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Daily SEO Checks

| 7 minutes to read

Daily SEO Checks

SEO takes time to implement and can take weeks or months to gain traction, but when it comes to errors and issues on your site things move much quicker.

Changes to algorithms and best practices can happen quickly and wreak havoc on your site, so you should be checking the basics daily for the first signs of trouble. It may seem like a lot, but these simple checks can save you from drops in traffic and revenue. Read further for our guide to daily SEO checks.

Google Search Console

Previously called Google Webmaster Tools, Google Search Console is your number one source for data on your website and how it performs in Google. You can quickly see changes to site performance, both good and bad.

It can be daunting to use if you’re unaccustomed, but our tips below can help you see issues and the first warning signs.

URL Inspection

The URL Inspection section of Search Console is great for checking in on your top landing pages or making sure that your newly posted pages are being indexed.

GSC URL Inspection

When you type in a URL you will see something like the above. If you have any warnings you can click on them to find out more about the issue as well as how to fix them. This tool is best for looking at specific pages and new sections, but if you want a more top-level view you should look at…

Performance

The performance section takes your whole property into account and looks at the clicks, impressions, click-through-rate and average position within search results. You can also look into specific queries, pages, etc.

The best way to use this in your daily checks is to put a relatively short range and compare it to the previous period, or the previous year if you have more seasonal fluctuations.

GSC Performance Date Range

This will quickly show you potential issues. Has your average CTR dropped for some reason? Maybe you have a spike in impressions? Take a look through the tabs for queries, pages and countries and you should be able to see the cause.

Coverage

This is a straightforward section, giving graphs on errors and valid pages. It is tempting to just focus on the error and warning sections, but you should make sure that you look at the valid and excluded sections for movement too.

Each type will have a clickable section where you can see more information on why these errors occurred or why pages are not indexed. Depending on the error they may be simple to fix or require some development work, but either way it is good to be aware of these and fix them as soon as possible.

Sitemaps

This feeds into the Coverage section above, and also provides a summary of any issues at a glance.

If the status is wrong, you can check this and resubmit if needed. Also check the number in the Discovered URLs tab and see if this matches with your sitemap.

Core Web Vitals (Pagespeed)

This relatively new section is great for technical SEO and page speed, showing a quick overview of which pages are good, poor or need improvement across mobile and desktop devices.

Again, open the reports and look at recent changes. You should be able to match the changes to website development, new pages going live or other changes on your site. If there are changes which seem strange or are unaccounted for, it is worth a more thorough investigation.

Mobile Usability

Similar to Core Web Vitals, you should check this for any changes and make the required development work to correct these errors. Once the changes have been made, you can go into each error and click Validate Fix.

Structured Data

This shows up as different sections depending on your website. Under ‘Enhancements’ you will see information on your structured data in sections such as Products, Videos, Events, Etc.

This should be treated similarly to the above few points in that any increase in errors (or decrease in valid pages) should be amended as soon as possible to help structured data be used.

Google Analytics

Analytics gives you a wider view of interactions with your website outside of Google, including spam traffic, unnatural traffic from referrals and more.

Realtime

Depending on the size and type of your site Realtime might not show a great deal, but if you get steady traffic it can help you highlight issues at key times.

GA Realtime

Rather than watching the users come and go in real time, identify your busiest or most productive time in the day and take a look on a regular basis. The top active pages can help you see where people dwell on your site and the events section can show you realtime interactions. This is interesting to see and can show different issues depending on your setup, including spam traffic and erroneous users.

Referrals

In Analytics, navigate to Acquisition > Overview > All Traffic > Channels and then select Referral.

This is great for checking up on external marketing and can potentially highlight links being built, mentions and more. If you are checking regularly, stick with fairly short date ranges to see how the referrals progress and isolate the best performing sites for future work.

Landing Pages

Under Behaviour > Site Content > Landing Pages you will see a list of the most popular entry pages on your site. This will generally be the homepage followed by your most widely appropriate content.

Again, if you are looking regularly keep the date quite short so that you can focus on fluctuations in landing pages. If you are getting lots of hits on pages you don’t usually, it could mean a change in search habits, improved rankings or possibly something negative on the pages that usually rank.

Bounce Rate

This will probably be shown on your default view in Analytics, but if not it can be found under Audience > Overview.

Your bounce rate will vary from site to site depending on your setup, but it should remain consistent. If it changes drastically it will be worth investigating further and if it goes to 100% or 0% (or very close to those), then it is a sign your Analytics code is wrong somewhere. If this is the case it is best to crawl your website to check the code is on each page.

Campaigns

When you’re running Google Ad campaigns it is important to check up on where you are spending your money. For many the Google Ads interface can be confusing, but it is much easier to view in Google Analytics for performance on your site.

Navigate to Acquisition > Campaigns and then select All Campaigns or Paid Keywords to see what is driving your traffic and where it is going. Again, if you are checking this regularly it will be beneficial to look across a shorter date range rather than looking at years’ worth of data.

Page One Results for Branding

Performing a quick check on your branded keywords will help you spot competitors and potential issues early on. There are lots of variables for personalised search so whilst it may be difficult to get an accurate view, it will give a good approximation. Using an incognito browser will help you get a more ‘generic’ results page.

Brand Mentions

You can set up Google alerts to send you notifications of some mentions, but these are restricted to mostly news based articles and outlets. Performing searches in quotation marks is helpful for isolating your branded terms, particularly if you have a more generic company name.

There are advanced search setting in Google to. In search results click on Setting > Advanced Search (under the search bar) and you can specify dates, regions and more.

Advanced Search Results

Social Channels

Similar to searching for your own branded mentions, take a look at social media channels to see what comes up.

This could be good news, such as your company trending after an announcement, increased social traction on Facebook, or similar. Equally it can be damage limitation if you are trending in a negative manner. Hopefully this won’t be the case, but it is best to be prepared and have contingencies in place.

Summary

There are numerous other checks which could be made on a daily basis, but if you focus on these you should start to see further patterns and learn how to spot potential issues quicker. All of this can maximise your opportunities and minimise the possibility of damage to your site.

Responses

  1. Freelancer avatar

    Great post especially white paper and tools you suggest are great to work with ease. Thank you

  2. InfinMarkets avatar

    Very impressive post.
    In order to achieve high ranks every website needs an SEO work for it.

  3. Mike Essex avatar

    I’m pleased to see you suggested GWT checks, as Google defaults alerts to gmail, if it’s not your main account it’s very easy to miss key messages. A daily check ensures you are on top of any major issues.

    With Backlink analysis Linkdex lets you do a week on week comparison which is very useful so yo don’t have to look over the same data.

    These are certainly all checks to be aware of, although doing them every day for all sites would be a bit extreme. It’s also worth noting that for really large sites you’d need someone on Analytics for a considerable part of every day, so there’s no need for someone to try and do all of this themselves. Likewise if time is short a lot of these tasks could be staggered over a week.

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Gary Hainsworth

Senior Organic Data Specialist

Gary is our technical SEO specialist and boasts more than 10 years’ experience in the industry. With in-depth knowledge on site migrations and all aspects of technical SEO, he’s a valuable asset to our team. Gary’s worked with the likes of the V&A, Warburtons, the NHS and the Lake District National Park. He has a passion for guitars too, be that playing them, modifying them or even building them. Gary has appeared in Startups Magazine, Portsmouth News and Southampton.gov.uk.

Gary Hainsworth Read more about Gary Hainsworth

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