Author Bios That Help AI Citation: What to Include
Anonymous content is less likely to be cited by AI engines than content attributed to a real, credentialled person. Your author bio pages are a direct GEO signal - here is how to make them work as hard as possible.
Author bio pages are a direct AI citation signal - including a named author's credentials, linked social profiles, Person schema markup, and connections to published content significantly increases the likelihood that AI engines will cite that author's work.
Why author attribution matters for AI search
AI engines are designed to surface credible, trustworthy information. One of the clearest signals of credibility is knowing who wrote something and whether they are qualified to write it.
A medical article authored by a named doctor with a verifiable medical degree is meaningfully different - to both humans and AI engines - from the same article with no attribution. The same principle applies across all topics. Expertise signals are strongest when they are explicit, not implied.
The author bio page: what to include
Essential elements
- Full name - exactly as it appears on published content
- Professional title and current employer
- Credentials and qualifications - degrees, certifications, professional memberships
- Area of expertise - explicitly stated ("15 years working in SEO and digital marketing")
- Brief professional history - 2 to 3 sentences on career background
- Links to professional profiles - LinkedIn, personal website, professional association pages
- Person schema markup - machine-readable version of all the above
Valuable additions
- Notable publications, guest posts or press mentions
- Podcast or conference appearances
- Books or significant long-form work
- Headshot photo (adds humanisation, not directly a GEO signal)
- List of articles published on the site
Person schema for author pages
Add Person schema to every author bio page. Include all the fields you can verify:
{{
"@context": "https://schema.org",
"@type": "Person",
"name": "Jane Smith",
"jobTitle": "Head of SEO",
"worksFor": {{
"@type": "Organization",
"name": "Example Agency",
"url": "https://exampleagency.com"
}},
"url": "https://yoursite.com/author/jane-smith/",
"sameAs": [
"https://linkedin.com/in/janesmith",
"https://twitter.com/janesmith"
],
"description": "Jane Smith has 12 years of experience in SEO and content strategy..."
}}
Connecting authors to content
Author attribution only works as a GEO signal when it is consistently implemented. Every article, guide and blog post should:
- Display the author's name with a link to their bio page
- Include Article schema with the
authorfield pointing to the author entity - Show a publication date and last-updated date
The author page, the article schema, and the visible attribution all need to be consistent for AI engines to connect them into a coherent credibility signal.
What to do if you have no named authors
If your content is genuinely team-produced, create a "SearchScore Team" or equivalent author entity with its own bio page that describes the team's collective credentials - years in the industry, qualifications held, research methodology. Add Organisation or Person schema for the team entity and link all content to that author page.
This is less effective than individual named authors but significantly better than no attribution at all.
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Sources & Further Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
Do author bios really affect AI citation rates?
Yes, meaningfully. AI engines use author attribution as a credibility signal - content from a named expert with verifiable credentials in a field is treated as more trustworthy than anonymous content. This is part of how EEAT translates into GEO performance.
What should an author bio page include for GEO?
An effective GEO author bio page should include: full name, professional title and employer, relevant credentials and qualifications, areas of expertise, links to professional profiles (LinkedIn, personal site), notable publications or appearances, and Person schema markup.
Can a company publish content without a named author?
Yes, but it performs worse in AI search. If individual authorship is not possible, create an Organisation author entity with an author page for your company, complete with credentials, About information, and Organization schema. Named authors are strongly preferred where possible.
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