Google Debunks Authorship Myths & Introduces “Mini-Site” Reputation Idea
Worried about hiring a freelancer with a bad SEO past?
Or maybe your website’s new section saw a ranking drop and you’re panicking?
Don’t.
At Search Central Live NYC, Google’s Danny Sullivan cleared up some big myths about authorship reputation and introduced an interesting concept: the “mini-site” metaphor.
Let’s break it all down in plain English.
❌ Myth: Negative Authorship Reputation Follows You Around
Some SEOs believe that if an author writes for a penalized site, Google will punish that author everywhere else they write.
But Danny Sullivan says that’s completely false.
“If you wrote for a site that got a manual action, it doesn’t somehow infect the other site that you might work for later on… It’s not a disease.”
In short:
- Freelancers don’t need to worry about being “blacklisted.”
- Publishers don’t need to avoid hiring writers based on past gigs.
- No need to delete bylines or distance yourself from old work.
Google doesn’t track or penalize authors across websites. Period.
🤔 So… Is There Even a Positive Author Signal?
If negative authorship signals don’t exist… could it mean positive ones don’t either?
Danny didn’t directly say that, but many experts believe that Google doesn’t use authorship signals at all in its ranking systems.
Why? Because it’s:
- Too easy to manipulate
- Hard to measure accurately
- Not essential when Google already evaluates site reputation
So while having expert authors is great for user trust, don’t rely on “author authority” to boost your rankings.
📉 Ranking Drop? It Might Be a “Mini-Site” Reputation Shift
Let’s say you added a new section to your site — like a forum, a news blog, or user-generated content.
Then, suddenly, your rankings dip. 😬
You might think, “Uh-oh, did I get hit by a penalty?”
But Danny says — not necessarily.
“It just could be we’ve had a general re-ranking… Or we might recognize that new section as its own thing — like a mini-site.”
What’s a “Mini-Site”?
This is just a metaphor, not a new Google feature.
Here’s the idea:
- If your new section is very different from the rest of your site…
- Google might treat it as its own entity
- That section might start competing in its own content category
For example, if you added a forum, Google might compare it to other forums — not just to your main site content.
🚦 Key Takeaways
Here’s what you should remember:
- Authorship Reputation Doesn’t Travel
Google doesn’t penalize authors across multiple sites. You’re judged by the current content, not your past associations.
- No Known Positive Author Signal
There’s no proof that Google rewards high-authority writers either — content quality and site trust matter more.
- Ranking Drops Aren’t Always Bad
Sometimes drops are just re-ranking shifts, especially after adding new content types.
- Mini-Site Reputation Is a Metaphor
Don’t overthink it. Google might treat different site sections separately, but it’s not creating actual “mini-sites” in the index.
🎯 Final Thoughts
SEO is complex, but some myths can really get in the way.
Thanks to Danny Sullivan’s latest comments, we can now:
- Stop worrying about “infected” authors
- Focus on content quality and trust
- Embrace how different content types may stand on their own
So if your site just launched a new section and rankings are shifting, take a breath — it might be Google just figuring things out.
And if you’re a freelancer with past gigs on troubled sites? You’re fine. Keep writing. 💪