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E-E-A-T and AI: How to Build Trust Signals That AI Can Read

DATE POSTED:July 4, 2025

AI models like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Google’s Search Generative Experience (SGE) are now pulling answers from websites without users clicking through. This changes how SEO works.

If you want your content to be chosen by AI, not just ranked by Google, it needs to show E-E-A-T clearly.

In this article, I’ll break down what E-E-A-T means, how AI uses it, and how I apply it to client websites and my own content.

What Is E-E-A-T? E-E-A-T stands for:
  • Experience – Has the person writing actually done what they’re talking about?
  • Expertise – Do they have deep knowledge in the subject?
  • Authoritativeness – Is the person or website recognized as a trusted source?
  • Trustworthiness – Is the content reliable, honest, and secure?

Google uses E-E-A-T in its quality guidelines. But AI tools now use similar signals to decide which content to summarize, cite, or ignore.

Why AI Looks for E-E-A-T

AI systems don’t evaluate websites like traditional search engines. They look for signs of credibility, consistency, and reliability.

Here’s what AI checks:

  • Is the author real and qualified?
  • Does the content reflect actual experience?
  • Is the site known in its field?
  • Are facts and claims accurate?
  • Do other websites reference or link to it?

If AI doesn’t see these signals, it skips the content—even if it’s well-written.

How I Build E-E-A-T for AI and SEO

Below is a full checklist I use to optimize content and websites for both Google and AI visibility.

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  1. Include Personal Experience I make sure content is based on real projects or actions.

For example:

  • If I write about “how to use Google Search Console,” I show screenshots from my own GSC account.
  • If I explain a content audit process, I list the exact tools and steps I used.

This proves to AI that the content is not generic.

What I do:

  • Add original screenshots

  • Use real-life examples and case studies

  • Share personal results (metrics, changes, outcomes)

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  1. Show Author Information Clearly AI needs to know who is writing the content and why they are qualified.

So I make sure every article includes:

  • A visible author name
  • A detailed author bio
  • Links to that person’s LinkedIn, website, or social profiles

This builds trust with both Google and AI models.

Best practices I follow:
  • Use a consistent author name across all content
  • Link the name to a full bio page
  • Mention years of experience or industry role in the bio

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  1. Use Structured Data (Schema Markup) Schema helps AI understand the page’s purpose. I add structured data like:
  • Article schema
  • Author and Person schema
  • Organization schema with sameAs links to LinkedIn, Twitter, etc.

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FAQ, Breadcrumb, or Review schemas where needed

Why it helps: AI reads structured data to understand relationships between content, authors, and topics.

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  1. Build Topical Authority Publishing one or two articles on a topic isn’t enough. I create content clusters that cover a topic in full.

Example: If I’m targeting the keyword “SEO for eCommerce,” I also publish:

  • Keyword research for eCommerce
  • Technical SEO for Shopify
  • Product page SEO tips
  • Case study of eCommerce SEO success

All these are internally linked, which helps AI understand that the site is a specialist on this subject.

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  1. Get Backlinks and Mentions from Trusted Sources AI models track links and mentions across the web. If other reputable websites reference your brand or content, your authority goes up.

What I do:

  • Use HARO (Help a Reporter Out) to get featured in articles
  • Submit quotes and tips to marketing blogs
  • Do guest posting on niche authority sites
  • Get listed in business directories or tools roundups

Even unlinked brand mentions can improve visibility in AI models.

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  1. Ensure Content Is Accurate and Fact-Based AI avoids content that is outdated or misleading. So I regularly audit my content to:
  • Update stats and screenshots
  • Remove broken or outdated links
  • Add references from high-authority sources (e.g. gov, .edu, major industry blogs)

Example: When I quote a Google update, I link directly to the official announcement or blog post—not third-party summaries.

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  1. Improve Site Trust Signals AI and Google both look at site-wide trust elements:
  • HTTPS (secure browsing)
  • Clear contact information
  • About Us and Privacy Policy pages
  • External review ratings (Google Reviews, Trustpilot, etc.)
  • Fast loading and mobile responsiveness
  • These help show that the site is real and reliable—not spammy or low-quality.
How AI Uses These Signals in Practice Let’s say someone asks ChatGPT:

"How do I optimize blog content for AI search?"

If your blog includes:

  • A real SEO expert as the author (with schema)
  • Step-by-step instructions based on actual work
  • Links to helpful external sources
  • A history of publishing related articles

Then there’s a high chance ChatGPT or Gemini will pull your content into the response — or at least reference it as a source.

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Final Thoughts AI tools are choosing what to show based on trust, not just keywords.

If you want your content to be visible in AI-generated answers, optimize for E-E-A-T. That means:

  • Write from real experience
  • Show author credentials
  • Use structured data
  • Build authority in one topic
  • Get quality mentions
  • Keep your content accurate
  • This is the same system I use across all my SEO projects.

E-E-A-T is not a plugin or shortcut — it’s about proving that your content comes from real people who know what they’re talking about.