Tag: Google Search Console

  • Why Google Search Console Impressions Dropped: September 2025

    Around September 10, 2025, website owners observed significant drops in Google Search Console impressions—some experiencing declines of 30-50% or more, particularly on desktop. While average positions appeared to improve, these changes resulted from Google's removal of a data collection parameter rather than actual ranking shifts.

    Google Disables Data Collection Shortcut

    Google eliminated the num=100 URL parameter that previously allowed retrieval of 100 search results per request instead of the standard 10. Rank tracking tools like Semrush heavily relied on this feature for efficient data gathering. The removal forced these tools to make 10 separate requests instead of one, increasing infrastructure costs roughly tenfold.

    The timing correlated precisely with widespread impression declines in Search Console, suggesting that bot traffic from automated tools had been counted in impression metrics.

    GSC Impressions Were Inflated

    Analysis by SEO consultant Tyler Gargula examining 319 websites found that 87.7% of sites experienced impression drops following the change. Desktop impressions suffered the largest impact, with mobile impressions affected less significantly.

    A health information website we track saw monthly impressions decline from 38,000 to 24,000, while average position improved from 31 to 16, with clicks remaining stable.

    Why Google Made This Change

    Protecting competitive intelligence: Search results represent substantial R&D investment. Efficient data scraping allows competitors and AI companies unauthorized access to ranking signals.

    Fighting AI training data collection: Services like SerpApi reportedly supplied bulk SERP data to ChatGPT and other AI systems. Disabling bulk collection methods creates obstacles for large-scale data harvesting.

    Google simultaneously posted a job opening for "Senior Engineering Analyst, Search, Anti-scraper," explicitly addressing scraper detection and machine learning models to identify abusive patterns.

    Improved Average Position Comes Down to Math

    The mathematical improvement in average position reflects removal of inflated bot impressions from positions 50-100. When calculating average position by dividing total position values by total impressions, eliminating deep-position bot traffic causes the remaining legitimate impressions from positions 1-20 to dominate the calculation.

    What Business Owners Should Monitor

    Rather than chasing impression recovery, focus on metrics connecting to revenue:

    • Organic clicks: Month-over-month and year-over-year trends in Search Console
    • Conversion rates: Track goal completions, form submissions, calls, and purchases via Google Analytics
    • Revenue attribution: Monthly and annual revenue from organic search channels
    • Landing page performance: Identify which pages drive valuable actions
    • Click-through rates: For page-one rankings, measure the percentage of searchers clicking through

    Stable or growing clicks despite lower impressions indicates unchanged real-world visibility. Both metrics declining proportionally warrants investigation, though the focus should remain on qualified traffic conversion rather than impression recovery.

  • How to Use Google Search Console

    Google Search Console (GSC) is one of the most valuable free tools for understanding how your content performs in Google Search. This guide focuses on features and metrics for content strategy, though we'll cover additional GSC functionality as well.

    Whether you're a content manager, editor, or analyst, understanding how to use GSC effectively can help you make data-driven decisions about what to create, update, or remove.

    Uncover Opportunities in Your Search Data

    GSC reveals how your content actually performs in Google Search—not just traffic, but impressions, rankings, and click-through rates. This data enables you to identify what's working and what needs improvement.

    Understanding Google Search Console Metrics

    GSC provides four key metrics:

    • Impressions — How many times your pages appeared in search results
    • Clicks — How many times users clicked through to your site
    • Click-Through Rate (CTR) — Percentage of impressions that resulted in clicks
    • Average Position — Your average ranking placement for a given query

    These metrics together tell you not just how much traffic you're getting, but how effectively your content is competing for attention.

    Interpreting Data and Filtering Brand Terms

    One important practice: filter out brand searches when analyzing content performance. Users who search for your company name will click on your result regardless of position, which skews your data.

    Brand terms to filter typically include:

    • Your company name and common misspellings
    • Product names
    • Abbreviations
    • Domain name variations

    Using Regular Expressions (Regex) in GSC

    GSC supports regex filtering, which creates powerful search patterns for analyzing your data. Think of it as a super-powered search function.

    Basic Regex Operators

    • ^ — Start of line
    • $ — End of line
    • . — Any single character
    • * — Zero or more of the previous character
    • + — One or more of the previous character
    • | — OR operator

    Practical Regex Examples

    Exclude brand variations:

    best buy|bestbuy|best b|bast buy
    

    Find long URLs (100+ characters):

    .{100,}
    

    Filter to specific file types:

    \.(pdf|doc|docx|xls|xlsx)$
    

    Show only blog content:

    ^/blog/
    

    Find question queries:

    ^(who|what|where|when|why|how)
    

    Match date formats (YYYY-MM-DD):

    \d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2}
    

    Find multi-word queries (4+ words):

    ([^" "]*\s){4,}?
    

    Finding Content Opportunities

    Use GSC to identify pages that deserve attention:

    High impressions, low CTR:
    These pages are ranking but not getting clicks. Improve your titles and meta descriptions.

    Position 11-20 (second page):
    Content that's close to page one often needs just small improvements to break through.

    Declining performance:
    Pages that used to perform well but have dropped may need updates to stay relevant.

    Content Revamping vs. Abandonment

    Not every page is worth saving. Here's how to decide:

    When to Revamp

    • The topic is still relevant to your audience
    • The page has decent traffic or rankings
    • There's clear improvement potential

    Revamp tactics:

    1. Update statistics and examples
    2. Improve formatting and readability
    3. Add new relevant information
    4. Optimize for featured snippets

    When to Remove or Consolidate

    • The topic is outdated or no longer relevant
    • The page has consistently poor performance
    • The content no longer aligns with your strategy

    Removal process:

    1. Identify underperforming pages
    2. Evaluate if content could merge with another page
    3. Set up 301 redirects to relevant content
    4. Update internal links pointing to the old page

    Technical Features Worth Knowing

    URL Inspection Tool

    Check the indexing status and crawlability of any URL. This reveals:

    • Whether Google has indexed the page
    • When it was last crawled
    • Any indexing issues
    • Mobile usability status

    Index Coverage Report

    See an overview of your indexed pages, including:

    • Successfully indexed pages
    • Pages with warnings
    • Pages with errors
    • Excluded pages (and why)

    Mobile Usability Report

    Identify mobile issues affecting your pages:

    • Text too small to read
    • Clickable elements too close together
    • Content wider than screen

    Sitemaps

    Submit and monitor your XML sitemap to ensure Google can efficiently crawl your site.

    Links Report

    View your site's linking data:

    • Top linking sites
    • Most-linked pages
    • Common anchor text

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How often is GSC data updated?
    Daily, with a 2-3 day reporting lag.

    What's the difference between GSC and Google Analytics?
    GSC tracks search performance (how you appear in Google). Analytics tracks on-site behavior (what visitors do after arriving).

    How do I add a website?
    You'll need to verify ownership via meta tag, file upload, or DNS record.

    Why do GSC and Analytics numbers differ?
    Different tracking methods. Some discrepancy is normal.

    Can I see competitor data?
    No. GSC only shows data for properties you own and have verified.

    How long is data retained?
    16 months.

    Can my team access GSC?
    Yes, through role-based access levels you control.

    Get More From Your Search Data

    Google Search Console is a powerful tool when you know how to use it. Regular analysis helps you understand what's working, identify opportunities, and make informed decisions about your content strategy.

    Need help setting up GSC or making sense of your search data? Contact Garrett Digital for a consultation.