Authority Snapshot · Audited June 10, 2026
One name. Three claimants.
One living operator.
In June 2026, BlitzMetrics audited what the internet does with the name “Billy Batt.” The verdict: the receipts are real, the entity is missing, and the name is occupied — by a Gambino soldier who died in 1970 and a rugby Hall-of-Famer who died in 1959. This page is the scoreboard, kept public on purpose.
Yes, that name. No — not the Goodfellas guy. I’m the living one.
Sources: Google Knowledge Graph via BlitzMetrics KG Explorer (June 2026); Ahrefs Keywords Explorer, US (pulled June 10, 2026).
Exhibit A
Meet the men holding the name.
Google’s Knowledge Graph confidence score measures how certain Google is that a person is a distinct, known entity. Here’s who it believes in when someone types “Billy Batt.” Bars scaled to the leader.
He closes a broker’s year of deals every month. Google thinks he’s a dead mobster.
— Billy Batt Authority Audit, cover page (BlitzMetrics, June 2026)
Exhibit B
Name the gaps — then close them.
What a seller’s lawyer found when they checked Billy out, per the June 10, 2026 audit. Every row is plumbing, not talent — buildable in weeks.
No panel. No Wikidata. No home.
At audit time, billybatt.com/ was unregistered — along with .net, .org, and .ai. For a man whose name is occupied by a mobster, the exact-match .com sitting open was the single cheapest, highest-leverage fact in the report. Fixed: you’re reading the entity home right now.
A firm site rounding to zero.
primeacquisitionsgroup.com graded DR 0.0 — zero ranking keywords, zero organic visits — with no structured data and its own /team/billy-batt page deleted. Real content (an 11-deal tape, five case studies) invisible as structure.
A namesake with an SEC flag.
An unrelated “Prime Acquisitions Group, Inc.” (Chicago; prime-agi.com) has sat on the SEC’s PAUSE list since July 30, 2019 — flagged for falsely claiming U.S. registration when soliciting investors. Billy’s firm is not affiliated — but until this site, nothing online said so.
Zero searches for the living spelling.
“billy batt” had no recorded search volume — Ahrefs didn’t even store a SERP for it. That’s the asymmetry that makes this winnable: an empty lane with no incumbent. On zero-volume names, the first definitive page typically owns the result within weeks of indexing.
The Plan
Disambiguate first. Amplify second.
Billy can’t — and shouldn’t — out-corroborate a Scorsese film for “billy batts.” The win condition is narrower: make his exact spelling, his firm’s name, and the AI-engine question “Who is Billy Batt?” resolve to the living one. Six moves, in order.
Claim the home
Register billybatt.com/ and ship a facts-first entity home with Person schema and a disambiguatingDescription separating Billy from the movie character and the Chicago Inc. Done — this site.
Canonize one identity string
“Billy Batt — Co-Founder, Prime Acquisitions Group. AI-driven M&A for digital businesses.” Same name, headshot, and line on LinkedIn, Instagram, Amazon, and every bio — and resolve the two-LinkedIn split.
Build the corroboration loop
Amazon author page linked both ways, the firm’s team page restored with Person schema, Organization schema naming its founders, and a consistent sameAs graph across 12+ surfaces with zero contradictions.
Earn proof that survives checking
Podcast guest spots, named testimonials from closed deals, one data story for trade press — and retire every unverifiable “as featured in” claim. They now cost more than they add.
File Wikidata, watch the graph
Once 5+ independent citations exist, create the Wikidata item citing them; re-pull the Knowledge Graph monthly to watch Billy’s entity strengthen and separate from Bentvena’s; claim the panel when it’s panel-grade.
Feed it forever
Panels and AI answers follow living corroboration: weekly publishing, deal announcements with schema, and quarterly AI-probe regression tests against the Day-1 baseline answers.
Nobody forgets the M&A guy who opens with the shine-box joke — provided the joke ends on his deal tape.
— Billy Batt Authority Audit (BlitzMetrics, June 2026), on the disambiguation rule
Full audit: 15 pages, prepared by Dennis Yu / BlitzMetrics, June 2026 — Ahrefs pulls, KG Explorer scores, property-by-property findings, the 90-day roadmap, and the impact model. Deal figures throughout are self-reported by Prime Acquisitions Group and labeled as such.
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