Did Google Kill AuthorRank With Authorship |
In our last post,
we talked about how Google has killed Authorship from search results
once and for all. Up until last month, this was an important of SEO and
it helped reputable authors get more traction on the search engine. But
Google's decision to remove author images
a month ago, and Authorship itself more recently took webmasters by
surprise. So what do these changes mean for authors? Does this mean the
end of AuthorRank?
Keep in mind that
when author images were removed, we didn't think Google would go as far
as to remove Authorship entirely. And yet, here we are.
Authorship was Google’s way to allow the authors of content to identify
themselves for display purposes. Google extended from this original idea
to link it tightly with Google+, as a step to create a
Google-controlled system of identifying authors and managing identities.
Those making use of Authorship were rewarded by more clicks because of
author names and images.
Now, the bylines and everything else related to the Authorship program are gone. It’s dead.
What is AuthorRank?
AuthorRank
is a way for Google to alter the rankings of a story based on the
expertise and reputation of an author. Google's executive chairman Eric
Schmidt talked about the idea of ranking verified authors higher in
search results, in his 2013 book, The New Digital Age:
Within search results, information tied to verified online profiles will be ranked higher than content without such verification, which will result in most users naturally clicking on the top (verified) results. The true cost of remaining anonymous, then, might be irrelevance.
Schmidt was just speculating and not describing anything. Google also
talked several times last year of making use of Author Rank as a way to identify subject experts
and somehow boost them in the search results. Google's Amit Singhal
said that AuthorRank still wasn't being used, but Google's head of web
spam team gave a caveat of where Author Rank was used: for the “In-depth
articles” section, when it sometimes appears, of Google’s search
results.
Can there be AuthorRank Without Authorship?
Now that Google Authorship is dead, how can Google keep using AuthorRank
(in whatever small way it does)? How will Google associate content with
authors? According to Google, dropping Google Authorship shouldn't have
an impact on how the In-depth articles section works. Google also said
that the dropping of Google Authorship won’t impact its other efforts to
explore how authors might get rewarded.
So how is this possible when Google is choosing to ignore authorship
markup? Google has other ways to determine who it believes to be the
author of a story. In particular, Google is likely to look for visible
bylines that often appear on news stories. These existed before Google
Authorship, and they aren't going away.
This also means that if you’re really concerned that more Author Rank
use is likely to come, think about bylines. That’s looking to be the
chief alternative way to signal who is the author of a story, now that
Google has abandoned its formal system.
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