Google’s E-E-A-T framework — Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness — is no longer an abstract idea that only content mills need to worry about. For small businesses, especially in competitive local verticals, E-E-A-T is now the single biggest lever you have for ranking against larger competitors who’ve been at this longer.
The good news: small businesses have a structural advantage on every one of the four pillars. You just have to show it.
Experience: show the work
Experience is the newest addition to the framework, and it’s the one small businesses are positioned to win. A tradesperson who has done 400 roof replacements has more first-hand experience than any content-farm article ever will. The question is: is that experience visible on your website?
- Project case studies with real photos, real timelines, real outcomes
- Before-and-after galleries tagged by location and scope
- Author bios that name the person writing or reviewing the content
- “Why we do it this way” explanations that only a practitioner would write
If a competitor could swap in their logo and the page would still read the same, you haven’t shown experience — you’ve shown marketing copy.
Expertise: the credentials you already have
Every professional has credentials. Licenses, certifications, continuing education, years in the field. The mistake most small businesses make is burying this on a bio page. Instead, weave it into the content itself: the dentist who wrote this procedure page, the attorney who reviewed this guide, the master electrician who explains this service.
Authoritativeness: build citations on purpose
Authority comes from third parties talking about you — not from you talking about yourself. For small businesses, this usually means:
- Industry association memberships and listings
- Local press mentions (business journals, community papers)
- Podcast interviews and guest articles in your field
- Google Business Profile reviews with real details
Trustworthiness: remove friction and risk
Trust is the final sanity check Google performs before deciding where to rank you. The signals are boring but mandatory:
- Full contact information (address, phone, email) on every page
- Clear privacy policy and terms — not boilerplate
- HTTPS everywhere, no mixed content warnings
- Legitimate author attribution on all content
- Transparent pricing where possible
The playbook
Audit every service page against all four pillars. If you can’t point to specific experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trust signals on a given page, the page is competing for rankings with one hand tied behind its back. Fix that, and you’ll be ahead of most of your local competitors before you’ve done any keyword research at all.