Guide to SEO Reports: Which Metrics Matter & How to Use Them

There is an overwhelming amount of data available to SEO professionals.

Some of it is useful, but a lot is not.

It can be tempting to report on data that doesn’t provide insight. We may have seen data used in someone else’s SEO report, or it’s a metric we’ve heard about a lot.

The reality is, unless you are careful, reports can become meaningless data-dumps.

Metrics used should be key performance indicators. If they don’t help identify if performance is improving or not, they shouldn’t be included.

What Is the Report For?

When creating reports we must identify what the report should show.

  • Is it a report of overall organic performance?
  • Are we reporting on the technical health of the website or the outcome of outreach work?

This should form the starting point from which we choose the report metrics.

Aspects of a Good SEO Report

A good SEO report will help communicate insight and the next steps.

It should have sufficient detail to help the reader make decisions.

Include Relevant Data

Reports should include data that is relevant to the topic being reviewed.

They should not overwhelm a reader with unnecessary information.

Keep Them Brief

Reports should be brief enough that pertinent data and insight is easy to find.

Brevity might be the difference between a report being read and being ignored.

Keep the data being reported on succinct.

Sometimes a chart will better illustrate the data than a table of it.

Remember the Audience

Reports should be tailored to the needs of the recipient.

It may be the report is being produced for another SEO professional, or the managing director of the company. These two audiences may need very different data to help explain the progress of SEO activity.

The needs of the report’s reader to make a decision and identify the next steps must be considered. A fellow SEO may need the detail of which pages are returning a 404 server error, the managing director likely won’t.

Make Them Easy to Understand

They should not include unexplained jargon or expect readers to infer meaning from statistics.

Write reports with the recipient’s knowledge in mind.

Liberal use of jargon for someone not in the industry might put them off reading a report.

Conversely, jargon and acronyms will be fine for someone who knows SEO and can help keep reports brief.

Keep Them Impartial

SEO reports are a form of internal marketing. They can be used to highlight all of the good SEO work that’s been carried out.

Reports should be honest and unbiased, however. They shouldn’t gloss over negatives.

Decreases in performance over time can highlight critical issues. These shouldn’t be omitted from the report because they don’t look good. They are a perfect way of backing up your expert recommendations for next steps.

Provide Insight

Data alone is likely to be unhelpful to most.

Reports shouldn’t just be figures.

Insight and conclusion must be drawn, too.

This means that as an SEO expert we should be able to add value to the report by analyzing the data. Our conclusions can be presented as actions or suggestions for a way forward.

Reporting on Metrics Correctly

Metrics used incorrectly can lead to poor conclusions being made. An example of this is “site-wide bounce rate”.

A bounce is typically measured as a visit to a website that only led to one page being viewed and no other interactions occurring. Bounce rate is the percentage of all visits to the site that ended up as a bounce.

The bounce rate of a page can be useful, but only really if it is being compared with something else.

For instance, if changes have been made to a page’s layout and bounce rate increases it could point to there being a problem with visitors navigating with the new layout.

However, reporting on bounce rate of a page without looking deeper at other metrics can be misleading.

For instance, if the changes to the page were designed to help visitors find information more easily then the increase in bounce rate could be an indicator of the new design’s success.

The difference in bounce rate cannot be used in isolation as a measure of success.

Similarly, reporting on the average bounce rate across the entire website is usually misleading.

Some pages on the website might have a high bounce rate but be perfectly fine. For example:

  • A contact page might see a lot of visitors bounce as they find a phone number and leave the site to call it.
  • A home page or product page with a high bounce rate is usually a sign that the page is not meeting the needs of users, however.

Reports should look to draw conclusions from a range of metrics.

Few metrics can be used in isolation and still enable accurate insight to be drawn.

Over-Reliance on Metrics

There are other metrics that are relied on a little too much in SEO reports. Measures of the authority of a page or domain for instance.

These third-party metrics do well to guess the ranking potential of a page in the eyes of the search engines, but they are never going to be 100% accurate.

They can help to show if a site is improving over time, but only against the algorithm of that reporting tool.

These sorts of metrics can be useful for SEO professionals to use, but can cause problems when reported to managers, clients, and stakeholders.

If they are not properly prepped on what these scores mean it is easy for them to hold on to them as the goal for SEO. They are not.

Well-converting organic traffic is the goal. The two metrics will not always correlate.

Which Metrics Matter?

Which metrics should be used together to illustrate SEO performance depends on the purpose of the report. It also depends on what the recipient wants to see.

Some clients or managers may be used to receiving reports with certain metrics in them. It may be that the SEO reports feed into their own reporting and as such, they expect to see certain metrics.

It is a good idea to find out from the report recipient if there is anything in particular they would like to know.

The report should always link back to the brand’s business and marketing goals. The metrics used in the report should communicate if the goals are being met.

For instance, if a pet store’s marketing goal is to increase sales of “non-slip pet bowls” then metrics to include in the SEO report could be:

  • Overall traffic to the pages in the www.exampledomain.com/pet-accessories/bowls/non-slip folder.
  • Organic traffic to those pages.
  • Overall and organic conversions on these pages.
  • Overall and organic sales on these pages.
  • Bounce rate of each of these pages.
  • Traffic volume landing on these pages from the organic SERPs.

Over time this report will help identify if SEO is contributing to the goal of increasing sales of non-slip pet bowls.

Organic Performance Reports

These are reports designed to give a picture of the ongoing performance of SEO of a website. They give top-level insight into the source and behavior of organic traffic over time.

They should include data that indicates if the business, marketing and SEO goals are being met.

An SEO performance report should look at the organic search channel both on its own and in relation to other channels.

By doing this we can see the impact of other channels on the success of SEO. We can also identify any trends or patterns.

These reports should allow the reader to identify the impact of recent SEO activity on organic traffic.

Metrics to Include

Some good metrics to report on for organic performance reports include:

  • Overall visits: The number of visits to the website gives something to compare the organic search visits to. We can tell if organic traffic is decreasing whereas overall traffic is increasing or if organic traffic is growing despite an overall drop in traffic. It is possible to use overall traffic visit data to discern if there is seasonality in the website’s popularity.
  • Traffic visits by channel: The number of visits coming from each marketing channel helps you identify if there is any impact from other channels on SEO performance. For instance, new PPC ads going online could mean cannibalization of organic search traffic.
  • All traffic and organic traffic goal completions: Have visitors been completing the goals set up in the website’s analytics software? Comparing organic and other traffic goal completions will again help identify if the organic traffic is completing above or below average goal completions compared to other channels. This could help determine if SEO activity is having as much of a positive effect as hoped.
  • Page level traffic: If there are certain pages that have been worked on recently, such as new content or keyword optimization, include organic traffic metrics for them. This means going granular in your reporting. Report on organic traffic over time, conversions on the pages (if appropriate) and actions carried out from that page. This can show if recent work has been successful in increasing organic traffic to those pages or not.
  • Organic landing page sessions: The pages that visitors arrived on from the organic SERPs. This identifies which pages are bringing the most organic traffic to the website. From here, pages that have not been optimized but show potential to drive traffic can be identified.

Google Analytics

Keyword Ranking Reports

A note on keyword rankings reports. Consider what they are showing before including them.

An overall report of “your site is ranking for X keywords” doesn’t give any useful insight or fuel for a way forward.

  • Which keywords?
  • Are those keywords driving traffic to the site?
  • Are they worth optimizing for further?
Metrics to Include

Keyword ranking reports should demonstrate growth or decline in rankings for specific keywords the site is being optimized for.

Ideally, data should be pulled from first-party tools like Google Search Console to give as accurate an indication of ranking as possible.

Technical Performance Reports

Good SEO performance requires a website that can be crawled and indexed easily by the search engines.

This means that regular audits need to be carried out to identify anything that might prevent the correct pages from appearing in the SERPs.

Reports are slightly different from audits in that a technical audit will look at a lot of different factors and investigate them.

A thorough technical audit can be vast. It needs to diagnose issues and methods of improving the site’s performance.

Depending on the audience of a technical report it may need to selectively highlight the issues. It should also show the success of previous SEO work.

The key to knowing which metrics to include in a technical report is understanding what’s happened on the site so far.

If work has been carried out on the site recently to fix an issue include metrics that indicate the success of that fix.

For instance, if there has been a problem with a spider trap on the site that has been fixed, then report on crawl metrics and log files.

This might not be necessary for every technical report, but it can be useful in this instance.

If the site has problems with loading slowly, then metrics about load speed will be crucial for the technical report.

If the site has had problems with being mobile-friendly then reporting on metrics such volume of Google Search Console mobile usability errors over time can indicate if it is improving.

A good way to convey the metrics in a technical SEO report is by including prioritization of actions.

If the metrics show that there are some urgent issues, mark them as such. If they are issues that can wait or be fixed over time, highlight this.

Technical SEO can feel overwhelming for people who aren’t experts in it.

Breaking down the issues into priorities can make your reports more accessible and actionable.

Metrics to Include

There are certain metrics that may be useful to include as part of a technical performance report:

  • Server response codes: It can be prudent to keep track over time of the number and percentage of pages returning a non-200 response code. An audit of the site should determine exactly which pages are not returning a 200 response code. This information may not be useful to the recipient of the technical performance report so it may be better to include it as an appendix or not at all. If the volume of non-200 response codes reduces over time this can be a good indicator that technical issues on the site are being fixed. If it goes up then it can be summarized that further work needs to be carried out.
  • Page load speed times: It can be helpful to report on an average of page load speed times across the site over time. This can indicate if the site’s load speed is improving or not. What is perhaps even more useful to report on is the average load speed of the top five fastest and five slowest pages. This can help to show if there are certain templates that are very quick as well as the pages that might need further improvement.
  • Any data that shows a need to act: This is really important to include. If an error on a site is going to prevent it from being indexed then this needs to be highlighted in the report. This might be different from report to report. Metrics could be crawl data, site down-time, broken schema mark-up, etc.

Link Building Reports

A link building campaign can yield benefits for a website beyond boosting its authority with the search engines.

If done well, links should also drive traffic to the website. It is important to capture this information on link building reports too as it is a good measure of success.

Metrics to Include
  • URLs of links gained – which links have been gained in the reporting period.
  • Which links have been gained through link building activity – of the links gained which ones can be directly attributed to outreach efforts.
  • Links driving traffic – of the links gained during the period which ones have resulted in referral traffic and what is the volume of visits.

You may be tempted to include a page or domain strength score in these reports. If that helps to communicate the effectiveness of an outreach campaign that’s understandable.

Do remember however that links from highly relevant websites will still benefit your site even if they do not have high authority.

Don’t let your outreach efforts be discarded because the links gained don’t score high with these metrics.

Conclusion

Which metrics to include in a report is determined by what the report is for.

Identify which goals are being influenced by SEO activity and report using the metrics that show success or failure.

Remember to stay clear of data that is not helping identify this. It can be misleading and prevent the message from being communicated.

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