EDITOR’S NOTE: Reviewing your SEO analytics is the only way to know whether your SEO strategy is working or not. SEO analytics answer questions such as: What content do users engage with the most? What is the competition doing? How do we increase sales? There are a few different analytics accounts you’ll want to have in order to gather the data to answer all of these questions such as Google Analytics, Google Search Console, and an SEO tool such as Ahrefs. Google Analytics will tell you what content on your site is performing well, and what is not. It will tell you everything you need to know about your audience and their behavior. Google Search Console helps you understand what is going on in Google’s SERP. Ahrefs will help you plan your future content. It will run much more in depth analyses so you can see what your competitors may be ranking for that you are not, find backlink opportunities, and any internal site errors. If you’d like someone to take over these analyses for you, reach out to us at The BBS Agency, we’d love to help you out!
That’s because you can’t make rational decisions without knowing which of your SEO efforts are (and aren’t) contributing to your SEO goals.
In this guide, you’ll learn how to solve this problem using SEO analytics.
SEO analytics is the process of collecting and analyzing raw data to better inform your search engine optimization efforts. It helps you to prioritize tasks, get approval for SEO campaigns, and make better decisions to improve SEO.
It does not matter whether you’re optimizing a personal blog while learning the ropes or consulting on an enterprise SaaS. All marketers will benefit from the information gained in SEO analysis because data eliminates much of the guesswork for developing goals and strategies.
Here are just a handful of questions SEO analytics can answer:
Every company will find value in different data points. So although I can’t tell you precisely what data points to focus on, I can outline an overall approach to SEO analytics that’s applicable to pretty much every company.
You can easily get lost in the rabbit hole of analysis and lose sight of the end goal. So the first step is to ask the question, “What do I want to know?”
From here, you can map out what tools you will need and what reports to pull.
Don’t be tempted to skip this step. Good planning is the key to smooth data analysis projects. If you jump ahead, you’ll only create more work for yourself and miss out on important insights.
Now that you know what you need data for, the next step is to set up the measurement tools that will collect the data.
Since we’re trying to rank on Google, we need to set up tools that provide insights into our Google search presence and keyword rankings. There are lots of tools, both free and paid, but there are three that we recommend setting up as a starting point.
Google Search Console (GSC) provides data to help understand what is happening in Google’s search results.
Think of GSC as your window into the search engine results page (SERP). You will get insights into how your content is doing, index coverage issues, and page experience.
Here’s how to set that up:
Google Analytics (GA) is your window into on-site user behavior. It tells you what organic users do once they land on your website, how engaged they are, what they click on, and how many leads (or sales) they generate.
Here’s a quick step-by-step process for setting up Google Analytics:
It’s important to note that Google Analytics products are not retroactive. Meaning, it can’t tell you what has happened, only what happens once the tracking tag is in place.
Depending on your time to conversion and product seasonality, you may need to wait before meaningful analysis can be done. So the sooner you get these tools in place, the better.
It’s undeniable that Google’s free tools are an incredible free resource for SEOs, but they were never meant to do everything. There are a few instances where you will need to invest in reliable software to help collect data—like Ahrefs.
Here’s how to set up a new project:
Now that you have set up your measurement tools, you will need to visualize the information in a way that is easy to understand and act on.
Most of the SEO tools mentioned above already have a bunch of pre-made reports.
For example, the Backlinks report in Site Explorer shows you who’s linking to your website, where they’re linking from, and the anchor text they use:
Photo: Ahrefs
The Link opportunities report in Site Audit tells you about missed internal link opportunities:
Photo: Ahrefs
And the Coverage report in Google Search Console tells you about issues affecting your site’s presence in Google search:
Photo: Ahrefs
Reports like these are super useful and insightful and offer a great starting point for SEO analytics. But there are many instances where you’ll need to create custom reports and dashboards so that you can see the data more clearly.
You can’t really do this in Search Console, but you can customize a lot in Google Analytics. You can also use the advanced filters in Site Audit to pinpoint pretty much any issue you like.
For example, this hyper-specific set of filters effectively creates a report that allows us to keep an eye on broken or redirected bio links on our blog:
Photo: Ahrefs
But still, if you’re working with data from multiple sources, what you ideally want is a dashboard that pulls in the data you need and presents it how you like. This is where Google Data Studio comes in handy, as it allows you to do precisely that.
There are dashboard templates available in the public gallery, or you can build your own from scratch.
Here’s how to set up a Google Data Studio Report:
The important thing to remember with SEO dashboards and reports is that you don’t need all the bells and whistles. You simply need insights that will inform strategy development.
Stick to the metrics that tell a story about what is working and identify areas for improvement.
The final step is to review and act on the data. Data is useless without action. Pristine client-facing reports are not the point—better performance is.
Let’s take a look at some of the questions we turned to data analysis for and use our tools to answer them.
Google tells us in its own SEO Starter guide that “any optimization should be geared toward making the user experience better.”
But how do you know which content your users are (and aren’t) engaging with?
This can be a difficult question to answer, but the “Average engagement time” metric in Google Analytics 4 can help. It shows the average engagement time per user.
Here’s how to see it for your organic visits:
You’re now seeing the most to least engaging pages on your website.
Photo: Ahrefs
You should still take this data with a pinch of salt because some pages will be longer than others. Having a low average engagement time on a 300-word blog post probably isn’t a sign that it’s unengaging; there just isn’t much to read.
Similarly, you shouldn’t read too much into data for pages with few users because it’s unwise to base your decisions on small sample sizes.
Our study of over a billion pages found a clear relationship between organic search traffic and backlinks. So if you’re looking to increase traffic, backlinks are definitely something to pay attention to.
To get more backlinks, you’ll need to answer the question: What content attracts backlinks?
The answer can be found in Google Search Console:
Look for patterns in the type of content-generating backlinks.
For us, it’s clearly studies:
Photo: Ahrefs
Just keep in mind that Search Console will only show you the number of backlinks and linking sites, not their quality. To delve deeper and analyze their quality, you’ll need a third-party backlink tool like Site Explorer. You can use it to view backlinks for your own website for free by signing up to Ahrefs Webmaster Tools.
Here are all the backlinks to our search traffic study sorted by the linking page’s estimated monthly organic traffic (which is a good proxy for backlink quality):
Photo: Ahrefs
You can use the Best by links report in Site Explorer to see which of your competitors’ content attracted the most backlinks. This can be super useful for finding popular “link worthy” content ideas that you may have missed.
Photo: Ahrefs
While I don’t advise basing your entire marketing strategy on what competitors are doing, it stands to reason that if two to three competitors are ranking for a particular keyword (that you’re not ranking for), then it’s important to your market.
You can find these keywords with Ahrefs’ Content Gap tool:
Photo: Ahrefs
If this uncovers too many keywords or you see a lot of irrelevant ones, switch the number of intersections to two or three.
Photo: Ahrefs
Recommended reading: How to Do an Effective Content Gap Analysis for SEO
In this article, we have defined what SEO analytics means, why it’s important to digital marketing, and how to get started.
Whether you’re optimizing a personal blog or multimillion eCom site, the insights you’ll gain from analytics should be at the core of your approach to defining and improving performance.
If you take away nothing else from this article, remember SEO analytics is simply a means to an end. It is a process to identify and then implement a value-driving answer.
Got questions? Ping me on Twitter.
Originally posted on Ahrefs.
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