E-E-A-T Signals and AI Search Visibility
E-E-A-T was originally Google's framework for evaluating content quality. In the age of AI search, it has become even more critical - because AI engines model credibility in similar ways, and without strong E-E-A-T signals, your content is simply less likely to be cited.
Why E-E-A-T matters more for AI search
When Google evaluates E-E-A-T, it uses a combination of explicit signals (schema, author bios) and inferred signals (backlinks, brand mentions). AI engines go further - they have access to broader contextual knowledge about whether a brand is well-known, whether an author is cited by others, and whether content is consistent with established facts.
This means the bar for credibility is higher in AI search. A website that manages to rank in Google through technical SEO alone may still be invisible in AI search if it lacks genuine E-E-A-T foundations.
Experience signals
The first E in E-E-A-T - added by Google in 2022 - refers to first-hand experience. AI engines favour content that demonstrates real-world experience, not just theoretical knowledge.
Practical ways to demonstrate experience:
- Include specific case studies with real outcomes and numbers
- Reference your own data and observations from direct work in the field
- Use first-person accounts where genuinely appropriate
- Include photographs, screenshots or other evidence of first-hand involvement
- Mention specific projects, clients (where permitted) or results
Expertise signals
Expertise is about demonstrable knowledge. AI engines evaluate expertise through:
- Author credentials - qualifications, job titles, years in field
- Technical accuracy - content that contains verifiably correct, specific information
- Depth - content that covers a topic thoroughly, not superficially
- Original insights - analysis and conclusions not just repeated from elsewhere
The practical implication: assign content to the most qualified person on your team, not the most prolific writer. A shorter article from a genuine expert is more citable than a longer one from a generalist.
Authoritativeness signals
Authority is largely about external recognition - what others say about you.
- Press coverage in industry or national publications
- Speaking engagements and conference appearances
- Being cited or referenced by other authoritative sources
- Awards and accreditations in your field
- Wikipedia or Wikidata entries
- Industry association memberships
For AI search, these signals work because AI models have been trained on content from across the web - if your brand is widely and positively referenced in that training data, it carries weight when AI engines evaluate your credibility.
Trustworthiness signals
Trust covers accuracy, transparency and consistency:
- Claims are verifiable and accurate
- Sources are cited for statistics and factual claims
- Contact information is clear and accurate
- Content is updated when information changes
- Corrections are published transparently when errors occur
- Privacy policy, terms and legal pages are present
- HTTPS across the entire site
The fastest E-E-A-T improvements for GEO
If you need to improve E-E-A-T quickly, prioritise these:
- Add named authors to all content with links to bio pages
- Create detailed author bio pages with credentials and Person schema
- Add Organisation schema with sameAs links to verified profiles
- Publish one piece of original research or data in your field
- Reach out to one industry publication for guest content or coverage
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