EEAT Signals and AI Search Visibility
EEAT 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 EEAT signals, your content is simply less likely to be cited.
EEAT signals - experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness - are the primary framework AI engines use to evaluate content credibility, making named authors with verifiable credentials, original research, and external brand mentions essential for AI citation.
Why EEAT matters more for AI search
When Google evaluates EEAT, 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 EEAT foundations.
Experience signals
The first E in EEAT - 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 EEAT improvements for GEO
If you need to improve EEAT 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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Sources & Further Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
What is EEAT?
EEAT stands for Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness and Trustworthiness. It is a framework Google uses to evaluate content quality, particularly for YMYL (Your Money or Your Life) topics. The same signals are increasingly important for AI search citation, as AI engines use similar credibility models when evaluating sources.
Does EEAT affect all types of content for GEO?
Yes. While EEAT was originally most critical for medical, financial and legal content in traditional SEO, AI engines apply credibility signals more broadly. Any content where the source's authority matters - which is almost all informational content - benefits from strong EEAT signals.
How do I improve my EEAT signals?
Key EEAT improvements include: attributing content to named authors with real credentials, creating detailed author bio pages, publishing original research and data, getting mentioned in authoritative publications, building a consistent brand presence across the web, and keeping content accurate and regularly updated.
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