How to do seo monthly reporting
How to Do SEO
Monthly Reporting
Rankings on their own don’t mean much to a stakeholder. This guide walks through exactly what to track, which tools to pull data from, and how to turn a month of SEO work into a report that clearly shows business impact.
SEO Monthly Reporting, Explained
An SEO monthly report is a recurring summary of organic search performance — traffic, rankings, conversions and technical health — built to show whether the work done that month is moving the business forward.
A good report answers one question above all others: is this working? That means leading with outcomes — traffic, leads, revenue — rather than burying them under a wall of keyword positions nobody outside the SEO team finds meaningful.
The most useful monthly reports combine quantitative data pulled directly from tools like Search Console and GA4 with narrative context — what changed, why it changed, and what’s planned next. Numbers without context invite questions; numbers with context build trust.
Reporting cadence matters too. Monthly is frequent enough to catch problems early and show steady progress, but spaced out enough that SEO’s naturally gradual movement has time to show up as a real trend rather than noise.
Lead With Outcomes
Traffic, conversions and revenue belong at the top — keyword-level detail can live further down or in an appendix.
Add Context, Not Just Numbers
Every metric needs a comparison point — last month, last year, or the original goal — to mean anything on its own.
End With Next Steps
A report that stops at “here’s what happened” is half a report. Close with what’s planned and why.
9 Things Every SEO Monthly Report Should Include
Not every report needs all nine in full depth, but each of these should at least be considered before you call a report complete.
Organic Traffic Overview
Sessions and users from organic search, compared against the previous month and the same period last year, with a short note on what drove any significant swing.
Keyword Ranking Movement
Net gained and lost positions, new page-one rankings, and any featured snippet or AI Overview wins for your priority keyword set.
Conversions & Revenue
Goal completions or ecommerce revenue attributed to organic search, ideally segmented by landing page or product category.
Technical Health Summary
Core Web Vitals status, crawl errors, indexation issues and any fixes shipped during the month that affect site health.
Backlink Profile Changes
New and lost referring domains, notable link wins from outreach, and any toxic links flagged for disavow.
Top Content Performance
Best and worst performing pages by traffic or conversions, plus content gaps identified for the next month’s plan.
Competitor Benchmarking
A brief comparison of share of voice or rankings against two or three key competitors for context, kept concise rather than exhaustive.
Local SEO Metrics
For businesses with physical locations: Google Business Profile views, calls, and direction requests, where relevant to the goals.
Action Items & Next Steps
A short, clear list of what was completed this month, what’s planned next, and any blockers that need stakeholder input.
How to Build an SEO Monthly Report: 5 Steps
A repeatable workflow that keeps reporting consistent month over month, instead of rebuilding the structure from scratch every time.
Define Your KPIs and Audience
Decide upfront which metrics actually matter for this stakeholder — an executive needs revenue and traffic trends, while a technical team may want keyword and crawl-level detail. The audience shapes the structure.
Pull Data From Your Tools
Export or connect data from Google Search Console, Google Analytics 4, your rank tracker and your backlink monitoring tool. Where possible, automate this step with a connected dashboard to save time each month.
Add Context to the Numbers
Compare every key metric against the previous month, the same month last year, and the original goal. A number without a comparison point tells the reader almost nothing.
Translate Metrics Into Business Impact
Connect traffic and ranking movement back to leads, revenue or whatever outcome the business cares about most. This is the step that turns an SEO report into a business report.
Summarize and Present
Open with a short executive summary covering the headline result, what drove it, and what’s next. Save the detailed breakdowns for stakeholders who want to dig further.
The Core Tools Behind Every Report
Most SEO monthly reports draw from the same handful of tools — the difference between a good report and a great one is usually how well the data from each is combined.
No single tool tells the whole story. Search Console shows what Google sees, GA4 shows what users actually did, your rank tracker shows day-to-day movement, and your backlink tool shows the authority signals building in the background. A report built from just one source is always missing context.
Many teams consolidate these sources into a single dashboard so the monthly report becomes a matter of reviewing and narrating the data rather than rebuilding it from scratch. That consistency is what makes month-over-month trends easy to spot and easy to trust.
Whichever tools you use, keep the same date ranges and definitions every month. A report that quietly changes how it measures “organic traffic” from one month to the next undermines the trend lines that make reporting valuable in the first place.
Common Questions About SEO Reporting
Quick answers to the questions teams ask most often when they start building or refining their monthly SEO reports.