Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 3:14 L'authorship fonctionne-t-il vraiment avec juste le nom de l'auteur sur la page ?
- 4:46 Pourquoi Google ignore-t-il les auteurs placés en footer ou sidebar ?
- 7:56 Faut-il vraiment corriger les erreurs HTML signalées dans la Search Console ?
- 10:00 Comment vraiment récupérer d'une pénalité Panda sans perdre son temps ?
- 13:08 Les caractères spéciaux et alphabets non latins dans les URL pénalisent-ils vraiment le référencement ?
- 15:23 Le contenu desktop et mobile doit-il être strictement identique en responsive design ?
- 22:24 Faut-il vraiment éviter les balises H1 multiples en HTML5 ?
- 28:11 Le passage en HTTPS booste-t-il vraiment le classement Google ?
- 32:38 Faut-il surveiller ses backlinks après avoir utilisé l'outil de désaveu de Google ?
- 35:01 Le désaveu de liens agit-il vraiment de manière progressive lors du crawl ?
- 36:04 Comment structurer un site international pour maximiser sa visibilité dans Google ?
Google states that authorship information does not count as a direct ranking factor. Instead, it serves as additional links in the knowledge graph, without affecting page positioning. For an SEO professional, this means that heavily investing in author markup to gain positions is a strategic dead end.
What you need to understand
What does 'not used for ranking' really mean?
When John Mueller says that authorship is not a ranking factor, he is referring to structured markup that explicitly identifies an author on a page. Schema.org Author, rel=author, Google Authorship (discontinued in 2014): none of these provide any direct boost to positioning.
The engine treats this data as informational entities rather than relevance signals. They feed into the Knowledge Graph, allowing content to be interconnected, but do not weigh in the ranking algorithm the same way a backlink or content quality does.
Why does Google maintain this position?
The reason lies in the ease of manipulation of this information. Anyone can claim content or create a credible author profile. Google cannot verify the authenticity of every digital signature on a large scale.
Furthermore, the engine prefers to assess the intrinsic quality of content rather than rely on a declarative metadata. True expertise shines through the depth of arguments, the accuracy of data, the informational density—not in a JSON-LD tag.
Does this statement contradict E-E-A-T?
This is where it gets interesting. E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) remains a core concept in the Quality Rater Guidelines. Human raters must identify authors, verify their credentials, and evaluate their reputation.
But these raters do not directly rank pages. They train the algorithms by providing examples of 'good' and 'bad' results. The system learns to recognize quality patterns without necessarily going through authorship markup.
- Author markup does not directly boost ranking in the ranking algorithm
- E-E-A-T is still evaluated by Quality Raters and influences algorithmic training
- Indirect signals matter: author's reputation on the web, mentions in reliable sources, editorial consistency
- Authorship links enrich the knowledge graph without impacting positioning
- Real quality takes precedence over formal claims of expertise
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with field observations?
In practice, it is indeed observed that author markup alone changes nothing in terms of positions. I tested on dozens of sites: adding perfect Schema.org Author, linking to a rich Google profile, creating detailed author pages—no measurable impact on organic traffic in the short term.
However, sites that clearly display their authors, their credentials, and their sources perform better overall. The correlation exists, but it does not go through structured markup. It comes from user trust, time spent on page, lower bounce rates, and social shares.
What nuances should be added to this position?
Mueller talks about direct ranking, but he dodges the question of indirect signals. A recognized author naturally generates more backlinks to their articles, more citations, and more direct traffic. Those signals count, even if the markup itself remains neutral.
Another nuance: in YMYL (Your Money Your Life), medical or financial sites that do not name their authors or show ghost profiles get hammered. Not by a technical factor, but by human raters who flag these pages as 'low quality'. The feedback escalates, the algorithm adjusts. [To be verified]: we do not know precisely how this feedback impacts rankings at scale.
In which cases does this rule not apply?
There are niches where personal authority outweighs everything else. An article signed by a celebrity in the field will rank more easily, not by the magic of markup, but because their name generates brand searches, mentions, and natural links.
Another exception: the featured snippets and rich results. Google sometimes displays the author in the SERPs when the markup is clean, which boosts the CTR. A better CTR indirectly improves ranking through behavioral signals. The markup then becomes an indirect but measurable lever.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you do practically with authorship?
First, do not waste budget on ultra-sophisticated author markup if your content is mediocre. Prioritize writing quality, factual research, and depth of analysis. Authorship comes after, not before.
Next, make sure to structure properly. Add Schema.org Author to your articles, create author pages with bios, social links, and publication history. Not to rank, but to help Google understand who writes what, link content together, and enrich its graph.
What mistakes should be absolutely avoided?
Do not fall into the trap of the false expert. Inventing fake author profiles with fictitious degrees might pass technically, but users will detect the scam. Behavioral signals drop, and your site gets indirectly penalized.
Another classic mistake: trivializing authorship across all content, including product pages or commercial landing pages. Keep the markup for editorial content where it makes sense: blog posts, guides, case studies. On a product page, it's off-topic.
How can you verify that your implementation is correct?
Use Google's Rich Results Test to validate your Schema markup. Ensure that the name, url, and sameAs properties are correctly filled out. Make sure each author has a dedicated page with real content, not just an empty shell.
Then, analyze the external mentions of your authors. Google reads the web as a whole. If your author exists nowhere else but through a JSON-LD tag on your site, it feels hollow. Encourage guest post appearances, interviews, and citations in industry media.
- Implement Schema.org Author on blog articles and editorial content
- Create rich author pages with bios, social links, and publication history
- Check the markup via Rich Results Test
- Avoid fake or substance-less author profiles
- Prioritize content quality over technical optimization of authorship
- Monitor external mentions of your authors to enhance their credibility
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Le balisage Schema.org Author est-il totalement inutile pour le SEO ?
E-E-A-T exige-t-il d'identifier les auteurs sur chaque page ?
Puis-je inventer des profils d'auteurs pour paraître plus crédible ?
L'authorship influence-t-elle le CTR dans les SERP ?
Faut-il créer des pages auteur dédiées même si ça ne booste pas le ranking ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 58 min · published on 05/06/2014
🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →
💬 Comments (0)
Be the first to comment.