Google’s E-E-A-T framework — Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness — is the lens through which Google evaluates whether content deserves to rank. For Canadian businesses, especially those in competitive or high-stakes industries, understanding and building E-E-A-T is not optional — it’s the difference between ranking and not ranking.
What E-E-A-T Actually Means
E-E-A-T is not a direct ranking factor (there’s no “E-E-A-T score” in Google’s algorithm). It’s a quality framework used by Google’s human quality raters to evaluate pages, and it informs how Google’s algorithm is tuned to identify and reward high-quality content.
Experience
Does the person or organisation creating the content have direct, first-hand experience with the topic? A review written by someone who has actually used a product. A healthcare article written by a practising physician. A legal guide written by a called barrister. Experience is the newest addition to the framework (added in 2022) and signals that content comes from real-world practice, not just research.
Expertise
Does the content creator have formal or demonstrated knowledge in the subject? Expertise can be formal (a CPA writing about tax) or informal (a passionate hobbyist with demonstrable depth in a niche). For regulated industries in Canada — law, medicine, finance, engineering — formal credentials matter significantly.
Authoritativeness
Is the creator or website recognised as a go-to source by others in the field? Authority is largely built externally: citations from other authoritative sources, mentions in credible Canadian media, references from industry associations, and backlinks from trusted domains.
Trustworthiness
Is the website honest, transparent, and safe? This includes: accurate information, clear authorship, HTTPS security, transparent business information (address, contact, registration), honest review management, and clear disclosure of commercial relationships.
Google’s documentation indicates that Trustworthiness is the most foundational of the four. Without trust, the other three signals are undermined.

Why E-E-A-T Matters More for Some Canadian Businesses
Google applies E-E-A-T scrutiny unevenly. It’s especially important for YMYL — “Your Money or Your Life” — content: topics where bad information could harm someone’s finances, health, safety, or legal rights.
High E-E-A-T scrutiny in Canada:
Moderate scrutiny:
Even for moderate-scrutiny categories, E-E-A-T signals increasingly separate ranking content from non-ranking content as Google’s algorithms improve.
How to Build E-E-A-T for Your Canadian Business Website
Author Bios and Credentials
Every piece of substantive content should have a named author with a bio that establishes their credentials. For regulated industries, this means:
For less regulated industries (marketing, consulting, tech), the bio should establish relevant experience: years in the field, specific achievements, notable projects.
A nameless blog post signals low E-E-A-T. A post attributed to “Sanjay Mehta, CPA, CPA Ontario member, 12 years specialising in corporate tax for Ontario SMEs” signals high E-E-A-T.
About Page and Business Transparency
Your About page and footer should clearly communicate:
For GTA businesses, local signals — a Toronto address, Ontario business registration number, local phone number — contribute to trust signals in local search contexts.
Editorial Standards and Content Review Process
Publishing a content policy or “how we create content” statement — especially for healthcare or financial sites — signals editorial rigour. For sensitive topics, have a subject matter expert review and approve content before publication.
Build Authoritative Backlinks
External authority signals are largely determined by who links to you. For Canadian businesses:
Each of these creates an external signal that your business is recognised as authoritative by others.
Review Management
Google considers review volume, recency, and sentiment as trust signals. For Canadian businesses:
Fact-Check and Keep Content Current
Outdated, inaccurate content is a trust signal in the wrong direction. For Canadian businesses publishing about law, tax, regulations, or industry standards:

E-E-A-T for B2B vs. B2C in the GTA
For B2B service businesses in Toronto and the GTA — marketing agencies, management consultants, technology companies, professional services — E-E-A-T looks slightly different than for consumer-facing YMYL businesses:
What matters most for B2B E-E-A-T:
What doesn’t work:
Measuring E-E-A-T Progress
There’s no direct E-E-A-T metric to track, but proxy indicators include:
Practical Starting Point for GTA Businesses
Most Toronto and GTA businesses can meaningfully improve their E-E-A-T signals with these five actions:
These changes don’t require a website rebuild. They’re targeted improvements that signal trust and expertise to Google and to the potential clients evaluating your business.
At SEOFIE, we audit E-E-A-T signals as part of every comprehensive SEO engagement with Toronto and GTA businesses.
Book a free SEO consultation to see where your site stands on E-E-A-T and what to prioritise first.

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