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EEAT Author Bio Generator

Generate credibility-rich author bios that signal expertise, experience, and trust — ready for your about page, bylines, and social profiles.

🔍 Why Google cares about authors

Google's Quality Rater Guidelines explicitly look for who is responsible for content. Pages with clear author information, visible credentials, and verifiable expertise score higher on EEAT. Anonymous content or thin bios are a red flag — especially for health, finance, or legal topics (YMYL).

📝 Short bio (50 words)

Used for: article bylines, guest post bios, podcast intros. Should answer: who is this person and why should I trust them on this topic? Lead with the most impressive credential or specific achievement. No fluff — every word must earn its place.

📄 Medium bio (100 words)

Used for: about pages, LinkedIn summary, email signatures, contributor pages. Adds context to the short bio — how they got here, what they focus on, and a human element to make it relatable. This is the most versatile length for most uses.

📖 Long bio (200+ words)

Used for: full about pages, speaker profiles, media kits, authority pages. Tells the full story — background, journey, specific achievements, current focus, and a CTA. This is what quality raters read when assessing who runs a site. The most important EEAT page on your site.

EEAT signals in bios

Strong bios include: specific years of experience, named credentials, concrete achievements with numbers, publications or media mentions, the specific niche (not just "marketing expert"), and a link to verify identity (LinkedIn, own site). Vague bios like "passionate writer" add zero EEAT value.

🔗 Connecting author to content

For maximum EEAT, add a schema.org/Person structured data block linking author name to your about page and social profiles. Use the same author name consistently across all content. Link your byline to your author page — Google uses this to build an entity understanding of who you are.

💡 Pro tip: Don't just paste your bio into the author box — add it as a dedicated /about page, link it from every article, and add Person schema markup. Google needs to connect your name as an entity to your content. A bio that exists only in a hidden author meta field contributes far less EEAT value than one on a properly structured, linked author page.

Generated author bios