Editor's note: Since the publication of this post, Google has discontinued support for authorship markup in web search. While we're leaving this post up for reference, we want you to know that implementation of authorship will no longer result in rich author snippets shown on SERPs. Carry on!
On June 25, 2014, Google's John Mueller made a shocking announcement: Google would be removing all author photos from Google search results. According to the MozCast Feature Graph, that task was fully accomplished by June 29.
In this post I will:
- Give a brief overview of how Google Authorship got to where it is today.
- Cover how Google Authorship now works and appears in search.
- Offer my take on why Author photos were removed
- Investigate the oft-repeated claims of higher CTR from author photos
- Suggest why Google Authorship is still important, and speculate on the future of author authority in Google Search.
A Brief History of Google Authorship
The Google Authorship program has been my wheelhouse (some might say "obsession") since Google first announced support for Authorship markup in June of 2011. Since I am both an SEO and a content creator, Google certainly got my attention in that announcement when they said, "...we’re looking closely at ways this markup could help us highlight authors and rank search results."
Of course, in the three years since that blog post, many search-aware marketers and content creators also jumped on the Google Authorship bandwagon. Occasional comments from prominent Google staffers that they might someday use author data as a search ranking factor, along with Bill Slawski's lucid explanations of the Google Agent Rank patent, fueled the fire of what most came to call "author rank."
Below is a video from 2011 with Matt Cutts and Othar Hansson explaining the possible significance of Authorship markup for Google at that time:
During the three years since Google announced support for rel=author markup, there have been many changes in how Authorship appeared in search results, but each change only seemed to buttress Google's continued support for and improvement of the program.
In the early days of Google Authorship, almost anyone could get the coveted face photo in search by correctly setting up Authorship markup on their content and linking to that content from their Google+ profile. As time went on, Google became pickier about showing the rich snippet, and some sort of quality criteria seemed to come into play. Still, it was not too difficult to earn the author snippet.
Then at Pubcon New Orleans in October 2013, Matt Cutts announced that in the near future, Google would start cutting back on the amount of Authorship rich snippets shown in search. He said that in tests they found when they cut out 10% to 15% of the author snippets shown, "overall quality went up." In December of that year we saw the promise fulfilled as the percentage of queries showing author photos dropped, and many individual authors either started seeing a byline-only snippet for much or all of their content, or losing Authorship snippets completely.
It was clear by then that Authorship as a search feature was a privilege, not a right, and that as much as Google seemed to want people to adopt Authorship markup, they were determined to police the quality of what was shown in search associated with that markup. But none of that prepared us for what has happened now: the complete removal of author photos from global search.
Google Authorship without Photos in Search
Here are the fundamental facts about how Authorship is used in search as of this writing:
1. The only Authorship rich snippet result now available in global search is an author byline. Google has dropped author photos entirely (except for some unique exceptions in personalized search; see below). Also, Google dropped the "in xx Google+ circles" link that showed in some cases and led to the author's Google+ profile.
2. Author bylines now link to Google+ profiles. Previously, at least in the US, author bylines in search results linked to a unique Google search page that would show just content from that author. This feature is no longer available.
3. Qualification for an Authorship byline now is simply having correct markup. This was a bit of a surprise given Google's move last December to differentiate and highlight authors with better quality content who publish on trusted sites. But in a Google Webmaster Central Hangout on June 25, 2014, John Mueller indicated that now as long as the two-way verification (rel=author markup on the content site linked to author's Google+ profile, and a link back to the content site in the author's Google+ Contributor To links) could be correctly read by Google, a byline would likely be shown.
You can check for correct Authorship verification for any web page by entering its URL in Google's Structured Data Testing Tool. If Authorship is correctly connected for the page, you should see a result similar to this:
However, it is well known that this tool isn't perfect. For example, even though it shows Eric Enge's post on Copyblogger as being verified, Google has never shown an Authorship snippet for any of Eric's posts there, and even now does not show a byline for that content. Eric is a very well-known and trusted author who gets a rich snippet for all his other content on the web, and Copyblogger is certainly a reputable site. Why his content there has never displayed an Authorship snippet remains a mystery.
In the Hangout, John Mueller went on to say that in the future they may have to reevaluate showing bylines for everyone who has correct markup, once they get more experience with the byline only results. He promised that there will be continued experimentation. If they see that people are using the bylines as a gauge of how great or trustworthy an author is, that might be impetus enough to try to re-implement some kind of quality factor into whether or not one gets a byline.
So are there actually more Authorship results in search now? If Mueller is correct that Authorship snippets are now based merely on a technically-correct connection, and there is no longer any quality factor, then wouldn't we expect now to see more Authorship in search, even if only bylines? Not necessarily.
Moz's Dr. Pete Meyers shared the following with me:
So, in my data set, Authorship [measured the old way - by thumbnail photos] peaked on June 23rd at 21.2% of SERPs (in our 10K data set). Measured the new way [bylines only], Authorship is showing up around 24.0% of SERPs. That could mean that, in absence of the photos, Google has allowed it to appear more often, or it could mean that there were a handful of SERPs with byline-only Authorship before. I suspect it's the latter, but I have no data to support that.
I agree with Pete's latter guess. The fact is that from the December 2013 "purging" of Authorship in search until the recent change, there have been two kinds of Authorship results: Those with a photo and byline, and those with byline only. I called the latter "second class Authorship," and it looked like when Google ran its quality filter through the Authorship results, most lower-quality authors dropped to second class, byline-only results rather than being dropped altogether from Authorship results.
So it appears that the net result is no overall change in the amount of Authorship in search, just an elimination of a "first class" status for some authors.
4. Author photos may still be shown in personalized search for selected Google+ content. This was an unannounced change in Google search that showed up at the same time author photos were being eliminated from global (logged-out-of-Google) search. Now Google+ posts by people you follow on Google+ may sometimes show an author photo when you search while logged in to your Google+ account (personalized search).
The example below is an actual screen capture from my own logged-in search for "Google Plus for Business." Joshua Berg is in my Google+ circles, and Google shows his relevant Google+ post both elevated in the results (higher than it would occur in my logged-out results) and with his profile photo.
In my testing of this, I have seen that these personalized author photos for Google+ posts are most likely to show if the author is high in the "relevancy" sort in your Google+ circles, and is someone with whom you have engaged fairly frequently.
While not Authorship related, it is interesting to note that Google+ brand pages that you circle and have engaged with may now show a brand logo snippet in personalized search for their Google+ posts. While some other parts of the world have had these branded results for a while, this is entirely new for US Google searches.
I'll have more below on what I see as the significance of these new results and what they may say about the future of Authorship and author authority in Google.
So Why Were Author Photos Removed?
So if Google was committed to continued improvement of the Authorship program, why did they drop photo snippets entirely? Was this a complete reversal, a "beginning of the end for Authorship" as some thought? Or were author photos in search simply not producing the results Google was looking for?
Before I give my take on those questions, I highly recommend Cyrus Shepard's post " Google Announced the End of Author Photos in Search: What You Should Know." I agree completely with Cyrus's take there, and won't duplicate what he covered. Rather in the rest of this post I will try to bring some added insights and informed speculations based on my intensive observation of Google's Authorship program over the past three years.
Let's start with the explanation given by John Mueller in his announcement post, linked at the beginning of this article. John said:
We've been doing lots of work to clean up the visual design of our search results, in particular creating a better mobile experience and a more consistent design across devices. As a part of this, we're simplifying the way Authorship is shown in mobile and desktop search results, removing the profile photo and circle count. (Our experiments indicate that click-through behavior on this new less-cluttered design is similar to the previous one.)
It sounds like Mueller is linking this change to Google's "mobile first" initiative. Mobile first seeks to unify, as much as possible, the user experience between desktop and mobile. It is a response to the rapid increase of mobile usage worldwide. In fact, at SMX West earlier this year Google's Matt Cutts said that he expects Google searches on mobile to exceed desktop searches before the end of 2014.
In subsequent comments on his Google+ post and elsewhere, Mueller elaborated that images in search results take up lots of bandwidth in mobile search, slowing down delivery of results on many devices. They also take up considerable screen real estate on the smaller screens of mobile devices.
But were UX and mobile concerns the only reasons for removing author photos? I seriously doubt that. If author photos were providing a significant benefit to searchers, according to Google's data, then it is likely they would have worked on some compromise that would have made them more compatible with mobile first.
Furthermore, John Mueller himself, in the aforementioned Hangout, hinted that there were other considerations involved. For example, he commented that there may have been too many author photos for some search results, and that too much of any one feature in search is not a good user experience.
My Personal Speculation. I don't doubt Mueller that demands by Google's search user experience efforts may have been the main driving force behind the removal of author photos, but as I said above, I do not think it was the only reason.
I believe that after much testing and evaluation Google may have decided that author photos for now send a disproportionate signal to searchers. That is, the photos may have been indicating an implied endorsement of result quality that Google is not yet prepared to back up.
Remember that in December we saw Google reduce the number of author photos shown in search as an attempt, according to Matt Cutts, to increase the quality of those results. However, when questioned about the concept of "author rank" (Google using author trust data to influence search results), Cutts consistently speaks about the great difficulty of evaluating such quality or trust. He elaborates that finding a way to do that remains a strong goal at Google, but he doesn't expect to see it for years to come. (For example, see my remarks on his comments at SMX Advanced last month.)
Given all that, it may be that Google, realizing that they still have a lot of work to do toward evaluating author trust and quality to a degree where they would allow those factors to influence actual search rankings, decided that even though Authorship does not currently affect rankings, the photos still might imply to searchers a trust and authority for the author of which Google could not be fully confident.
In addition, I believe that three years into the Authorship program, Google realized that they were never going to get the vast majority of authors and sites to implement Authorship markup. If author authority is to succeed as a contributor to better search results in the future, Google has to find ways to identify and verify authors and their connected content that are not tied to either markup or Google+. That also will be a long-term project.
So this may actually be merely a temporary retrenchment as Google knuckles down to the hard work of figuring out how to make author authority something truly worthwhile in search.
What About Ad Competition? When the dropping of author photos was announced, there was immediate speculation by many, including Moz's own Rand Fishkin on Twitter, that the author photos were seen as too competitive with the AdWords ads displayed in search.
It's impossible to either prove or disprove such speculation, as only Google holds the data. I personally find it a little hard to believe that it came down to a zero sum game between author photos and ads. In other words, is it reasonable to think that was either/or; that author photos were so attractive and got clicked so much that when they appeared too many people totally ignored the ads?
Also, that speculation is based on the assumption that author photos were, in recent history, huge CTR magnets. In the next section I'll examine those CTR claims.
What About Author Photo CTR?
One of the most oft-repeated alleged benefits of author photos in search was that they dramatically increased click-through rates (CTR), as people were drawn to those results even if they were lower on the page.
I was as guilty as anyone else in confidently proclaiming in my online articles and conference presentations that "studies have shown" this increase in CTR for Authorship results. So it shocked me as much as anyone when John Mueller in his announcement post said, "Our experiments indicate that click-through behavior on this new less-cluttered design is similar to the previous one ."
First, we should note some ambiguities in Mueller's statement:
- He does not actually say "click-through rate," though that's what most readers assumed he was talking about. He called it "click-through behavior," which could refer to other things, such as how quickly people bounced back to the search results after clicking an author photo result. In that case, higher CTR would not be a good thing from a search quality viewpoint.
- He does not explicitly say that the click-through behavior was for the author photo results exclusively. It could be an evaluation of overall click behavior on search pages that included author photos.
- This could be a reference to click behavior aggregated across all queries showing author photos. If so, then it may be that while CTR was higher for photo results in some queries, overall the effect may have been a wash.
But were we ever really sure there was as huge a CTR increase for author photo results as was frequently claimed? After investigating those claims, I'm not so sure.
- Google themselves never made a positive claim of increased CTR for author photos. A much-cited paper by Google researchers on social annotations such as face photos in search was based only on eye-tracking studies and user interviews, not actual click behavior. It actually found that image-based social annotations were not necessarily as attractive to searchers as believed, and only were attractive under certain circumstances.
- I found hundreds of blog posts proclaiming "30-150% increase in CTR!" for Authorship. Those all seemed to trace back to one article two years ago that cited a 30% increase of CTR for rich snippet results in general. That post did not talk about Authorship specifically, nor was it made clear exactly how they determined the 30% raise.
- Most of the other articles or "studies" purporting to show increased CTR from Authorship are based on one-off, anecdotal evidence. In other words, the authors implemented Authorship, and then saw more organic traffic to their sites. While interesting, such correlative claims at best may demonstrate a one-off accomplishment for that particular author for particular queries, but they do not prove that there was a general, or even universal, CTR boost.
- Testing for actual CTR boost is probably impossible outside of access to Google's own data. That's because CTR is highly volatile by ranking position, and it is impossible to know if you're comparing apples to apples. For a truly conclusive test, one would have to be able to randomly show the same result for the same query in an A/B split with half the results showing an author photo and half not. I don't see any way for us to set up such a test.
- In the Webmaster Central Hangout mentioned previously, John Mueller hinted strongly that whatever CTR boost there may have been, Google has seen it wear away over the past couple years. He mused that it is likely people became more used to seeing author photos in search over time, and so they had less impact and drawing power. If Google sees a feature not having much effect, it is natural that they would remove it.
- Unfortunately, the Author Stats feature in Google Webmaster Tools is no help in evaluating CTR of author photo results vs. post-author photo results. Before June 28, for me it showed hundreds of pieces of content showing in search as Authorship snippets. Since June 28, only one result shows, and that is for a Search Engine Land article I wrote that made it into Google News results, where author photos can still show. Apparently the Author Stats tool was measuring only results with author photos.
All that is not to say there was never any rise in CTR for any Authorship posts. But it is to say that we never really knew for sure, and we never knew how much. Most importantly, there was never any proof that any CTR boost was universal. That is, there was no reason to assume that just because your results got an author photo, they were automatically getting a CTR boost.
So Does Google Authorship Still Matter?
In a word, yes. If Google had actually lost its enthusiasm for and commitment to author identity as a future, important aspect of search, then this would have been the time to pull the band aid all the way off, rather than just removing photos. But, in fact, Authorship still works in search.
Let me conclude with some reasons why I think Authorship still has value, and that author authority is still a major priority for Google search.
1. Authors still matter. The bylines are an indication that Google still cares who created a piece of content, and thinks that is significant and useful information for searchers. Every pixel of a search result is very valuable real estate. Google realizes that, and is still willing to give up some of that territory to an author's name.
2. Bylines are not invisible. Sure no one believes that a byline might capture the eye of someone viewing a search page to the same degree that a face photo probably did, but it does not follow that bylines are without value. More and more SEOs are advising their clients to optimize the meta descriptions for their pages. Why? Not because they are a ranking factor (they are not), but because they can have a significant effect on "selling" the searcher on clicking that result.
We're used to hearing that the number one result for a given query usually gets the most clicks by far. But it doesn't get all the clicks, and on some queries the top result may not be as attractive as on others. If we all believed the top result was always the best, wouldn't we just click that "Feeling lucky?" button on Google's home page?
The truth is that when the title of the top result doesn't immediately grab the searcher as a sure thing to fulfill her search need, she will begin looking for other clues in the other results. Among those will be the descriptive text under the results. When an author's name appears there, it may move the searcher to think the result is more reliable (written by a "real person"). And if that person is someone already known to and trusted by the searcher, the value goes up significantly.
3. Author and brand images now in personalized search. While limited in appearance, the fact that Google now will sometimes show an author photo or a brand image for Google+ content in personalized search indicates that they have not at all abandoned the idea that such image results can have value. It may be that they see that such highly-personalized recommendations have real value to searchers. It makes sense that if I regularly engage with Rand Fishkin on Google+, I will be more likely to value his content when I do a logged-in search with a relevant query.
This may have implications for the future of author authority in search in general. It is conceivable that even if Google does implement it and expand it for content beyond Google+ posts, that it will remain highly personalized. In other words, Google may decide that it is most reliable to boost authors with whom you already have some affinity.
4. Authorship still builds your author rank database with Google. Using Authorship markup on your best content is still the clearest way to let Google see what you create and how people respond to it. You can be sure that Google has been tracking such data all along, and will continue to do so. Even if author authority is still not a ranking factor (outside of personalized search, and some search features such as In-Depth Articles), it likely will be someday. When that day comes, if Google has a clear history of your growth as a trusted author in your field, you may have a competitive advantage.
5. Google remains committed to author authority as a search factor. As recently as SMX Advanced in May, just a few weeks before the announcement of the end of author photos, Google's Matt Cutts reiterated his enthusiasm for author authority, while noting that it was a difficult and long-term project. For a transcript of his remarks, see my post here. Google understands that people are wired to trust other people long before they trust "brands" or websites.
Hi! I'm the author of this article. I welcome your comments and will be glad to try to answer any questions you post here.
By the way, Moz's Dr. Pete just announced that the MozCast Feature Graph is once again able to track Authorship results in search: https://mozcast.com/features
Hi! I have read your post on replusyourbusiness.com and it was about hash tag, that was very very very informative and very usefull, this one is too :)
Thorough, balanced, authoritative.certainly a post like this deserves an author photo
Thanks, Russ. I'm selling little stickers with my profile photo on them that you can put on your screen whenever you see my content in your searches. ;-)
My main blogging position is targeted almost exclusively towards Google News results as we cover breaking news and all that. I will say that only two of our blogging staff of a dozen have Google Authorship correctly setup and the two of us are consistently the only two who see our posts show up in the main Google News Feed for our target search term. Occasionally some of the other posts from our other writers get in there if its popular or trending, but its nothing close to the 100% inclusion that I get from Google News. With the author photo still showing up in those results, I think people should focus more on putting out content that will get your blog included in those results.
Good point, Tim. A few months ago Matt Cutts confirmed to me that while Google may not be using Authorship in the ranking algorithm, they may be using it as a "qualifier" for certain features. He used In-Depth Articles as his example, but it may be a factor for News as well.
Of course, it is not necessary to have Authorship to get into News (there are many examples of News items with no Authorship connected), but as you share, it may help if all other things are equal.
Oh I agree. Authorship doesn't matter for our mainstream competitors like USA Today, NFL.com or ESPN.com (its a sports blog I write for by the way). I have found for even major blog websites like ours(1 million+ views a month), the Authorship deal helps in a major way.
It could just be that I am just devilishly handsome and Google's algorithm has recognized this and rewarded me accordingly. I have no data to back that claim up though. :) lol
The removal of the authorship foto, was for me a huge change in the way I look at the SERP. I guess that Google must have thought this through, because many clients who rely on visibility in the SERPs, can't understand why the visual image have gone.
One example is a client of mine, who wanted to me to make their website appear in the SERP with Google Sitelinks. Yes, of course it is possible, but they wanted me to make the change by simply making a quick fix and definately not change anything on their site. Just make it magically appear, as if it was some sort of on/off switch.
My point is, such dramatic changes in the SERP could get some clients worried, and should be dealt with proactively. I would have liked to see a hint or notice of the removal of the author images, but hey, long live Google's changing nature!
Thanks for your comment, Rene. Perhaps we should all take a lesson from this. When taking on new clients, part of the process should be educating those clients about the nature of search, including that qualifying for most search features cannot be guaranteed, and that any of those features could change at any time and without notice.
Of course, none is guaranteed. However most clients which I encounter, don't see how much of the changes are based on a 3rd party (Google most often). One way I try to deal with this, is to make sure that the client is not focused on the small details everytime they get a report, but on the ongoing progress during a agreed period of time.
Success is based on a long term period in this matter.
Yeah, it doesn't make sense to get worked up over these changes. That is what makes SEO and its related topics so interesting. It's an evolving landscape, which means we'll never have to be bored.
I completely agree. However, some clients are not always so open minded, and expect to see straightforward results. That depends on how the client was told about SEO of course :-)
Thanks for the wonderful insights on Google Authorship, Mark! Cyrus Shepard RT'ed this post earlier today, which talks about Google's plans to implement Quality Rating Guidelines in their search algo. In my opinion, Google's emphasis on E-A-T (expertise, authoritativeness and trustworthiness) with regards to the quality of content is going to be tied with Google's Authorship to a significant extent down the road. Therefore, the impact of Google authorship will continue to grow in future.
Thanks for that link Susanta!
The pessimist half thinks that the images are affecting Google's ability to meld Adwords ads with the organic SERPs. It's drawing away ad revenue.
On another side, it's also pulling eyeballs away from other SERPs that don't have images. That could be construed as affecting SERP quality or distracting users.
I don't put much faith in Google these days in regards to their ethics. They say one thing and do another.
Great article, thanks for the thorough, speculation free breakdown.
One thing I'm still fuzzy on is what can I do for authorship in the cases that the publishing site does not properly mark up authorship. For instance, I wrote an article for Entrepreneur, I can't go back to them and say "Hey, you should implement authorship." Is it still worth listing them as a site I've contributed to in my plus profile? Or do I just chalk that up to a loss in terms of authorship?
Thanks, Dave, and a great question! (Although I wouldn't say my article is "speculation free." I did try to label clearly where I was speculating.)
Yes, I would still put a site in my Contributor To links even if they aren't using Authorship, as long as you are proud of your content there. In some cases, we have seen Google go ahead and attribute Authorship in the SERPs, as long as your byline name on your posts on the site exactly matches your name on your G+ profile.
We were without authorship. And I've personally seen on my site have dropped trráfico if only a little.
I personally do not think the image of author help us in the ranking of the SERPs, I always saw it as a striking element to draw the eye of the user.
Now that is not the picture I have chosen to use the stars of "Rich Snippets" to call the attention of the user, in a few weeks we will see if it works or not.
.@sotelor10 — Did you notice some value? Can you describe any advantages/disadvantages to your web-presence and SERPs? What did you want to accomplish; what did you do; and what was the result? It's been enough time now to know something. Can you share it?
Thanks for taking the time to write such a comprehensive post on this, Mark. While many Googlers are running around like chickens with their heads cuts off over the loss of authorship photos, they forget that it wasn't the only valuable aspect of Authorship.
I would argue that personalized search (which you mention above) is indeed an immensely important outcome of Authorship, with or without photos appearing. I would also argue that people aren't as quick to appreciate this aspect because it's less visual than authorship photos appearing in the SERP. Not only does this feature offer up content specifically tailored to your circles and industry, but it gives posts by those with less "weight" a better chance to be seen by their peers.
Yes, the lack of transparency on Google's part is a little suspect - but some forget Google is an advertising company first and a search engine second. They constantly change not only to improve search as a whole, but to evolve as a business. Either way, you did a great job demystifying Mueller's statement for us. We all knew CTR couldn't improve with AND without authorship photos - that's an oxymoron.
Your tattoo suggestion, "the only thing constant is change" should really be Google's slogan.
Thanks, Damien. I work hard to try to see through emotionalism, panic, and hype. I don't always succeed, but that's my goal.
Perhaps I'm naive, but I don't buy that Google does short cut things that might drive short term revenue gains. I think they are smart enough to understand that if they are to continue to grow and provide returns to shareholders year after year, they have to continue to offer the best possible search experience.
I didn't see any major changes in ranking since 25-June when Google started deletion of author pic from serp. So one point is very clear, authorship still matters, it is still working. Google just removed only pic from results, not its power. Totally agree with you Mark!
Gaurav, see my reply to Rank Watch in these comments. I would not expect to see any ranking change because I do not believe that Authorship is used as a ranking factor (not yet).
Right Mark. I went through a important post of Eric Enge before few months where he analyzed and find that there is no evidence/co-relation of Google authorship & ranking. Agree.
Until a week ago you could click the byline of any Authorship result in Google Search and get to a dedicated search page for just that author's content.
That's gone now, but Terry Simmonds has built an interface that still gives you access to such a search.
NOTE: You'll need the ID number from the URL of the Google+ profile for the author you want to search. If that author has a vanity URL, it won't work. Just right click that author's name anywhere on Google+, copy the URL, and paste it somewhere to extract the ID number.
This (byline linked to G+ profiles) I have a problem with. There are many fledgling searches still out there who have never heard of Google + and don't care to learn anything about it. I'm annoyed by the amount of influence Google puts on it's own brand. I do not believe that the bylines should take you to the Google + page. it's misleading to someone who might think anything that is clickable in the SERPs will take you to the article, site, etc you were intending to land on. I miss the authenticity of the Google search from yesteryear (minus the spam). Good, old fashioned, depersonalized search results. Although, I can't say I don't love local search results - but oh yeah, that goes right back to Google +/Places. To wrap this up and add one more small tantrum: #bringbackauthorship photos; it made the search engines a friendlier place.
Hi Mark -
Thanks for your research and opinions, this is definitely one of the most talked about dialogues right now.
"The bylines are an indication that Google still cares who created a piece of content"
I think this is the biggest piece that a lot of us have been worrying about. 'Doing all this work for nothing.' As an agency SEO, I've spent many hours with my team betting on the fact that as being an early adopter of this technology, we'll be rewarded at a later date when it finally 'kicks in.' The photos getting taken out from search results was kind of scary, but it is good to know nothing really changed from a technical perspective, if anything it has gotten better.
Thanks, Patrick. If there is one thing anyone involved in search marketing should have tattooed on their arm, it should probably be: "The only thing constant is change." ;-)
I haven't paid much attention to the "Did all this work for nothing" complaints. First off, what "work"? You set up a Google+ profile and linked your content to it? My ditch-digging grandfather would have a few things to say to that person about "work."
The only real work anyone might have invested was trying harder to produce truly valuable content and to earn the right to be published on trusted sites. Those things are total wins in their own right, with or without author photos.
If striving to get a photo in search made you a better content marketer, how can you say "it was for nothing?"
"Those that are nearsighted are sure to run into what's in-front of them."
One would think that if a person is investing non-refundable time into fixing issues that are now nonexistent; the term "all for nothing" would not be out of place to say.
From my experience most of my personal SEO clients were mainly attracted to Google Authorship because of the ability to have their profile image in SERPs. On the other hand I for one wanted them to have it as I am a firm believer in people doing business with people. So yes I too am aware of the benefits that came with building authority around an authorship account such as providing quality content ;-)
Throughout the release of Google Authorship I did have to put in some work in order to get it to function properly in SERPs. (That's right I said work & I have the calluses to prove it).
You may recall the Structured Data Testing Tool that allows you to find issues in Google Authorship markup. Well in a SEO Agency you don't always get to work on websites that you create (for the most part I spend my days bringing blackhated website back within Google Webmaster Guidelines).
From what I've seen, there are some people that went overkill on trying to manipulate authorship markup on their client's websites or they used an erroneous author box plugin that would pull multiple authors and cause errors within the SERPs. I know this because I've spent time successfully restructuring the markup errors that would later result in the profile images being able to come forward once again in SERPs.
To sum it up, my point is that it is not uncommon for a SEO Agency to have to do more work than just "setting up a Google+ profile and link your content to it" in order to get authorship to function properly. Anyone that works in the industry could verify that there's always a number of variables that could cause errors in a Website/CMS.
After all we don't live in Shouldland were things always work as they should.
Antonio, clearly I was talking about the work involved in setting up Authorship correctly (which, indeed, is relatively minimal). I was not talking about untangling huge problems due to the negligence, stupidity, or nefarious nature of particular site owners. That will always be a lot of work.
But relative to many other things we need to do to have good rankings and get traffic from search engines, I stand by my statement that Authorship is not particulalrly labor intensive.
Mark, It's Antonino* so there's another oversight on your end.
Now by your logic I guess what you do isn't labor intensive since all you do is focus on Authorship. You clearly are nearsighted
Antonino, I apologize for misspelling your name.
I thought we were having a reasonable discussion. If you are going to resort to insults and snark, that will not be possible. Thanks for your comments.
Mark, to me it seems like you enjoy creating ridiculous metaphors and pass off assumptions as facts. Which is fine but the real kicker is that you expect no one to take it as an insult.
Well I did, you want to have a "reasonable discussion?" Fine let's have one
What you believe to be witty responses actually come off as insults, i.e., "My ditch-digging grandfather would have a few things to say to that person about 'work.'"
Are you trying to imply that I and other SEO Professionals do not know our fair share of manual labor? How could you not see that others could fine that as a derogatory remark???
The same thing goes for your 'work' comment. These "untangling huge problems due to the negligence" as you call them are apart of authorship.
As I said we don't live in Shouldland were things always work as they should. There were/are always issues with Authorship; after all you did create the largest Google+ community dedicated to discuss them. Thanks for your response.
Great write up Mark. I'm surprised no one else of prominence came to a similar theory as you did (not that I've read, at least). In short, just because you had authorship markup implemented ≠ higher quality content, which has been Google's mantra for years now. Authorship photos were a "quick win" for site owners that could give them a leg up on the competition who was behind the times. I know I personally consulted people to do this, knowing full well that their content wasn't that great and probably didn't deserve this extra picture that (probably) helped their CTR.
I will, however, personally miss the photos in the SERPs, because it was a quick way to identify content by faces I recognized (yourself included). But overall I think it's actually a positive move if you strictly look at delivering the best search results possible.
Thanks for your kind words, Kyle. As I mention in the post, I'm intrigued by the fact that Google is still showing author photos sometimes for Google+ content for people you have circled, in your personalized search. While that's a very limited implementation, I wonder if it points the way for the future (that Google will first apply "author rank" on a personalized basis, boosting authors for whom you already have some affinity.)
Thanks Mark - I knew you would have something to say about this! Nice insight and thought process on how this is still relevant and worth working on. As a community, the SEO industry has a history of being reactionary and that has to change. IMO, the best SEO people are those that learn how to look ahead and be proactive rather than react. In this case, now way to really look ahead - but in general it is an issue for many SEO's. However, hindsight is 20X20, right. When Jon announced removing the author photos my mind immediately went back a month or two when the photos suddenly stopped showing up for a couple of hours. Should've known something was coming. :)
Thanks, Rick. Yeah, I didn't mention it in this article, but I now believe those 3-4 hour drops of author photos were not "glitches" as we were told but likely tests for this change.
Great post. Thanks a bunch for explaining this fully. It probably would have been un-wise for Google to throw the baby out with the bathwater, hopefully, Authorship will make a better return in the future!
Thanks Laurean. Let us hope so!
I don't think anyone with clients or a multitude of websites is hoping so, Mark!
It is unfortunate that Google has removed. Yet it was very promising.
Whether it's about money or something else, I don't care, I'm glad they are gone! Google was looking like a complete mess with images for shopping results in the top left (which rightfully should have images) and then those useless authorships photos which amount to nothing. Photos here and photos there it was horrendous, at least no it's much nicer on the eyes again, organic results look nicely different from shopping (product) results. Well done Google, thumbs up!
sehr guter Artikel, danke
This is so disappointING and I'm sure results in a lot of work in tErma of search disappearing for a lot of people. When google can make such sweeping changes at this without warning it makes me wonder about the scalability of SEO work.
Thank you for your well thought through input as always Mark.
My two cents: given Google overall goal of presenting the best results possible and results (and the culling of authorship photos in the near past) it would seem that Google has been struggling with the signals that authorship photos have been sending out. It is not far fetched for a user to interpret results with author photos as of higher quality than those without.
In our field most content creators have some technical background and setting up authorship has not always been easy even for us considering the amount of mystery cases where snippets aren't showing up although we expect they should. For a lot of other fields the content creators may barley have bothered with the technicalities of the snippet giving an even greater advantage to those who actually did, and in these cases the snippet with photo may have showed for content which wasn't at all of the best quality on the SERP.
Keeping the byline in the snippet shows that there is absolutely still a future for authorship. My guess is that the long term goal is for Google to be able to determine authors with perhaps as little as no markup, lessening the dependence on both markup and Google+. Extracting a name from posts should be a lot easier than magically extracting photos out of nowhere.
Lastly, I'm not at all convinced that the author photo did not (or barely) affect CTR, my guess is that the influence it actually did have seemed to be part of the problem and was thus removed at least until Google feel they are ready to stand by the quality stamp that the photos ended up being perceived as.
Thanks for the comment Henrick. On the CTR question, I want to be clear that I am not contending that author photos did not or never did get any CTR boost. I am pretty certain they could and did. The only things I'm questioning are:
1. Did we ever really have accurate data on how much of a boost there was?
2. Was the boost universal (did most or all get a boost, or was it dependent on the photo and the query?)
3. Did the CTR affect perhaps decay over time as searchers became more accustomed to seeing them?
I completely agree with you on your first two points, at least I have never seen any data that can statistically prove the CTR increase. As you state yourself that would probably require some sort of AB-testing of the SERP which it is unlikely we will ever see.
It is also not that far fetched to assume that any possible increase in CTR is not universal. What we have seen are eye-tracking studies which have proven that photos do capture attention, from that point to the actual click my guess it that a lot of factors are at play, ranging from query to title and all the normal shananigans.
On your third point though I am not as certain and my personal belief is that therein lies the real issue. Intentional or unintentional the authorship photo ended up being som sort of quality stamp. If they did not at all affect CTR I do not think we would have seen them removed. My guess is that Google did not feel comfortable affecting the CTR with a system which they feel they do not yet master.
That's just my guesswork though. Thanks for the valuable input!
Thanks for the post Mark. It was great insight as always.
It will definitely be interesting to see where Google takes us and what the future of Authorship is.
Hi,
Then why in the Markup column of Moz bar page analysis is still suggesting "Adding Google Authorship to a page allows Google to show author images and information as part of the search result. This can increase click-through!"?
We just haven't had a chance to update that section of the Mozbar yet. Good catch, and we'll be sure to revise that. Thank you!
Well they don't want to loose their ad revenue due to some author pics. In my opinion Authorship is just like schema giving Google more information about post and it has very low or no affect on rankings.
Good post. It's a bit of a downer for authors that their photos will no longer appear on search. However, Google's decision still makes sense since it's all about improving the design of search results. As what you've said they're simplifying the way Authorship is shown in mobile and desktop search results and removing the profile photo can help save space. Thank you for sharing Mark!
Thanks StaffChecking, glad you found it helpful!
Thanks for the post! Some months ago I have seen the disappearing of photos in some search queries for some authors, but now they are not shown in general.
I think, there is a big future in microdata.
Regarding the idea that a prime motivator for Google removing author photos was competition with their ads, you should take a look at the very interesting ad CTR data shared today by Larry Kim of Wordstream.
Please see my comment there. I do think Larry's data is interesting, but I have some cautions about claiming it as "proof."
I think sometimes there's a danger of over-analysing things. I don't think you need a study to prove that Author Pics developed better CTRs. Of course they did. It's just natural human nature to be drawn into something that is different and more unique to everything else on the page.
I do hope Google re-visit their policy on Authorship, however, as I think it's important to have that distinction between more credible content and lower quality copy.
Matthew, I do agree that it makes some intuitive sense that author photos could, in many cases, be a powerful attractor, and that that could lead to higher-than-usual CTR. That's why I said in the post that I wasn't disputing that higher CTR could and probably did happen in many cases. All I was trying to state was that we had no scientifically-verified proof as to how much it affected CTR, and whether that effect was universal (i.e., all or nearly all author photo results had higher CTR), or highly dependent on other factors (page position, photo appearance, query intent, etc.).
As I said in the post, it is also conceivable that over the three years author photos were present in the SERPs, their effect may have begun to wear off as users became more conditioned to them being there.
Removing authorship snippets from the SERPs came as a shock to the webmasters. However, linking your content pages to your G+ account will always fetch some incentives. I am not really sure that Google is done with the change and I expect that removing the snippets from SERPs is a part of a bigger plan.
Google has always been good with hiding plans and no one does it better than them. There is not much discussion or comments being heard from G on this and this gives a signal that the change is not yet over.
We would just need to wait and watch!
Thanks Mark, for such a descriptive post.
You're welcome, and thanks for your comment!
Hey Mark
Excellent post, I found it interesting with you "finding about hundreds of blog posts proclaiming "30-150% increase in CTR!" for Authorship and them tracing back to one article from two years ago" as it is something I have long suspected.
Thanks, Mark. Frankly, it was a good lesson for me. I like to think of myself as a skeptic (in the healthy sense of that term), but I have to admit I was taken in by that hype as well.
A lot of articles just rehash what is in other articles. It takes time and effort to find people genuinely publishing original information because there arn't many of them!
Though author's image has been removed, I personally feel that it still plays a crucial role in ranking in SERPs. So, I would continue to advise webmasters to use authorship for their sites.
Rank Watch, I'd be interested to see what evidence you have that Authorship affects ranking in non-personalized search. I don't think that it does.
Add to that what I said in this article about the great difficulty of establishing "author trust" and "author authority" and even defining what those mean, and I still believe that any kind of author rank of discernible significance is still off in the future; perhaps years away yet.
In the food blogging community, bloggers were upset that their pictures appeared in search engine results. They're much happier now that pictures of the food they're blogging about (or the restaurants or dishes they're reviewing) are appearing instead. Don't you think it should be about reader experience?
Authorship was (mostly) a voluntary program. If people were upset about getting their face photos in search, then all they had to do was remove any Authorship connection from their content.
I say "mostly" because there were examples of Google auto-attributing Authorship, but those were relatively rare and usually only for well-known authors.
I found the auto-attributing occurred in my experience because the other 8 bloggers on our site did not have Google Authorship enabled, so if, somehow, Google found a comment or sidebar of a post with my byline in it, that post would show up in Google News with a notation that it was written by me.
I have only noticed the auto-attribution from multi-author websites, so I wonder if this issue has occurred on single-author blog sites.
I have only seen auto-attribution for single author sites where the author is fairly well-known. For example. Chris Brogan frequently got an author photo for his blog posts even though he has never implemented Authorship on his sites.
Ah ok, that's what you meant by auto-attribution. I was thinking something different. Thanks!
Thanku sir for Giving me Informative Updates
I've always felt that AgentRank (AuthorRank) would be a significant portion of the algorithms in the future. Using a trusted set of Agents and being able to cite sources through authorship could be a valuable tool for the Search Engines to determine important information that users will want. If you write this article and cited Dr. Pete's information, that could be the new "linking" structure that engines could use to determine quality sources. Building PageRank is easy to manipulate. Having someone link to you that is a verified agent is much much harder.
Googles 2011 update to the Agent Rank Patent
"[0034] In an alternative implementation, a seed group of trusted agents can be pre-selected, and the agents within this seed group can endorse other content. Agents whose content receives consistently strong endorsements can gain reputation. In either implementation, the agent's reputation ultimately depends on the quality of the content which they sign."
Obviously I agree, but my impression from listening to and talking with a number of Google staffers is that implementing this well is harder than most people think. For one thing, rel=author adoption has been very low in many verticals. And it's easy to talk about "strong endorsements" and "trusted agents," but actually evaluating that in a machine-scalable way is quite harder.
This definitely isn't the forum to discuss this but I'm sure they had to do that when they first started PageRank. How did they initially value and measure PageRank? Meaning, how did they decide the initial set of sites that they would crawl from? These are rhetorical questions obviously. I'm just saying they shouldn't be that hard to figure out. It's Google! ;)
Well, that about sums it up :) very good post! thank you for putting that together.
Thanks, Andrew. Glad you found it helpful!
Thanks for this article Mark. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it.
I've been looking for yours/Eric's opinion on the recent authorship changes, and now I have it. Bill Slawski alsow weighed in here: Authorship Badges Removed: Still Worth Setting Up , and I believe he is of a similar opinion as yourself, on the matter.
I agree with you both, to an extent.
Google is trying to improve their search quality, etc., but their approach is less than transparent. In my opinion it serves Google's internal purposes to change the way authorship is displayed in SERPS. Why else would they remove a feature which they have championed for over 3 years? And to do so with very little warning. I appreciate that Google may have given hints of their impending authorship shake-up, but nothing prepared SEOs or webmasters for this recent action.
The problem now is that Google has not told us categorically, what value authorship still holds for us. Especially for those who do not yet use Google+. It will now be nigh on impossible to convince a small business owner of the ROI of "authorship", when there's no longer anything tangible to show for it's implementation.
For many skeptical website owners, the authorship photo is proof that the SEO has actually "done" something. The author byline is a shadow in comparison, and does not have the same visual impact.
That is not to say that authorship is no longer relevant, because it definitely is. But only to those who understand why. Try explaining your article and standpoint to a small business who is looking to improve their online presence quickly. Most of them will agree, but they can no longer justify the time or expense of bothering with authorship, or Google+ in fact.
Personally, it doesn't really matter what Google does. At the end of the day they are an advertising company with an online "yellow pages"/search directory. Whatever action they take is solely for their own benefit. We can choose to play along, or find an alternative to free organic traffic (which is what it comes down to eventually).
Great article, Mark. Thanks!
Thanks for your comment. I guess the thing we have to keep reminding ourselves is that Google doesn't exist to build your site traffic, ROI, etc. We should never look at any Google feature as a "right" nor give our clients an expectation that it will be there forever. We take advantage of what we can, and what makes sense for us, but we don't build our whole business hopes around something Google could take away at any moment.
If you have clients whose only concern is whatever short term, "sooner rather than later" wins they can get, then I would say that they probably shouldn't bother with authorship, or content marketing in general. Those things will most benefit those who understand and value long term brand-building and the value of authority and reputation.