Look at their SEO reports.
- Bad SEO reports – Don’t communicate the work you’ve done effectively
- Good SEO reports – Share useful insights and provide a logical overview of the work
I’ve seen many SEO reports from consultants, in-house teams, and agencies. I discussed them with SEO experts from our Ahrefs Insider community.
Using this knowledge, I’ve created an SEO report template that you can build on and expand yourself to create your very own SEO report.
To get started, make a copy of our SEO report template and personalize it to your client’s needs. You’ll have a perfect SEO report in no time.
But before you steal our SEO report template, let’s consider the following:
An SEO report is an overview of important SEO metrics reflecting business growth, performance in search engines, backlink portfolio strength, and website health.
It’s the main resource for your clients, managers, or bosses that tracks the progress of your work and its impact. After all, these stakeholders want to see that their investment in SEO is returned.
While you can’t always win at SEO every month, an effective SEO report should convey that your work will return a positive ROI in the long term.
This leads us nicely to…
While the content of an SEO report largely depends on a client’s business type, most SEO slide deck reports usually contain the following:
- Title Card – The front page of your SEO report
- Executive summary – Bulleted summary of the most important points from the report
- Performance summary – An overview of your SEO performance for the time period
- Organic traffic – Chart of your organic traffic performance over the tie period
- SEO KPIs – Evaluate SEO metrics that are closely tied to revenue growth, like conversions, organic traffic
- Keyword rankings – See how rankings of the most important keywords have changed
- Winner and loser keywords
- Links – Share the most relevant updates with the website’s link profile
- New and lost referring domains – Share new and lost referring domains
- Backlink growth – Share new, valuable referring pages that drive traffic and/or pass link equity
- Link opportunities – Identify areas for improvement
- Content – Provide an update on the website’s content performance
- Content performance – Provide a detailed look at content performance
- Content opportunities – Share relevant content opportunities
- Technical SEO
- SEO health – Know that the website is doing well from the technical SEO perspective
- Next steps – Outlining the most important SEO tasks to be completed in the next time period
Your work doesn’t end with just dumping a bunch of metrics into a document. You’ll need to interpret them and provide useful commentary.
Your SEO reports should convey the impact of your work in the most succinct and coherent way possible.
Now, let’s get back to the expectations between you and your client. The report should primarily contain what you’ve previously discussed. If you sent an SEO report without educating the client beforehand, you’d get a lot of questions and demands to show more data. This is even if the SEO report is perfect. That’s because you’re the SEO expert, not the client.
I’ll explain all the used metrics and data as we go through the slides later. But I also highly recommend you check out our articles on SEO KPIs and SEO metrics that actually matter.
Based on what I’ve heard, SEOs can spend anywhere from 30 minutes to a few hours per month on each SEO report. This depends on several factors:
- Your responsibilities in the project
- Complexity of the project
- Your SEO experience and knowledge
- Your data analytics experience and knowledge
- Reporting format you and your clients prefer
Let me expand on the last point. It seems most SEOs prefer using the good old PDFs and decks for reporting purposes: