If you're like me, you love watching the reality show Survivor. In the show, contestants try to outwit, outplay, and outlast the other players. During the game, players can find hidden clues to an immunity necklace. This clue provides a player with an advantage and serves a guide or path to winning the million dollar prize.
Google's Quality Raters Guidelines serve as a clue or guide for websites that want to rank. While it's not a million dollars, ranking on Google is an important step to gain new website visitors. There is no guarantee your site will rank by following these guidelines, but it is a step in the right direction.
The guidelines are a document produced by Google for a team of "Quality Raters." The guidelines aim to teach these "Quality Raters" how to assess the quality of a website.
The Quality Raters have no direct impact on analyzed websites. A website labeled as low-quality by the raters is not affected in rankings. Instead, the information helps Google's engineers in creating better algorithms to assess quality on the web.
Google did not release the Quality Raters Guidelines until 2015. You can find the
latest version of the Quality Raters
Guidelines here. The current document provides examples of what Google considers high and low-quality measures.
E-A-T stands for Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. A website's content, information, and reputation are all ingredients in the E-A-T recipe.
The "E" in Google's E-A-T stands for expertise. In this context, expertise represents knowledge or skill in a specific field. It's evaluated at the content level rather than at the organizational level. Google is looking for content created by a subject matter expert.
The "A" in Google's E-A-T stands for authoritativeness. Your reputation among other experts and influencers in your field defines your authority. Quality Raters search the web for insights into the reputation of a website or individual to determine authority.
The "T" in Google's E-A-T stands for trustworthiness. Trust is about the legitimacy, transparency, and accuracy of the website's content. The raters examine whether the website states who creates the published content.
We list and link to our blog authors on the BlinkJar website (yes, the site you're on right now). While tempting, this link is not an invitation for you to lurk on my bio page or slide into my DMs. We identify the content creator at the bottom of every web page. This transparency helps build trust with readers. Check out Dan Davidson's bio. That guy knows his sports.
Yes, "Your Money, Your Life" (YMYL) websites are more scrutinized by E-A-T. According to Google, any page including content that can affect someone’s health, happiness, safety, or financial stability is a YMYL page.
The answer is "sort-of." E-A-T is not a direct ranking factor. E-A-T is a guideline Google uses to determine the quality of a websites' content. Google raters provide feedback to Google engineers for testing future ranking factors. So, while it's not a direct ranking factor, Google's E-A-T indirectly influences your rankings. By the way, "sort of" is the best answer to every question.
E-A-T guidelines tell human reviewers exactly what type of content Google considers high-quality. It provides you with the ingredients to rank on Google.
Do you like the sauce at Raising Canes Chicken Fingers? Yeah, so does everyone else! Wouldn't you love to know the secret sauce of the Cane's sauce (see what I did there)? We may not know every ingredient, but our eyes and taste buds are our best bet on what makes up the sauce. Our senses serve as our guide of sorts. Mine are telling me it is some combination of ketchup, mayo, ranch, and pepper.
The same scenario holds for Google's secret sauce - its algorithm. By releasing the Quality Raters Guidelines to the public in 2015, Google is telling you what they consider high-quality content. This information can have enormous implications for content marketers and businesses.
As updates take place around Google and E-A-T, we will provide helpful content to make sense of it. As for now, all this food talk has made me hungry. Who is ready to E-A-T?