Authors
Experts who write for SEOmator
We invite independent practitioners — people doing the work at other companies — to write about the corner of search they know best. Each contributor writes in their own field, under their own name, with their real background and affiliation on the record.
Our authors
How we work with our authors
Real expertise, in their own field
We invite practitioners to write only about areas they actually work in. A byline here reflects hands-on experience — not a name rented over ghostwritten copy.
Honest affiliations
Every contributor's current employer is named on their profile and in the page's structured data. We never present an external expert as SEOmator staff.
Independent, unpaid contributions
Contributed articles are editorial, not advertising. We don't sell bylines, and a contribution is never conditioned on a link, a mention, or payment in either direction.
Reviewed before publishing
A SEOmator editor reviews every contributed piece for accuracy and clarity, and we disclose any relevant conflict of interest at the top of the article.
Editorial standards & independence
Who writes for the SEOmator blog?
Invited practitioners — SEO, GEO, and technical-search specialists who work at other companies. Each writes about their own area of expertise, and their full background, current role, and external profiles are on their author page.
Do these authors work for SEOmator?
Our contributing authors are external experts, not staff. Their profile and the page's structured data name their real employer — we never imply they're on the SEOmator team.
Are authors paid, or do they pay to be featured?
Neither. Contributions are editorial. We don't accept paid placements or sell author bylines, and publishing is never conditioned on a backlink or a mention.
How do you verify an author's expertise?
We check that their stated role and credentials are corroborated by their public profiles — LinkedIn, a personal site, prior published work. Those links are published on the profile so readers and search engines can confirm the same person wrote the article.
How are conflicts of interest handled?
If a contributor writes about a product, employer, or client they're connected to, we disclose that relationship at the top of the article. Most guidance is method- and data-driven regardless of affiliation.
