Google either says you exist — or it says nothing at all.
When someone searches your name, that box on the right — your photo, your title, your links — is a Knowledge Panel. It's Google formally recognizing you as a real, notable entity. We engineer the press, profiles, and structured data that trigger it, then claim it so you control the photo and the facts.
You can't buy a panel. You can build what triggers one.
Entity audit
We map how Google currently understands you — every profile, mention, conflicting fact, and identity collision with same-name strangers.
Source building
Editorial press (the same guaranteed placements from our flagship service), corroborating databases, and consistent verified profiles.
Structured data
Person/Organization schema on your site, sameAs links tying every profile into one entity, disambiguation from name-twins.
Claim & control
Once the panel surfaces, we walk you through Google's entity verification so you can set the photo and correct the facts — permanently.
"How do I get my photo and info on top of Google?"
That box is a Google Knowledge Panel. Google generates it automatically when its Knowledge Graph recognizes you as a notable entity — which requires consistent, structured information about you across authoritative sources: editorial press coverage, verified profiles, schema markup on your website, and corroborating databases. You can't buy a panel from Google; you build the evidence that triggers one, then claim it to control the photo and details. That build is exactly what this service does.
Typically 2–6 months depending on your starting point. Clients with existing press and consistent profiles can trigger a panel in weeks; starting from zero means building coverage and entity signals first. Once the panel appears, claiming it takes days.
Once you claim your panel through Google's entity verification, you can suggest a featured image and corrections to key facts. Google checks suggestions against its sources — which is why the underlying press and profiles must be consistent. The panel reflects the record; we fix the record.
No. Wikipedia helps but isn't required — the Knowledge Graph draws from editorial press, structured data, verified social profiles, IMDb, Crunchbase, MusicBrainz and industry databases. Plenty of panels exist for people without Wikipedia pages, built on strong press and consistent entity signals.