SEO reporting
📖 8 min readUpdated 2026-04-19
SEO reporting is where data meets decision-making. Too little reporting: stakeholders lose trust. Too much: signal drowned in noise. This page walks through the 3 report tiers, the cadence that fits each audience, and the structure that keeps leadership bought in without burying the team in slide-making.
The 3 report tiers
The three report tiers
Executive summary (monthly, C-level)
Audience: CEO, CMO, VPs. Purpose: show business impact of SEO.
Content (1-2 pages):
- Key metrics vs, targets (traffic, leads, revenue from organic)
- YoY + MoM comparisons
- 2-3 big wins or issues from the month
- Upcoming priorities
- Budget/resource asks
Format: slides or one-page PDF. Visual-heavy. No SEO jargon.
Marketing team report (biweekly)
Audience: marketing leadership, content team, SEO team.
Content:
- Executive summary (top of doc)
- Traffic + conversion trends
- Content performance (top pieces, underperformers)
- Rankings movement (top movers up and down)
- Backlink acquisition
- Technical issues status
- In-progress initiatives + expected impact
Format: document or dashboard. More detail than exec summary.
Operational report (weekly, SEO team)
Audience: SEO team.
Content:
- Anomaly watch (traffic drops, ranking drops, tech errors)
- Keyword opportunities (queries close to ranking better)
- Content performance last week
- Technical tickets status
- Publishing pipeline
- Link acquisition queue
Format: dashboard + short notes. Heavily data-driven.
Core metrics to always include
Traffic
- Organic sessions (vs prior period, vs prior year)
- Organic users
- Non-brand organic traffic (specifically)
Engagement
- Engagement rate / dwell time
- Pages per session
- Organic landing pages (top entry points)
Conversions
- Conversions from organic
- Conversion rate
- Revenue / pipeline from organic
Rankings
- Count of keywords ranking top 3 / top 10
- Movement on priority keywords
- Visibility score (aggregate)
Technical health
- GSC coverage status
- Core Web Vitals pass rate
- Crawl errors
Backlinks
- Referring domains (total + new this period)
- Domain Rating / Authority
- New high-value links
Visualization tools
Looker Studio (formerly Data Studio)
Free. Integrates with GA4, GSC, Ads, custom data sources. Most-used SEO reporting tool.
AgencyAnalytics / Whatagraph
White-label reporting for agencies. Pulls from many data sources.
SEOmonitor / Dashthis
SEO-specific dashboards.
Custom BI (Tableau / PowerBI)
For enterprises with existing BI platforms.
Dashboard components
Summary cards
Top of dashboard: big numbers (organic sessions, conversions, top ranked keywords), vs prior period indicator (↑/↓).
Trend charts
Line/bar charts over time: sessions, rankings, keywords, backlinks.
Tables
Top landing pages, top queries, recent ranking movement, recent backlinks.
Alerts / anomalies
Call-outs for metrics that moved significantly.
Segments + filters
Enable drilldown: by page type, by keyword cluster, by country.
Telling the story, not just showing numbers
Good reports have a narrative:
- What happened? (the numbers)
- Why did it happen? (the analysis)
- What are we doing about it? (the plan)
Numbers without commentary are confusing. Commentary without numbers is unfounded. Always both.
Common reporting mistakes
- Too many metrics. If the executive dashboard has 30 KPIs, none are important. Pick 5 to 7.
- Same report for every audience. Exec team doesn't need page-level analysis.
- No commentary. Numbers alone are ambiguous. Explain what they mean.
- Inconsistent definitions. Last month "conversions" meant form fills, this month it includes downloads. Reports become un-comparable.
- Lag. Monthly report arrives three weeks after month end. Useless for decisions.
What to do with this
Build one Looker Studio executive dashboard with 5 to 7 KPIs. Ship it to leadership next cycle. Add commentary explaining what moved and why. One good report does more for SEO's credibility than a year of Slack updates.
Next: SEO experimentation, how to test changes instead of guess at them.