Course → Module 1: Entity Relationships
Session 3 of 9

Co-citation is when two entities are mentioned on the same page by a third party. Neither of you links to each other, but a third source connects you. This is one of the strongest entity relationship signals because it is editorial, not self-declared. When industry publications, roundup posts, and conference speaker lists mention you alongside known authorities in your niche, the system takes note.

Co-citation is the digital equivalent of being seen at the right events. You did not invite yourself. Someone else put you on the list.

Co-Citation vs. Co-Occurrence

These two concepts overlap but are not the same. Understanding the difference matters for strategy.

Dimension Co-occurrence Co-citation
Definition Two entities or concepts appear on the same page Two entities are both cited by a third-party source
Who creates it Anyone, including yourself Only third parties (editorial or independent sources)
Trust level Lower (can be self-created) Higher (requires independent editorial judgment)
Control High (your own content, profiles, bios) Low (depends on earning mentions from others)
Link required? No No (mention is sufficient)
Example Your blog post mentions a competitor and yourself A trade publication lists both you and a competitor as experts

Co-occurrence is the broader category. Co-citation is a specific, high-value subset where the source is independent and the mention is editorial. Both build associations, but co-citation carries significantly more weight because the system assigns higher confidence to signals from independent sources.

Where Co-Citations Happen

Co-citations occur in predictable contexts. Knowing where they happen helps you target your efforts.

graph TD A["Co-Citation Sources"] --> B["Expert roundup posts"] A --> C["Conference speaker pages"] A --> D["Industry award lists"] A --> E["Resource pages / curated lists"] A --> F["Journalistic articles with expert quotes"] A --> G["Research papers citing multiple sources"] A --> H["Podcast guest directories"] B --> I["High value: editorial selection"] C --> I D --> I F --> I E --> J["Medium value: curated, may be self-submitted"] G --> J H --> J

The highest-value co-citations come from sources where an editor or journalist made an active choice to include you. Expert roundups ("10 Entity SEO Experts to Follow"), conference speaker pages, and journalistic articles with expert quotes are the gold standard. These are not self-submitted. Someone decided you belong alongside other recognized entities.

Why Co-Citation Matters for the Knowledge Graph

The Knowledge Graph's "People also search for" section is, in many cases, a direct reflection of co-citation patterns. When you search for an entity and Google shows related entities, those connections were built from co-citation data: the entities were frequently mentioned together across multiple authoritative sources.

Co-citation is how the knowledge graph builds neighborhoods. If you want to be in a specific entity neighborhood, you need to be co-cited with the entities already in it.

This is also how AI systems build entity associations. When ChatGPT or Perplexity names experts in a field, they are drawing from training data where those experts were co-cited in authoritative contexts. If you are not co-cited with established entities in your niche, AI systems have no basis for including you.

The Co-Citation Audit

Before building new co-citations, audit what exists. You may already have co-citations you are not aware of.

Search methods for finding existing co-citations:

Earning Co-Citations

You cannot directly create co-citations. By definition, they come from third parties. But you can increase the probability of earning them through deliberate actions:

The common thread: put yourself in contexts where editorial selection places you alongside established entities. You are not asking for links. You are earning mentions in the right neighborhoods.

Further Reading

Assignment

  1. Search for "best [your niche] experts" or "[your industry] thought leaders" roundup posts. Check if you appear in any.
  2. Identify 5 publications or platforms where you could realistically earn a co-citation mention alongside established entities in your field.
  3. For each publication, note: what type of content they publish (roundups, interviews, contributor articles), who they have previously featured, and how to submit or pitch.
  4. Draft a one-paragraph pitch for the most promising opportunity. Focus on why your expertise adds value alongside the entities they already feature.