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Being an SEO, I’m a huge fan of finding ways to assist Google in retrieving the information they need to display higher quality search results. I particularly enjoy making sure Google gets the information they need to display Rich Snippets; additional information that they pull from websites to help improve the quality and effectiveness of a particular search result.
My personal favorite of late has been Author Rich Snippets.
What are Author Rich Snippets and Why Do I Need Them?
What is an Author Rich Snippet, you ask? An Author Rich Snippet consists of a specific author’s picture, name, and a “More by” link that’s added to a standard search result.
Aside from the obvious ego boost that accompanies your own Author Rich Snippet showing up in search, Author Rich Snippets offer the following additional benefits. An Author Rich Snippet:
- breaks up standard wall-of-text search results.
- calls significant attention to your result.
- leads to more qualified traffic by giving searchers a better idea of what to expect when they click on your results.
- establishes Author Authority for the author and builds search trust for the site.
- allows readers to get to know you and trust your contributions to the web.

Now, Author Rich Snippets aren’t for everyone. However, they are for most people, so if you’re serious about doing well in organic search, ask yourself the following questions.
Do you want to attract more search traffic to your site?
By setting up Author Rich Snippets, you’ll increase your CTR (some sites report a 20-30% increase in CTR) from search results. Users who have read your posts in the past will get to know you and be much more likely to click on your next blog that they encounter in the search results.
Do you want to set yourself apart from your competitors?
Unless you’re doing business in the online services space, the chances are that most of your competitors aren’t down with Author Rich Snippets yet. By becoming an early adopter, you can really set your site apart in non-branded search. Which search result do you think your target audience/customers will be inclined to click on?

Need to improve your site’s search trust or recover from Google Panda?
Modern search algorithms (notably Google’s) focus on what can be referred to as website “search trust”. Essentially, search engines have learned that spammy sites, sites that use boilerplate content, and sites that use low-quality or hastily produced content give their searchers a poor experience. As a result, Google’s Panda update identified criteria that indicated low-quality sites, applied them to machine learning, and released “Panda” on the web to determine the quality and trust of websites. Those that failed the test got hit pretty hard in the search results and their respective webmasters were left scrambling to pick up the SEO pieces. It’s been well over a year now since Panda hit, but if your site is still battling to establish itself as high-quality, Author Rich Snippets are a great way to speed the process along. Why? Author Rich Snippets connect website content with real people; this equates to quality content (in the eyes of Google, at least).
Want to build a reputation for yourself?
If you’re looking to build up an online reputation as an authority or thought-leader in your industry, you need to be using Author Rich Snippets. Not only will they allow your face to be seen all over the SERPs, searchers can also easily click your “More by” link to access more of your articles and posts. Soon enough, people will scan SERPs just for your picture so they can find reliable information that they trust. #winning
Author Rich Snippets for Companies
Faceless company blog posts are going out of style, fast. Google is well on its way to leaving anonymous corporate content in the dust and focusing on company spokespeople who have the experience and talent to produce truly great content for Google searchers. At present, you can’t apply the theory of Google Author Rich Snippets to Google+ pages (business/brand pages). A brand or company isn’t a person, so it would kind of defeat the whole purpose of promoting authors.
If you want to get your company on Author Rich Snippets, you have the following options:
- Set the author of every company blog post as a single company spokesperson (CEO or other key persona). However, I don’t recommend this option because it’s not authentically representing the true author.
- Highlight employees as the authors of their own posts. This is really the way to go. If employees are already active on Google+, their circles will be leveraged to benefit the company as a whole.
Your company is made up of talented individuals; don’t let that go to waste by stripping the person out of the post.
How to Set Up Author Rich Snippets on Your Site
If you haven’t been sold on ARS (moar acronyms!) yet, you can stop reading now. If you’re so excited about getting your face in Google’s search results that you can’t contain yourself, then this is your section. There’s a simple way and a somewhat more complex (IMO) way to go about this. I’ll begin with…
The Simple Way To Set Up Author Rich Snippets
There are a few things you need in order to step up Author Rich Snippets:
- A public Google+ profile.
Make sure to upload a decent looking profile picture. Google will use this when it pulls in your Author Rich Snippet. If you already have a presence online, I recommend using the same photo you use elsewhere (Twitter, Facebook, Quora, etc). - Access to your blog
That, or a webmaster/IT guy who doesn’t hate your guts. You’ll need to tweak your blog posts or blog post template a bit.
- Go to your Google+ profile and copy the URL
- Insert a link in your blog post and use the copied URL as the destination (make sure to remove anything like /posts that’s at the end).
- Make sure the anchor text is your full name (it should match the name used on your Google+ profile).

The Somewhat More Complicated Way to Set Up Author Rich Snippets
Now this probably isn’t that much more complicated. In fact, it may even be simpler. However, I prefer the previous method as this one places more trust in Google figuring out things on their own rather than being hand-fed the information. Another reason I don’t typically recommend this method is that it requires you to have an email address at each domain you write for. In a lot of cases, notably guest blogging, this isn’t feasible.
How to do it:
- Make sure you have a Google+ profile (same as in option #1)
- Make sure each blog post your write has “by firstname lastname” (the name must match that used on your Google+ profile).
- Go to https://plus.google.com/authorship and “apply” for authorship with Google.
- Google will send a verification email to the email address at the domain you write for; verify.
Now, Let the Magic Happen
After completing one (or both) of these options, you might be inclined to repeatedly Google the titles of your recent posts until your fingers bleed or hold your breath until your Author Rich Snippet appears. I don’t recommend it. It can take a day or two for Google to make the association and re-crawl your blog post. I won’t guarantee this will work, but go ahead and re-pimp your posts on Twitter and Google+; you know Google is going to be crawling those links and therefore end up on your posts.
So that’s how you configure Author Rich Snippets to appear in Google SERPs. I highly recommend it. Give it a shot and I’d love it if you came back here to give me a report on how it works out in the comments. Happy optimizing.
Like this post? Follow Mike Arnesen on Google+
Tags: author rich snippets, Google, SEO
RT @swellpath: Fresh Blog Post: Author Rich Snippets and Why You Need Them http://t.co/42cKoRXy
[...] you want to get in on the action, check out Author Rich Snippets and Why You Need Them. Let me know what you think and, of course, comment here or there (preferably there) if you have [...]
Have your blog post stand out in search results for Google. Plus add some new school SEO value to boot. http://t.co/txVBLaOP
SEO tip from @Mike_Arnesen! http://t.co/qrBtf1jQ
Online marketing – http://t.co/iEDegs1H… http://t.co/HXa8sTSe
RT @Mike_Arnesen: Check out my latest @swellpath blog post – “Author Rich Snippets and Why You Need Them” http://t.co/OREyzVOR #SEO #Google
another good step-by-step on rich snippets http://t.co/LCdRIqMg via @swellpath
I am redesigning my wife’s interior design website, and was going to add some markup. The site is very light (no blog or content generation), but works quite well in generating business. I was going to try adding author rich snippets to a few pages just to get a pic in the serps, but would try tying it to her barely used Google Plus business page. Would that work or be worth it? I’m just and amateur. Thanks!
Hi David,
Thanks for your question! Unfortunately, Google doesn’t allow linking Google+ business pages with website content in the same way that it links authors with their content. To Google, this initiative is all about connecting content with the real people who produce it. They’ve found that connecting content with authors creates greater trust. Letting businesses become an author entity defeats the whole purpose of that.
Let’s say “Tim” is someone you’re familiar with and he’s somewhat well known for blogging about money saving tips. Seeing his face next to a blog post on “smart shopping tips” is going to really make that result trustworthy. On the other hand, seeing a blog post on “smart shopping tips” from WeSaveMoney.com doesn’t have anywhere near the same trust because it’s not actually connected with a person.
Remember that having a Google+ business page and a Google+ personal profile are not mutually exclusive. I’d recommend having your wife create a Google+ profile and linking that with her content. For the business page, there’s actually a separate process Google has in place to do something similar: link the Google+ business page with the website entity. Documentation can be found here: http://support.google.com/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=1708844
If you have two Google+ accounts, which one should the AuthorRank be linked to?
Suppose you have both a company (Google Apps) account and a personal Google+ account. A company account can be shut down so, which profile would a writer want to be linking to?
I use my company profile as any writing I do online is either for our site or a guest post for our company. If I start writing more personal stuff I’ll use my personal link.
[...] Blogging regularly on your own site, your company’s site, or through guest blogging opportunities can do wonders for saturating your personal brand’s SERPs with high-quality results. You can also leverage the guest blogging you do to link to your personal site and, as a result, increase your site’s search authority. If you’re truly serious about dominating for your personal brand, you also need to set up author rich snippets. [...]
SEO Secret: Your face on Google sells. Why you need authorship rich snippets. http://t.co/xTilR69E
Hi, I’ve just tried on my website according to your tutorial. Hope it will works but anyway it was very clear. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful! Looks like you’ve set things up correctly on your site. Best of luck!
[...] intergraded services such as Google Places, now Google+ Local, and encourage authorship with author rich snippets to improve ranking of blog posts. Google will never be the next Facebook, but it’s ok Google, [...]
Hi, I have a few questions that I hope you can help me with – if not then Google got that search result wrong!
I have the rel=author set up OK, no problems there. However, I recently set up a GD Star Rating (a WordPress plugin) that has Google Rich Snippets built in. In seems to have overidden my author links in search. Also, the rating is not actually being used, and some pages have a lot of Facebook Likes and Google+ plusses. So I am wondering – how many ways to vote do I need on my site?
1. Should I be able to run a Rich Snippet like the GD Star Rating and still have my Google Author Link?
2. If not – which is probably going to be best for CTR / SEO?
3. Is there a way to have Facebook Likes showing as a Rich Snippet in search?
Cheers
Jon.
Hi Jon, thanks for posting.
First let’s deal with the author rich snippet. That plugin may be messing with things, but the first thing I noticed was that through the Rich Snippet Testing Tool (http://bit.ly/TL4KrC) I saw that your Google+ profile is linked to a page with “/about”. The first thing I’d recommend is just having http://profiles.google.com/112594150264603349403 as your linked profile. This may be in your WordPress user information.
The second thing I’d do is manually verify authorship using an email address at your domain here: https://plus.google.com/authorship
If that doesn’t work, I’d recommend using Yoast’s SEO WordPress plugin for authorship. It will add a rel=”author” meta tag in your that should fix things.
As to why Google isn’t displaying your rating data, I’d say it’s because A) your site doesn’t have a lot of ratings (1 or 0 on most of the pages I visited) and B) Google may not consider your site particularly relevant for ratings. Your content seems to be mainly resources and opinion pieces (perfect for authorship), but it’s not exactly a product or a service that warrants ratings.
One question #2, for your site, I’d definitely say that the Author Rich Snippet is going to be better. For the kinds of queries you’re appearing for, I think an ARS just looks more honest and trustworthy.
For your last question, Google will (selectively) display +1 counts in search once they hit a certain threshold. Bing will do something similar with Facebook likes. Neither search engine ever does the other.
[...] The ability to get your picture in Google search results was the big thing last year. With the rollout of Google+, the world’s leading search engine started promoting a simple(r) way for people to link their online identity to their digital content. This lead to the rise of Author Rich Snippets! [...]
Grrr again that we can’t “link” multiple google addresses under one google+ account. I just can’t fathom updating multiple google+ accounts with different parts of my life (personal blog, which is hosted at a different domain than my primary email address; work blog, but I don’t have a separate google+ profile set up for my work address because my work and life are so inextricably blended; and, because I use FB for personal and Google+ for business, even though it’s associated with my main “forever” email address, not a work-related address that’s subject to change over the course of years). This is a very helpful tutorial for the steps that I was able to complete; but man, it’s frustrating to see an “authorship validation” option and not be able to walk through it because I don’t want to spawn a bunch of extra Google+ profiles…
looks like its working ! thanks a lot :))
[...] of all, you’ll need to set up Google Authorship. Aside from getting that sweet author rich snippet in search results, setting this up will give [...]
Bada Bing Bada Boom! …
I’m jazzed, but does that mean that i have to go back and upload my personal pic into all my WP business & hobby websites that have logos or icons of my brand?
Great Info, Thanks A Million
Dear Mike,
Great article and totally understandable by a non-technical person (that would be me!). A few more questions.
1. After completing step one, I verified with “Google’s Rich Snippet Testing Tool” and my post appeared, however, it gave the following errors:
— Warning: Missing required field “updated”.
— Warning: Missing required hCard “author”.
What should I do?
2. Do I really need to do the second method? I don’t use my name on my posts.
3. How do I re-pimp (update) my Google/Twitter posts?
4. Do I need to add the link to my Google+ profile on all my old posts. All.of.them?
Besos, Sarah
I’ve used the Authorship plug-in for blogs with multiple authors (https://www.keywordstrategy.org/extras/authorship-plugin/) and although the rich snippet testing tools sees the linked author profile, it sees no publisher data. Do I need both? Is this the reason why I can’t see the author picture in the testing tool? Or perhaps my plug-in is not doing all that I want it to…
[...] 1) Set up authorship [...]
[...] of all, you’ll need to set up Google Authorship. Aside from getting that sweet author rich snippet in search results, setting this up will give [...]
[...] A content creator who is clearly identified in search results by their photo, their website name, how many Google Circles they are in and (sometimes) a “More by…” link (all of which is known as an Author Rich Snippet). [...]
Thank you so much for this info! And yes, I’m definitely interested in a WordPress plugin :)
Firstly, Thanks for this awesome article. But the problem i have faced is, in Google rich snippet tool my author link is showing nicely but not in the search results even after some days. How many days it takes Google to modify on SERP?
Very easy to implement Google Authorship information.
Hey Mike, how might this affect freelance writers who have multiple clients for guest blogging? Would those posts be better ranked coming from a company spokesperson for each client?
I’d say that would be the best was to handle it. Unless you’re a public face of your client’s business, it doesn’t really make sense. However, if you have a blog of your own that’s about freelance writing or content marketing, use your own profile.
On the rich snippt testing tool; under AUTHOR is says Linked Author Profile and Google Profile and obviously the google+url. along side each. How and could they ever differ from each other. i.e An author profile and google profile. I assume that is for sites which have their own profile/page and the author has one. If you are blogging on your own site should you create two profiles?
Curious if this method should include adding the g+ link to each youtube description field within one’s channel and then cite in g+ the author’s youtube channel url as one of the “Contributor To” fields.
Hi Marty,
If you link your Google+ account to your YouTube channel, you shouldn’t need to worry about it. The name listed on your YouTube channel will have all the markup that’s required and you don’t have to do anything else. I get into YouTube authorship more in this post: http://www.swellpath.com/2012/09/author-rich-snippets-for-youtube-video-content/
Thanks for reading!
[...] You will be provided with a code to embed into your posts. For more information on how to embed the code, click here. [...]
[...] Kohn wrote a post on AuthorRank and stated that Author Rank would be “bigger than Panda and Penguin [...]
Hi! Why when I test it do I see my picture but I get this error: Warning: Missing required field “updated”.
Warning: Missing required hCard “author”.
[...] mean for marketers looking to achieve good search rankings? First off, it means that you need to set up Google Authorship. Then you need to consider you’re future content creation strategy – because regular, relevant, [...]
[...] up authorship connecting your Google+ profile is not difficult to do (here is an easy guide to setting it up). The harder part is that this clearly emphasizes that you are going to need to spend time on [...]
[...] on http://www.swellpath.com Share this:ShareTwitterEmailPrintDiggFacebookLinkedInRedditStumbleUponGoogle +1TumblrLike [...]
[...] Author Rich Snippet garners you more real estate in the search results, a higher CTR, and more quality within your [...]
[...] it is, you can see increased exposure in the Google’s search results thanks to the author rich snippet. Also, when somebody clicks on your search listing, reads your article and then clicks back to the [...]
[...] it is, you can see increased exposure in the Google’s search results thanks to the author rich snippet. Also, when somebody clicks on your search listing, reads your article and then clicks back to the [...]
[...] organisation rich snippet was used in the about us section. Here’s a decent explanation of rich [...]
I’ve got 99% working, but still cant seem to see it via the webmaster structured data tool on individual youtube videos, it shows on the channel but not the video URL.
Is there other settings to achieve this?
Good write up Mike.
Some questions for you:
1) By labeling my Google+ profile PUBLIC I’m assuming that anyone can find my profile. However, if I label it “Only You” does this mean that Google won’t be able to link my external posts to my Google+ profile, for better SEO, or does this happen regardless?
2) Also if Post on different forums will I need to post the rel-author tag to EVERY post which wouldbe a real pain, or can I simple add it to my profile page on that site once in order for Google to see the relationship back to my Google+ profile page?
Thanks much
[...] By showing the author’s picture and name (linked to their Google+ profile) on search, these Author Rich Snippets will help you get earn more links and improve your site’s search trust, while building a [...]
I am inspired from your writing and obviously will use it getting SERP advantage
[...] Google+). Rel Publisher has the potential to be comparable signature system to the one used for traditional Google Authorship. Theoretically, Google has all the pieces in place to create a ranking system for brands and [...]
I run a photography website on my own. Do I set the author tag on every page including the help, ordering, about section? Is there an issue in doing this?
[...] they have a blog, do they have Google Authorship set up for their employees that post frequently? You can check if they have this configured using [...]
[...] Mike Arnesen is much better equipped to help you get up to speed with the use of Author Rich Snippets. Those are the tiny bits of code that identify your blog posts, articles and other writing online so that Google connects the dots and you build authority. Literally. Use of a Google+ profile is a critical part of the connection. [...]
Nice tutorial. Will try it later today
https://twitter.com/SvetlanaLuchkiv/status/300674575820263424
[...] Sign up for a free Google+ account (If you don’t own one already). Go to your Google+ profile edit section and link the websites you’re an author for within the “Contributor to” section near the bottom of your profile page. You will be provided with a code to insert into your posts. For extra information on how to insert the given code, Please click here. [...]
How do you modify the Anchor text of the link in medias like Twitter? Can you simply paste the html after editing?
For a blog, I use a proprietary one. Which CMS do you recommand that allows that?
Thanks
can i have a rich snippet to capture my users email addresses(subscription input text and a small submit button) when site is listed in the organic search….. Let me know this would be really helpful for me
This isn’t possible with organic results, but is with paid ads on Google.
[...] Google has not fully disclosed how to get displayed as an author. Sure, they’ve published the “authorship” instructions. I have followed the instructions to the letter but my author profile has not yet been displayed in [...]
[...] you are a business blogger (and you really should be), setting up an author rich snippet establishes your author authority and, therefore, increases search “trustability” for [...]
Hi Mike, yours is the most straight-forward description I have seen to date on how and why to set up author rich snippets. I used the e-mail address method, and it was a piece of cake. Thank you for sharing!
[...] of the Author Rich Snippet in logged out organic [...]
Hi Mike,
Thanks for the great post and tips, unfortunately having tried everything my snippets are still not appearing in the serps. Example: “reisebericht wales” appears in Google (Germany) in 4th position, yet does not show my icon/snippet…any thoughts folks?
Oops—forgot the URL: http://www.deine-stimme.de/reisebericht-wales-teil-1-ein-etwas-hugeliges-land/ – this does not show up with a snippet :(
[...] Set Up Google Authorship. This will give Google what it needs to give you an Author Rank. [...]
I have set it up – that#s the trouble. I have all the relevant links, incomin and outgoing =rel thingy…when I test it all using the rich snippets testing tool it says all is ok, but when I search…nothing :(
[...] of all, you’ve got to have a Google+ profile and edit the “contributor to” section. You will need to fill it with the URL of your [...]