for in every single piece of content or webpage that exists.
But with around 7.5 million blog posts alone published every day, they don’t have time to look at each piece of content that goes out. Instead, they rely on – yes – algorithms that look at an array of metrics and characteristics of your content.
We don’t know what those are specifically, but we do know what Google wants to see in our content. (Hint: it’s the same thing our readers want to see.)
Are you giving readers the best content to E-A-T?
Here are five things you should do right now to make sure that you are.
Area: Authority, Trustworthiness
The admonishment to cite sources has been drilled into us since grade school. After all, plagiarism detection is a death blow for content – even when it’s unintentional.
And while we may not be writing essays anymore, the advice still applies in content writing.
In fact, sources take on an extra level of importance in content writing because they can affect your SERPs. Whenever you link to a site, you signal to Google that you believe the source is credible.
If you’re linking to sites of questionable reputation or information or providing broken links, Google will notice.
However, when it comes to credits and sources, the links you use aren’t the only thing with which you must take care.
You must also include credits for graphics as well as for who wrote the content itself.
Including author names and bios is highly recommended when you’re writing YMYL content. In the case where content can radically impact someone’s life, Google evaluators want to make sure that you’ve got the proper credentials to be offering such advice.
Boost your E-A-T by using sources and credits strategically. Make sure to:
Area: Expertise, Authority
You must create different, unique content.
Just like every brand has a unique selling position, every content creator has a content differentiation factor.
What is the unique perspective that you bring to a topic?
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You need to find an “it” factor – something that engages eyeballs and inspires customers to convert.
Leveraged correctly, it’s also one of the best ways to establish your expertise and authority in an industry while setting yourself permanently apart from the competition.
For example, I’ve got insights and a perspective that you’ll be hard-pressed to find elsewhere due to my history and experiences with building a brand from scratch using content marketing.
You’ve got insights and a perspective to share, too.
The trick lies in uncovering them, then using them to prove why you’re an authority in your industry.
Once you’ve got that, you’ve got a solid foundation for your content house.
Here’s how to get started:
Area: Expertise
Digital content is neat. Unlike a book, once it’s published, it’s not set in stone. You can go back and edit, update or alter what’s there.
Yet, for some reason, a lot of people treat blogs and website content like they do the content of books – as unalterable words on a page that aren’t easy to revise without creating yet another book.
This is a dangerous mentality and one which you should banish at once.
There’s always been an emphasis on producing evergreen content, but evergreen doesn’t mean you can forget about it forever.
As industries change, facts become outdated or untrue, best practices fall out of favor, and advice that was once a good idea becomes dangerous.
When those things happen, your content becomes what Google calls stale. And stale content rapidly falls to the wayside of the SERPs.
If you’ve recently noticed that content that used to perform well suddenly gets no traffic, or there have been any major advancements in your industry, then it’s time to perform a content audit.
However, even if there hasn’t been, consider performing a content audit every year. I recommend that you:
Area: Trustworthiness
Customers crave transparency. Some 86% of customers report that they want to see it from the brands they support. If they don’t, they’ll shop elsewhere.
Transparency is important because it proves that a company has more than its own bottom line in mind. By being transparent with information, associations, and even mistakes, you’ll help build consumer trust.
Your content can help you do this. Improve business transparency by:
Area: Authority
User-generated content can be an incredibly powerful tool for your marketing efforts. It can also boost your SEO, giving you more visibility in the SERPs. From hashtags to comments on your blog, you’ve got plenty of options for getting people to participate with your content more actively.
But don’t let it become a free for all.
How many times have you clicked away from a blog because the comments were filled with spam? Have you ever chosen not to shop on a site because people used hashtags that linked the brand to questionable causes?
Both of those things can and do happen. To avoid having your customers do the same, I recommend that you:
Staying in Google’s good graces isn’t difficult. There’s no need to scry for signs in algorithm updates or overanalyze every single post on their blog.
All you need is a firm dedication to delivering the best content for your readers to EAT.
With these five pointers, you’re well-prepared to help Google serve up the best. In the process, you’ll also grow your brand’s authority and reach by proving you’re a straight-up professional at what you do.
More Resources:
Originally posted on Search Engine Journal.
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