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Google launches Search profiles for publishers and creators

Google is rolling out Search profiles, giving publishers and creators an official, customizable space on Search where their latest articles, videos, and social posts live in one place.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 5, 2026, 9:00 AM EDT
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Illustration of two smartphone screens demonstrating a social profile and search discovery experience. One screen shows a travel-themed profile with a beach scene, social media links, and a “Follow on Google” button, while a hand interacts with the display. The second screen presents a creator-style profile feed with posts, profile information, and a “Follow” button. A floating label reading “View Search Profile” connects the two interfaces, highlighting profile visibility, content discovery, and audience engagement through Google Search.
Image: Google
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Google is turning Search into something that looks a lot more like a first-party profile platform, not just a list of blue links. With new “Search profiles” for publishers and creators, your name or brand can now live on Google as a dedicated, customizable page that pulls together your content, social presence, and follower relationship in one place.

This is not just a cosmetic tweak. It is a strategic move that ties into everything Google has been doing around “helpful content,” perspectives, and AI over the last few years – and it has real implications for how publishers, creators, and media brands think about their presence on the world’s biggest discovery engine.

If you search your favorite creator or news brand on your phone in the coming months, you might notice something new sitting alongside the usual links and knowledge panels. Google’s new Search profiles are essentially official profile pages that live directly on Google Search, giving publishers and creators a central, shareable space to showcase their latest articles, videos, and social posts. These profiles sit on top of the usual web results layer, acting as a sort of Google-native “home base” that tries to answer a simple question: “Who is this source, and what are they publishing right now?”

Google describes Search profiles as a way for publishers and creators to “shape their presence on Search,” putting more control in the hands of the people and organizations who actually produce content. Instead of letting the algorithm stitch together a patchwork of links, social snippets, and scraped bios, Search profiles consolidate this into a single, branded page that can be customized with an avatar, bio, website link, and connected social and video platforms.

For audiences, the pitch is pretty straightforward: this is meant to be the authoritative, up-to-date doorway into a creator or publisher’s universe. From the profile, people can follow a source directly, making it more likely that they will see that publisher or creator’s content in Google Discover, the personalized feed on the home screen of the Google app. That turns Search from a one-off touchpoint into an ongoing relationship – closer to subscribing on YouTube than just clicking a random result and bouncing away.

Today, Search profiles are mobile-first. Google says users will be able to access them via a creator or publisher’s knowledge panel (that familiar information box you see when you search for notable people, brands, or organizations), by tapping the name of a source in Discover, or through a direct URL. In practice, that means if you have a knowledge panel already, this profile becomes the “more human” layer on top of it – with a face, a short introduction, and a live feed of what you are publishing right now.

There are, of course, some gates around who gets in first. At launch, Google is targeting “publishers and creators with a sizable following on at least one major social or video platform,” which is their way of saying this is not rolling out to every blog or small site on day one. The eligibility criteria, published on Google’s support pages, tie access to follower thresholds on platforms like YouTube, Instagram, X, and TikTok, with higher requirements for TikTok-only creators.

Once you are eligible, you can claim and customize your Search profile, adding your avatar, bio, website, and links to social and video platforms, and curating the presence that appears directly on Google. Google notes that claiming a profile can even trigger the creation of a knowledge panel if you did not already have one, effectively elevating creators into the same “entity graph” that brands, celebrities, and major organizations already inhabit.

Geographically, this is starting where most of Google’s experiments start: in the United States. Google says it plans to expand to more regions and to more types of publishers and creators over time, and hints that it will “add more capabilities” to profiles as the product matures. Reading between the lines, this feels less like a one-off feature and more like a new surface that Google will keep layering features onto as it reshapes how Search works in an AI-first era.

If this is giving you déjà vu, there is a reason. Google has been inching toward this kind of source-centric view of Search for a while. The company’s “helpful content” update was explicitly framed as an effort to reward people-first content, emphasizing first-hand experience, depth, and clear audience value. Around the same time, we got the Perspectives filter, which pulls in content from social platforms, forums, and Q&A sites to surface “noteworthy voices and sources” directly in the results.

Search profiles feel like the logical next step on that path: if you are going to surface diverse voices and emphasize original sources, you also need a clear, trustworthy way to represent those sources inside Google’s own interface. For years, creators and publishers have fought to shape rich results, author boxes, and schema markup to get a bit more control over how they appear in Search. Profiles formalize that into an official, structured product instead of a hacky mix of meta tags and third-party knowledge graphs.

At the same time, this is happening as Search itself is being refashioned around AI-generated overviews and conversational answers. In a world where AI can answer more queries directly on the page, Google needs a credible way to show where information is coming from, and to keep high-quality sources visible and accessible. Search profiles give Google a neat way to say: “This is the real you, and here is your work, in your own words,” even when the primary experience is an AI summary on top.

For publishers, the obvious upside is branding and control. Instead of being one line in a results page, your brand can be a fully fleshed-out profile, with your avatar, bio, and cross-platform links all in one place. In theory, this should help readers distinguish between official sources and impersonators, particularly in a landscape where cloned websites, AI-written knockoff pages, and misleading social handles are not going away.

There is also a distribution angle. Because people can follow sources from their profiles, your Search presence is no longer just about ranking on a given keyword; it is also about building a repeat audience inside Google’s ecosystem. For large publishers and established creators, that is another owned-ish channel, alongside newsletters, apps, and platforms like YouTube and Instagram – but this time, plugged directly into the discovery flow that still drives most web traffic.

However, there are inevitable questions around dependency and platform risk. Giving Google yet another “official” channel for your brand makes the company even more central to how your audience finds and interacts with you. If Search profiles become the default way users evaluate sources, publishers might feel pressure to optimize not just pages and schema, but their actual identity layer inside Google – and we have seen how quickly that dependency can shift when algorithms change or new features roll out.

Creators sit in a slightly different place. For them, Search profiles look almost like a cross between a Linktree-style page and a Google-native bio. If you are big on YouTube or Instagram, this is a way to unify your footprint so that someone who types your name into Google gets a single, cohesive representation of who you are, where you publish, and what to follow next.

It is also notable that the first version of this product explicitly ties eligibility to follower counts on the big social and video platforms. That effectively treats those platforms as proof-of-identity and quality – which might feel validating if you are a large creator, but a bit exclusionary if you are a niche publisher with strong authority in a specific vertical but a modest social presence. In that sense, Search profiles initially skew toward the creator economy and major media brands, not the long tail of independent sites that still form a big chunk of the open web.

Then there is the relationship with Google Discover. Because follows from Search profiles can feed into Discover, creators and publishers may begin to see this as an acquisition funnel into that feed, which is increasingly important for mobile readership. Discover has long been a bit of a black box in terms of what gets surfaced and why; profiles add a more explicit “subscription-like” signal that could, over time, give some publishers more predictable visibility there.

From a user perspective, the promise is clarity in an increasingly noisy information environment. When you tap on a Search profile, you are not wading through SEO-choked pages or random reposts; you are seeing content that is explicitly tied to an entity Google recognizes and has verified to some degree. The idea is that you get a better sense of who is behind the information you consume, and you can quickly decide whether to trust and follow that source.

But this raises a deeper question about how authority is defined on the modern web. If eligibility is partly based on follower counts on platforms like Instagram and TikTok, the lines between “popular” and “authoritative” can blur. Google has been under pressure to surface more diverse perspectives while also combatting misinformation, and Search profiles will almost certainly become part of that balancing act – giving prominent, verified presences to certain voices, while others remain scattered across traditional results.

All of this lands at a time when search itself is no longer just about ten blue links and organic SEO. Between AI-generated answers, new filters that highlight user-generated perspectives, and now official Search profiles, Google is steadily evolving toward a more app-like ecosystem where identity, reputation, and follow relationships are part of the search experience. For publishers and creators, that means your “Google strategy” is not just technical SEO anymore; it is product thinking about how you present yourself as an entity across the web, and how that identity plugs into Google’s changing interfaces.

In the near term, if you are a publisher or creator with a qualifying audience, it is probably worth claiming your Search profile early, if only to make sure you control the way you appear in this new space. Over the longer term, it will be worth watching how aggressively Google integrates profiles into AI answers, Discover, and maybe even followable topic streams – because that is where this feature moves from “nice to have” to “core infrastructure” for being visible in Search.

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