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Official statement

Although Google encourages the full use of the rel="author" attribute to ensure accuracy in authorship, it offers an alternative method by simply adding a link with ?rel="author" for those who have technical limitations.
3:10
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 3:41 💬 EN 📅 09/08/2011 ✂ 2 statements
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Other statements from this video 1
  1. 1:04 Le paramètre ?rel="author" peut-il vraiment remplacer l'attribut HTML pour signaler la paternité ?
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Official statement from (14 years ago)
TL;DR

Google recommends the complete use of <strong>rel="author"</strong> to clearly identify content ownership, but allows a simplified method if technical constraints exist. This flexibility raises the question of the real impact on ranking. In practice, it is better to prioritize the full version when possible, but the lighter solution remains acceptable to avoid blocking publication.

What you need to understand

Why does Google emphasize identifying authors?

Content ownership has become a trust signal for Google, particularly since adjustments around the E-E-A-T criteria (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness). The engine strives to distinguish between content produced by recognized experts and generic texts without credible signatures.

The rel="author" attribute links published content to an identifiable author profile, usually through a biography page or social profile. This way, Google can associate multiple publications with the same person and evaluate their thematic consistency and legitimacy in a field.

What’s the difference between the full method and the proposed alternative?

The full method involves bidirectional markup: the content points to the author page with rel="author", and the author page references published content with rel="me" or a list of contributions. This double verification ensures Google that the attribution is intentional and controlled.

The simplified alternative consists of only adding a link with ?rel="author" from the content to the author page, without requiring the reverse verification. This approach is suitable for rigid CMS or limited technical teams that cannot easily modify the structure of author pages.

In practice, the lighter version reduces the risk of configuration errors while maintaining a minimal authorship signal. Google tolerates this simplification, but clearly prefers the bidirectional version when feasible.

Does this alternative method offer the same SEO benefits?

Google does not explicitly communicate on the treatment gap between the two methods. It is assumed that the full version provides a stronger trust signal, as it proves that the author actively claims their contributions.

The simplified version remains functional for associating content with an author, but without reverse validation, Google may attribute less weight to this attribution. No large-scale tests confirm this gap, but algorithmic logic suggests a preference for bidirectionality.

  • Full method: bidirectional markup with rel="author" and rel="me", maximum trust signal
  • Technical alternative: simple link with ?rel="author", minimal but acceptable authorship signal
  • No attribution: risk of diluting the E-E-A-T signal, especially on YMYL topics (Your Money Your Life)
  • Variable impact: depends on the author's notoriety and thematic consistency of their publications
  • No strict obligation: Google does not impose rel="author" as a direct ranking factor, but its absence may work against you in competitive niches

SEO Expert opinion

Does this technical flexibility hide a weakened ranking signal?

When Google offers a simplified alternative to a recommended markup, it rarely comes without consequences. Historically, optional but "encouraged" schema.org tags often end up becoming differentiating signals in competitive SERPs.

Here, the alternative method allows one to check the box for authorship without investing in a complete infrastructure. But if all your competitors are deploying the bidirectional version while you remain on the light version, you could potentially leave a E-E-A-T advantage on the table. [To be verified]: no public study quantifies the treatment gap between the two methods.

Is author markup really a priority in 2025?

Let’s be honest: author markup has never been as visible a ranking factor as backlinks or loading speed. Google even removed author photos from search results, which cooled the enthusiasm for many SEOs.

However, since the rise of AI-generated content, Google is actively seeking to reward publications signed by identifiable experts. YMYL sites (health, finance, legal) that neglect this signal risk losing algorithmic credibility to competitors who clearly display their authors with history and expertise.

For business blogs or media, it has become a quality standard. For e-commerce or transactional sites, the impact is more marginal, except for editorial content like buying guides or comparisons.

What pitfalls should you avoid when implementing rel="author"?

The classic pitfall: attributing all content to a single fictional author or the company itself. Google can detect this inconsistency, especially if the author has no verifiable online presence. It’s better to leave content unattributed than to create a fake expert profile.

Another frequent mistake: pointing to an empty or generic author page without a biography, photo, or links to other publications. A credible author page should contain at least a bio of 100-150 words, a photo, and ideally links to external profiles (LinkedIn, Twitter, personal site).

Warning: if you are using the alternative method (simple link with ?rel="author"), make sure the target URL is a dedicated author page, not a generic team page or a homepage. Google may ignore the signal if the destination is not clearly an individual profile page.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do to correctly implement rel="author"?

The first step: create a dedicated author page for each regular contributor. This page should have a clean URL (e.g., /authors/first-name-last-name/), a structured biography, a photo, and links to the author's social or professional profiles.

Next, add a link with rel="author" in every article, pointing to this author page. Ideally, this link should appear at the top or bottom of the article, with a clear anchor like "By [Author's Name]" or "About the author".

If you choose the full method, also add a link on the author page with rel="me" to an external profile (LinkedIn, personal site), or list the author's publications with internal links. This bidirectional loop strengthens the legitimacy of the attribution.

How can you check that the markup is being properly recognized by Google?

Use Google Search Console to monitor markup errors. Although GSC does not directly display rel="author" data, you can check via the URL inspection tool if Google has crawled and indexed the linked author page.

Another method: search Google for "site:yourdomain.com author:[Name]" to see if Google is properly associating content with the author. If no results appear, it means the link is not detected or the author page is not indexed.

A simple test is also to check the HTML source code of a published article: the link with rel="author" must be present and point to a valid URL, without redirection or 404 errors.

What errors should you absolutely avoid when implementing?

Do not create orphan author pages without a link from the menu or footer. If Google cannot discover these pages through natural crawl, they may never be indexed, making the markup useless.

Also, avoid frequently changing author page URLs. If an author has published 50 articles with rel="author" links pointing to /authors/john-doe/, and then you modify the URL to /authors/j-doe/, all the links become invalid. Implement a 301 redirect if a change is unavoidable.

Finally, do not over-optimize author link anchors with SEO keywords. Google expects a natural phrasing like "By John Doe" or "Written by John Doe", not "SEO Expert Paris specializing in organic search". This type of anchor may be perceived as spam.

  • Create a dedicated author page with bio, photo, and external links for each regular contributor
  • Add a rel="author" link in every article, visible at the top or bottom, with a natural anchor
  • Ensure that author pages are indexed and accessible via crawl (no orphans, noindex)
  • Test the markup via Google Search Console and the URL inspection tool
  • If using the full method: add rel="me" or a list of publications on the author page for bidirectional loop
  • Avoid frequent URL changes on author pages, implement 301 redirects if necessary
Author markup remains an underutilized E-E-A-T signal by many sites. The full method offers the best potential for algorithmic recognition, but the technical alternative remains valid if your CMS or organizational constraints are strong. These optimizations often require a structural redesign of the site and precise editorial governance. If you lack internal resources or if your technical team is overwhelmed, working with a specialized SEO agency can accelerate compliance and ensure a clean implementation, avoiding errors that would negate the markup effect.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le balisage rel="author" est-il obligatoire pour ranker sur Google ?
Non, ce n'est pas un critère de ranking direct obligatoire. Mais sur des thématiques YMYL (santé, finance, juridique) ou dans des niches concurrentielles, l'absence de paternité identifiable peut affaiblir votre signal E-E-A-T et vous désavantager face à des concurrents qui l'utilisent.
Quelle différence entre rel="author" et le balisage schema.org Person ?
rel="author" est un attribut HTML simple qui lie un contenu à une page auteur. Le balisage schema.org Person structure les données de l'auteur (nom, photo, bio, liens) pour les moteurs de recherche. Idéalement, on combine les deux : rel="author" pour le lien, schema.org pour enrichir la page auteur.
Peut-on utiliser rel="author" pour pointer vers un profil LinkedIn directement ?
Techniquement oui, mais ce n'est pas optimal. Google préfère une page auteur sur votre propre domaine, que vous contrôlez totalement. Vous pouvez ensuite ajouter un lien rel="me" depuis cette page vers le profil LinkedIn pour renforcer la validation d'identité.
Faut-il créer une page auteur pour les contributeurs occasionnels ou invités ?
Oui, même pour un guest post unique. Une page auteur minimaliste avec bio courte et lien externe suffit. Cela signale à Google que vous identifiez clairement qui écrit sur votre site, renforçant la transparence éditoriale.
Le balisage rel="author" a-t-il un impact sur les featured snippets ou les rich results ?
Pas directement sur les featured snippets, qui dépendent surtout de la structure du contenu. En revanche, un auteur identifiable peut influencer la perception de crédibilité du contenu, ce qui joue indirectement sur la sélection par Google. Aucune donnée publique ne confirme un lien mécanique entre rel="author" et rich results.
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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 3 min · published on 09/08/2011

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