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Google Search Console is a free tool connected directly to Google’s own data about your site. This guide covers what it is, the five reports worth your time, and one quick win you can action in each report in under 15 minutes.
Contents
What is Google Search Console?
Report 2: Coverage and Indexing
What to do when your GSC data shows problems
Most business owners set up Google Search Console when they launch their site, then forget it exists. Meanwhile, Google is quietly logging every crawl error, every query your pages rank for, and every page it cannot index. All of it is sitting there, free, waiting to be acted on.
This guide covers the five GSC reports worth your time, and what to do in each one.
What is Google Search Console?
Google Search Console is a free tool from Google that shows you how your website performs in Google Search. It is the only source of data that comes directly from Google’s own systems: actual clicks, actual impressions, actual indexing errors, and actual ranking positions. No third-party SEO tool can replicate it, because they all work from estimates.
The simplest way to understand the difference between GSC and Google Analytics: Analytics tells you what people do after they arrive on your site. GSC tells you what happens before they click, and why some of them never do.
Report 1: Performance
The Performance report shows every search query that triggered an impression of your site in Google Search, along with your clicks, impressions, click-through rate, and average ranking position for each one.
Filter for queries where your average position is between 4 and 10. These are pages already ranking on the first page of Google, but sitting below the top three spots where most clicks go. A page in position 7 for a competitive term might be generating thousands of impressions and almost no traffic. That gap is where most SEO quick wins actually live.
Sort by impressions descending and look for high impression counts paired with low click-through rates. A sharper title tag and a clearer meta description targeting the actual query intent can shift a page from position 7 to position 3. The click volume difference between those two positions is significant.
“Impressions without clicks are where most Australian businesses leave SEO money on the table.”
Pages ranking 4–10 on page one with high impressions are your highest-leverage optimisation targets.
QUICK WIN: Under 15 minutes
Filter for Position > 3 and Position < 11, sort by Impressions descending. Update the title tags and meta descriptions for your top 5 results to better match what the query is asking for.
Report 2: Coverage and Indexing
The Coverage report shows which pages Google has indexed, which it has excluded, and which have returned errors. A single misconfigured setting can silently prevent entire sections of your site from appearing in Google Search, and you will not see it in Analytics.
The most common errors: a noindex tag added during development and never removed; pages blocked by a robots.txt file carried over from a staging environment; soft 404s, where a page returns a 200 status code but shows a “not found” message.
In 15 years of managing SEO for Australian brands, Shout Digital’s team has seen a noindex tag on a client’s homepage, robots.txt files blocking entire product categories, and staging configurations accidentally applied to the live site. Every one of those errors was invisible in Analytics.
QUICK WIN: Under 15 minutes
Open Coverage, click “Not indexed,” and scan the reason categories. More than a handful of “Excluded by noindex” or “Blocked by robots.txt” pages you did not deliberately exclude is a flag worth raising with your developer today.
Report 3: Core Web Vitals
The Core Web Vitals report measures three user experience signals that Google has used as a confirmed ranking factor since June 2021: how fast your main content loads (LCP), how quickly your page responds to interaction (INP), and how much your layout shifts while loading (CLS). Pages rated “Poor” are at a direct ranking disadvantage.
In plain English, here is what each metric means and what “Poor” looks like:
Your hero image or headline should load in under 2.5 seconds. Over 4 seconds is “Poor.”
Your page should respond to a click or keystroke in under 200 milliseconds. INP replaced FID as Google’s standard in March 2024.
Your layout should not jump around as the page loads. A score above 0.1 is “Poor.”
QUICK WIN: Under 15 minutes
Open Core Web Vitals, select Mobile (it is almost always the worse view, and it matters more because Google uses mobile-first indexing). Click into “Poor URLs,” identify which metric is failing, and send that list to your developer. The conversation starts with data, not guesswork.
Report 4: Search Appearance
The Search Appearance section shows how your pages appear in Google Search beyond standard blue links, including star ratings, FAQ dropdowns, product prices, and event dates. These enhanced listings appear when Google can successfully read your structured data (schema markup). When schema is broken, those enhancements disappear; your competitors’ results look more prominent than yours, even if you outrank them.
A spike in schema errors usually means a recent site update broke the markup on a template. As Google CPC costs keep rising across Australian categories like legal, finance, and retail, every organic click through an enhanced result is a click you did not pay for. Broken schema is leaving those clicks on the table.
QUICK WIN: Under 15 minutes
Open Search Appearance, then Structured Data. Any error (not just a warning) is worth investigating. For most sites, fixing a handful of template-level issues resolves errors across hundreds of pages at once.
Report 5: Links
The Links report shows which external sites link to your pages, which of your pages earn the most external links, and how your internal links are distributed. It is the only source of backlink data drawn directly from Google’s index rather than a third-party estimate.
If your homepage earns 90%+ of your external links and your key service or product pages earn almost none, your link authority is concentrated in the wrong place. Internal links follow the same logic: pages with few internal links are harder for Google to discover and harder to rank.
QUICK WIN: Under 15 minutes
Open Links, go to Top Linked Pages under External Links, and compare that list to your most commercially important pages. If your high-value pages are not near the top, that is a link-building gap. Under Internal Links, confirm your most important pages receive more links than thin or low-priority content does.
What to do when your GSC data shows problems
GSC tells you what is wrong. Acting on it, in the right order, is where most businesses need support.
If your Coverage report is showing indexing errors, your Core Web Vitals report has a cluster of “Poor” mobile URLs, or your Performance report shows queries stuck on page two that should be ranking higher, those are concrete, fixable problems. Shout Digital’s SEO team uses GSC as the foundation of every client audit, turning those findings into a prioritised action plan: technical fixes, content improvements, structured data corrections, and title or meta description updates.
If you would like us to run through your GSC reports and identify the highest-priority opportunities, see how we approach that on our SEO services page.
For more on how SEO, AEO, and GEO work together to build AI search visibility alongside traditional organic performance, see our guide on how to build topical authority so AI tools recommend your brand.
Frequently asked questions
Updated June 2026. Shout Digital is a Melbourne-based digital marketing agency specialising in SEO, SEM, Social Media, Answer Engine Optimisation (AEO), and Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) for established Australian brands. For more on how to maximise organic search performance, see our SEO services page or the Shout Digital blog.
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