KGMID SEO for Stronger Knowledge Panels (James Dooley Interviews Dennis Yu)

/ 21:40 / E327

Listen on your favourite platform

PlatformLink
YouTubeListen on YouTube →

What Does “KGMID SEO for Stronger Knowledge Panels (James Dooley Interviews Dennis Yu)” Talk About?

This episode of the James Dooley Podcast features a detailed conversation between James Dooley and SEO expert Dennis Yu on the topic of Google Knowledge Panels and KGMID, also known as the Knowledge Graph Machine ID. Dennis explains why entrepreneurs and public figures need to dominate branded search results, noting that a well-established entity in Google's Knowledge Graph leads to greater visibility in AI search, featured snippets, and the coveted "people also search for" section. The discussion walks through the foundational steps required to begin building a Knowledge Panel, including setting up a personal brand website, adding schema markup, and ensuring social profiles are properly connected to reduce what Dennis calls disambiguation, or confusion around who a person or entity actually is.

The conversation goes deeper into practical tactics including podcasting as a content engine, turning podcast episodes into chapters of a book, publishing on Amazon using a targeted niche category to achieve bestseller status, and running dollar-a-day amplification ads to generate real behavioural signals. Dennis also explains how tools like Graipedia and freeebooks.net can serve as third-party citation sources when Wikipedia notability has not yet been achieved. James shares his own experience publishing eight books in one year using influencer co-authors, and the two discuss how associating with notable people in your industry through podcasts and social media can strengthen both parties' Knowledge Panels. The episode wraps with Dennis offering to fly to Manchester to record a live, verifiable batch of podcast content to demonstrate the authenticity Google increasingly demands.

“If you have a relationship and there's proof of it, like you and I have done multiple podcast episodes, and that's distributed on blog posts, on YouTube, YouTube tubes embedded inside the blog posts, and we use schema to identify the objects within that page, then yes.”

— Dennis Yu

Who Are the Guests on “KGMID SEO for Stronger Knowledge Panels (James Dooley Interviews Dennis Yu)”?

Dennis Yu is a former search engineer and internationally recognised digital marketing expert with deep expertise in Google's Knowledge Graph, entity SEO, and personal branding strategy. He is known for his dollar-a-day advertising methodology and his work helping entrepreneurs and public figures build authority online. Dennis has worked with major brands and influencers and brings a technical yet accessible perspective to topics like schema markup, disambiguation, and Knowledge Panel optimisation. He is also a publisher and co-owner of freeebooks.net, a domain with significant organic traffic that he uses as part of his entity-building toolkit.

James Dooley is a UK-based entrepreneur and SEO authority who hosts the James Dooley Podcast. Known for his practical approach to digital marketing, James has built a reputation through content creation, event participation, and strategic book publishing. In this episode, he draws on his own experience of publishing eight books in a single year, each featuring influencer contributors from the SEO space, and shares his plans to go aggressively into podcasting as the next phase of his personal brand strategy. His sharp questions throughout the episode push Dennis to deliver actionable, specific guidance rather than high-level theory.

What Are the Key Takeaways From “KGMID SEO for Stronger Knowledge Panels (James Dooley Interviews Dennis Yu)”?

Here are the key points discussed in this episode:

  • Building a Google Knowledge Panel requires creating a clear, corroborated entity through a personal brand website, schema markup, and consistently linked social media profiles that reduce disambiguation.
  • Podcasting is one of the most efficient ways to generate long-form proof of expertise, because a single recording session can be repurposed into clips, blog posts, social media edits, and even book chapters.
  • Publishing a niche book on Amazon using a highly specific category, such as SEO for pest control companies, makes it far easier to achieve bestseller status and claim that credential as a third-party signal.
  • The dollar-a-day amplification strategy applied to Amazon book ads can generate real behavioural signals like traffic and reviews, which reinforce Google's confidence in your entity at minimal cost.
  • Associating with notable people in your industry through podcasts, co-authored books, and social media tagging benefits both parties, as Google connects those entities and may surface your name when someone searches for your peers.

“My favourite part of the knowledge panel is not when people look for my name and they see the panel. It's when you look at someone like Neil Patel or Mari Smith and it also says people also look at Dennis Yu and these other people. That's when you know.”

— Dennis Yu

Is “KGMID SEO for Stronger Knowledge Panels (James Dooley Interviews Dennis Yu)” Worth Listening To?

This episode is worth listening to because it bridges the gap between technical SEO concepts and practical personal branding strategy in a way that is rarely done this clearly. Dennis Yu draws on his background as a former search engineer to explain exactly how Google evaluates and confirms entities, while James Dooley keeps the conversation grounded with real examples from his own book publishing campaigns and podcasting plans. The result is a conversation that is both technically credible and immediately actionable for anyone building a public profile online.

What makes this episode particularly valuable is the specificity of the tactics discussed. Rather than vague advice about building authority, listeners get a step-by-step path from schema setup and social profile linking, through podcast production and book publishing on Amazon, to dollar-a-day ad amplification and third-party citation sources like Graipedia and freeebooks.net. The real-world examples, including Danny Librandt becoming the go-to SEO expert for pest control companies and Jabez Labret dominating digital marketing for lawyers by selling just seven copies, make the strategy feel achievable regardless of where someone is starting from.

Who Should Listen to “KGMID SEO for Stronger Knowledge Panels (James Dooley Interviews Dennis Yu)”?

This episode is ideal for:

  • Entrepreneurs and founders who want to build a recognisable personal brand and appear prominently in Google and AI search results
  • SEO professionals and digital marketers looking to understand entity-based optimisation, schema markup, and Knowledge Graph strategies
  • Content creators and podcasters who want to repurpose their existing work into books, social assets, and authority-building signals
  • Business owners in niche industries who want to dominate branded search in their specific market and establish themselves as the leading expert in their category

Where Can You Listen to James Dooley Podcast?

You can listen to James Dooley Podcast on all major podcast platforms:

  • Apple Podcasts – Search for “James Dooley Podcast” in the Podcasts app
  • Spotify – Available on Spotify for free
  • Amazon Music / Audible – Listen through your Amazon account
  • Overcast – For iOS users who prefer a dedicated podcast app
  • Pocket Casts – Cross-platform podcast player

You can also subscribe using the RSS feed: https://feeds.transistor.fm/james-dooley-podcast

What Are Listeners Saying About This Episode?

★★★★★

“I have heard Dennis Yu speak before but this interview pulled out things I had never heard him explain so clearly. The breakdown of disambiguation and how confusion between entities hurts your Knowledge Panel finally made something click for me that I had been struggling with for months. Immediately went and audited my schema after listening.”

— Rachel T.

★★★★★

“The part about choosing a super specific Amazon category to become a bestseller was genuinely eye-opening. The example of the guy who wrote the only book on SEO for pest control companies and became a celebrity at those conferences is exactly the kind of niche thinking I needed to hear. Really practical episode.”

— Marcus B.

★★★★★

“What I appreciated most was that James pushed Dennis on the specifics rather than letting him stay high level. The conversation about whether to create one page per podcast or a combined page, and why pure entity architecture can look robotic, was the kind of nuanced SEO discussion you rarely get in podcast format.”

— Sophie L.

James Dooley speaks with Dennis Yu about Google Knowledge Panels, KGM IDs, and how entrepreneurs can strengthen their entity in the Knowledge Graph. Dennis explains why dominating branded search matters because Google rewards clear, corroborated entities with visibility in AI search, featured snippets, and “people also search for”. The discussion covers disambiguation, schema, entity hubs, podcasts as long form proof, books as third party validation, Amazon bestseller strategy, and dollar a day amplification. This episode breaks down how to build authority, reduce confusion, and increase Google’s confidence in who you are.

James Dooley: Google knowledge panels. Getting yourself that KGM ID, also known as a knowledge graph machine ID, and the importance of it. Today I’m joined with no other but Dennis Yu, who is an absolute legend when it comes down to knowledge panels. Dennis, first and foremost, before we start about how to trigger it and a more in depth conversation, is it important initially to have a knowledge panel and why?

Dennis Yu: It is if people are going to Google your name, your company’s products, your company, and you want to dominate the search results with those coloured boxes. You want to win in AI search. You want the featured snippets to show up, then yes. If you are just somebody where you’re trying to be invisible, then it does not matter. But if you’re a public figure, if you’re an entrepreneur, then by definition, you’re a public figure. And that would be important.

James Dooley: Anyone now that says, “I want to be seen in AI. I want to grow my business. I want me to be the founder that’s attached to a successful business that I’m really proud of”, but they do not have a knowledge panel. What’s the first steps for these to start going, “Okay, I’m going to start now working towards getting myself a KGM ID”?

Dennis Yu: You can use Google’s tool. You do not need to use anyone else’s tool. Look yourself up. We built a tool too, just to show how many other James Dooleys there are to see what the competition is. Usually you’ll get a few other people. Maybe you’ll be unlucky and there’s an athlete or a porn star or someone like that. Even if there is, you can still get your knowledge panel. You have to decide what you’re really known for. What have you achieved? What are you notable for? Not Wikipedia notable. A different kind of notable. Are there citations and facts that are not from your websites, not from your social media, that show credibly that you are someone worth listening to about a particular topic or having achieved a certain result? That should tie with your why. That should tie with the reason why you started your business. If you’re an entrepreneur, that should tie with the expertise that you have. Most people do not have the footprint of all the social media. They do not have a personal brand site. They do not have schema on the company site and the personal brand site. Their company about is really their personal about. They have confusion which creates disambiguation. If you get that basic layer sorted out, schema with WordPress takes care of half of that, then get on other people’s podcasts. Interview other people that you think should be notable or are notable in the area you want to be known for. Take those podcast episodes and each becomes a chapter in a book. Use your favourite AI to turn it into a book, put it on Amazon, have the print and Kindle copies, put a dollar a day against it, make it a bestseller, take a screenshot showing your bestseller. Then it’s driving traffic. You repurpose those podcast episodes to YouTube. Now you have a virtuous circle. No matter where Google is looking, they look on social media, they look at Graipedia, they look at X, they look at Facebook, they look at people’s blogs, and all of those corroborate. Yes, this is James Dooley.

James Dooley: With regards to that, there’s quite a lot of stuff in there that needs to unfold. You’re talking about disambiguation. For anyone listening to this that is not familiar, can you explain what disambiguation means between different people with the same name?

Dennis Yu: You want to show that you are distinct. If there’s this John Smith and this John Smith, how do we know it’s the same John Smith? Maybe you have a business name, ABC Plumbing. How many other ABC Plumbings are there? That’s when you go down to the facts of the name, address, and phone. That’s when you go down to the other entities that are attached to that particular company or that particular person. Think about that entity. How clear is that entity? The entity could be a person, a place, whatever company. Say James Dooley is a person. What are the facts about that entity? What is your date of birth? Who are your relatives? What books have you written? What companies are you involved in? What are the facts that detective Google would find in researching you? A lot of people, because of the way they do hypertext, or because they create pages the wrong way, or because they do not have a personal brand website and they use their company about, all of those things create confusion. Disambiguation is just a fancy way of saying reduce the confusion so we have clarity on information tied to each particular entity and then how those entities are connected. If the structure is set up properly, including all the social medias for each of the names, and that information is connected together, it sends a very clear signal. Google can be very sure. Yes, this is James Dooley. Yes, this is Dennis.

James Dooley: That leads me on to the next question because you said about connecting the entities together. You mentioned earlier about getting a personal branded website. For me it’s like jamesdooley.com. Some people call it the entity hub, the brand hub, whatever it is. That’s the central source of who you are and what you do. You said about getting schema with the sameAs and linking to your social profiles. Pretty much everyone should have Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, the basics, and link through. You speak about the dollar a day amplification. You mentioned podcasts. If you’re on this podcast now, would you go and do a post about this podcast on your own entity hub and wrap that in schema? Or do you wrap it in schema on one podcast page for all the different podcasts? Or do you do a dedicated URL for each one and link to that?

Dennis Yu: You’ve been listening to Jason Barnard. That’s what he would say. One page for each of these that all link together. But when you look at that, it looks like someone is designing that for the robot. In an ideal world, yes. But practically speaking, it’s this. If you have a relationship and there’s proof of it, like you and I have done multiple podcast episodes, and that’s distributed on blog posts, on YouTube, YouTube tubes embedded inside the blog posts, and we use schema to identify the objects within that page, then yes. If it’s an important object then we’ll have a whole page for it. It ties to other related topics and objects. All the things you would do as SEO, you would do that. But literally it’s as simple as saying, of all the different things I want to be known for, of all the people I know, can I prioritise the top two or three topics, the top two or three people I want to be associated with? Is there long form content like a podcast episode? The podcast is the easiest, most effective way to gather a whole lot of content in one go. Then that can be repurposed a hundred different ways. Chopped up clips, social media edits, articles, chapters in a book, so many different ways. I like podcasting as a hack because I only need to sit down with someone once or twice and then I’ve got content for days. That enhances their ability to show up on Google. My stuff will show up in their knowledge panel and vice versa. My favourite part of the knowledge panel is not when people look for my name and they see the panel. It’s when you look at someone like Neil Patel or Mari Smith and it also says people also look at Dennis Yu and these other people. That’s when you know. When you’re connected to these other people, you speak together, you tag them on Facebook, but not in an annoying way. You reference them by saying here’s one thing Gary Vaynerchuk told me and you show a picture of you and Gary Vaynerchuk. That shows the audience you’re credible. I am not even doing it for Google. I’m doing it because it shows the audience that you’re credible.

James Dooley: So that notability and credibility then, with people also search for, is there any other ways of getting in there or does it come down to how much noise you have together and the connections together? Is it related to follow on searches where people have searched Neil Patel and then searched Dennis Yu?

Dennis Yu: It’s when people who consume Neil Patel’s content also consume my content. That’s a Venn diagram and there’s that overlap in the middle. That’s what Google is looking at. Just like with YouTube. If you like a topic, it starts showing you stuff that is related, but also by other people on that topic. Consider what topics you want to be known for so you can be recommended in ChatGPT or YouTube or whatever. Also consider who are the people. The intersection of people and topics is where the sweet spot is. Do a podcast with a couple of those people and you’ve hit the bullseye.

James Dooley: Does Google Images ranking in Google Images have any impact in improving your knowledge panel or not?

Dennis Yu: It does. Remember, when you have a podcast or a video with somebody, you can pull images out of that. Once you have a knowledge panel, you can go in and edit it and choose which pictures you want, correct information, and whatnot. More common folks like you and me will have duplicate knowledge panels and then we’ll try to merge them together, that whole messy thing of trying to consolidate, disambiguate down into one.

James Dooley: What about Google Scholar? Do you do anything with Google Scholar?

Dennis Yu: That’s great for books. There are many other places you can publish. If you’ve done anything in terms of academic publications, which is not the same thing as self publishing on Amazon, that does carry more weight. It’s kind of like an edu link versus a dot com link.

James Dooley: With regards to the books, do you always publish it on Google Books as well? It seems to pull that in as one of the bio descriptions in knowledge panels. Do you publish it there or only Amazon?

Dennis Yu: In an ideal world, you publish to all of these. We would think Google would be biased towards their own sources. They’d be biased to YouTube and Google Maps and things like that.

James Dooley: With regards to the book bestseller, how are you looking to get the bestseller? Is that using the amplification of a dollar a day strategy?

Dennis Yu: Yeah, in our other episode we talked about dollar a day. If you have interviewed someone on your podcast who is well known and has the depth of expertise you want to be associated with, and then that gets turned into a book, which is very easy to do using your favourite AI tool, and you publish that to Amazon. Say you interview 10 people and then you send out that book to all of those 10 people and now they’re co authors and they’re sharing that. They’re excited to be in James Dooley’s book, in chapter three. All of them are sharing that book which ties to that entity. That’s an object tied to you. You’re another object as a person. You’re creating third party signals, improving your personal brand. Then when you run dollar a day ads on Amazon, maybe $5 a day, but you only spend like $150, you can choose up to three categories. When you become a bestseller in one category, it’s very easy. You take a screenshot of that. Google can see that. Amazon can see that. There’s actual traffic, people like your book, you get some reviews. You’re showing real behavioural signals, which is ultimately what we want to show.

James Dooley: Is there any specific choice of category you go for? I’m presuming if you just went marketing in general, it would be hard.

Dennis Yu: This is the whole niche. What niche do you want your business to be in? I have a friend, Jabez Labret, and he wrote arguably the book on digital marketing for lawyers. He went to conferences and he would advertise that he was number one bestseller in digital marketing for lawyers. He told me, do not tell anyone, I only sold seven copies of my book. How many other people have produced a book on digital marketing for lawyers? My buddy Danny Librandt chose the super niche of SEO for pest control companies. How many other people do you know that are experts for SEO for pest control companies? He interviewed all the top people in pest control. Some of these guys have $50 million a year companies. He went to the conferences. He interviewed the Neil Patels of the world. Anyone connected with pest control now knows who he is. He’s a celebrity when he walks around at the conference because he chose that. He did the podcast thing, turned it into a book, gave out copies, set up a table. People love to take pictures and autograph copies with him as the author. All of those things multiply together. Then run ads, free plus shipping, use it to sell your course or coaching programme or give away your book.

James Dooley: Let’s say someone’s done all that. They’ve got books, lots of videos, promoting on social media, doing the dollar a day strategy. There’s three powerful Dennis Yus. There’s a porn star, there’s a sports player, and there’s yourself. When you type it in, your name is not coming up. Apart from amplification on socials, is there any third party sources someone should be looking to get? Not Wikipedia because they might not have notability yet. I’ve seen you talk about Graipedia. Is there any other sources people can get that will improve clarity and confidence?

Dennis Yu: You could publish that book, cross publish, on free ebooks dot net, which has been around forever. I’m an owner in it. It’s got a domain rating 75. We have half a million visits a day coming organically from Google. You’re coming from the UK, you type in free ebooks, I’m number one. But here’s the other thing. If there are other people with your name, context is important. Maybe that porn star is in India. I’m not trying to rank in India. I’m trying to show up for the audience I want to reach. Google is smart enough to know when someone is looking for Dennis Yu and they’re in home services or local. Google knows to show me. There is a Dennis Yu Hong Kong film director because Yu is a two letter last name. Super common. Like Smith. If you’re in Hong Kong and you type Dennis Yu, you’ll probably get that guy. I do not think it matters to win everywhere all the time. When do you need to show up? When there’s business value to you.

James Dooley: I think I’ve seen you’ve done a video on the free ebooks, have you? If there is, send it me through. I’ll put the link in the description. I think you’ve got a whole strategy around how you should be sending that out.

Dennis Yu: I’ll do this for you, James. You’ve got 280 episodes or something. You have so much content. If you want to package that up into a book and follow our book guidelines, which are straightforward, I’m the publisher. I will publish it. I will feature your book. I will link to you from many places and you could not even buy links of that quality. I’ll do that for you because I want you to see.

James Dooley: Last year I published eight books. They’re on Amazon, Google Books and stuff. Eight different books. I did a similar strategy where I got influencers in the SEO space, got them to write a chapter each, syndicated it out, bought copies and gave it out at events. The exposure was incredible. I did not do the free ebooks and it was painful writing because I had to check it all. A lot of people were coming back with AI content and I was having to change it. It became hard work. This year I’m going very aggressive on the podcasting circuit. I’ve launched eight podcast series. Last year it was books. This year is going to be podcasting. I do not know if you could do any of the existing books. We can talk off air. Some of the existing books I have, could that get syndicated out to the free ebooks?

Dennis Yu: I’m a big fan of starting with real podcast content like you and I having a real conversation. I just assume it’s AI content if it’s a submission. I need to see you and me or whoever are actually talking face to face. I’m trying to prove to the AI beyond a shadow of a doubt that this is not AI generated. That’s why I want to see you. I’ll fly out to Manchester later this year. We’ll record a whole bunch of these all at once to show this is real. We’ll even live stream it to prove this was real.

James Dooley: Let’s do it. I’m more than up for it. We can do a whole playlist about what we did, why we did it, and so on. I think it will be incredible. Anyone watching this with regards to knowledge panels, is there anything else we’ve missed there about specifically knowledge panels, improving KGM IDs, that people can take away?

Dennis Yu: Consider this. If you are podcasting with other people who will all say yes, believe it or not, even if they’re a big deal, and they have a knowledge panel, they’re notable, they have authority and credibility, then you by interviewing them actually enhance their knowledge panel. By associating with them, when people look up their name, it might also show you. In the same way your personal brand is what other people have to say about you, the best way for you to build your knowledge panel is to honour all these other people in your industry and they even could be a competitor.

James Dooley: Incredible advice there, Dennis. Dennis, it’s been an absolute pleasure. If anyone wants to know any more about knowledge panels, comment down below. Dennis has agreed that he will do other videos to discuss whatever you’re struggling with. Whether you want to know specifics of triggering a KGM ID and triggering that knowledge panel, or you’ve got one and you want it strengthening, Dennis can go in depth. He is previously a search engineer. He knows all the ins and outs related to knowledge panels. Make sure you like and make sure you drop a comment in. Dennis, it’s been an absolute pleasure. Thank you.

Dennis Yu: Thank you, James.

Creators & Guests

James Dooley Host
James Dooley

James Dooley is a UK entrepreneur.

No episode selected
0:00
0:00