Most founders ignore 95% of Google Search Console — but only five reports actually drive decisions: the Performance report (what you rank for and click-through rates), the Page Indexing report (what Google has and hasn't indexed), the Sitemaps report, the Core Web Vitals / Page Experience report, and the Links report. Master these five and GSC stops being intimidating and becomes your most valuable free SEO tool. Here's how to read each one.
1. Performance — your most important report
Shows the queries you appear for, plus clicks, impressions, CTR, and average position. Use it to find quick-win keywords (positions 11–20), spot pages with high impressions but low CTR (improve the title/meta), and track whether your work is moving positions over time.
2. Page Indexing (Coverage)
Tells you which pages Google has indexed and why others aren't. If an important page isn't indexed, it can't rank — this report surfaces the reason (blocked, noindex, duplicate, crawl error) so you can fix it.
3. Sitemaps
Confirms Google received your sitemap.xml and how many URLs it discovered. Submit your sitemap here and check for errors after big site changes.
4. Core Web Vitals / Page Experience
Reports real-world loading, interactivity, and visual-stability scores. Slow or unstable pages hurt both rankings and conversions — pair this with a site audit to fix the worst offenders.
5. Links
Shows your top linked pages, top linking sites, and internal-link counts. Use it to spot under-linked important pages (and fix them via internal links) and to understand your external backlink profile at a glance.
How to use GSC weekly
A 10-minute weekly habit: scan Performance for movement and quick wins, check Page Indexing for new errors, and confirm nothing important dropped out. Connect GSC to your SEO platform so this data flows into your keyword and rank-tracking workflow automatically — see the pricing page.