How to identify rising keywords in analytics?
-
Hi Guys
I just spotted in the Google Analytics > Traffic Sources > Search Engine Optimisation > Queries section a keyword that on the 27th Feb went from generating 35 impressions per day to 2000 impressions per day.
This was down to people searching for a newly launched product.
Does anyone know how I can identify any increases like this easily? I only came across this by accident, and I am 1 month behind the times. It would have been ideal to pick this up closer to the time so I could capitalise and write some great content on the topic.
Thanks
Paul
-
I totally dorked up the cells in step 9 - I fixed that in my answer above.
As far as the Step 10 - 11 thing, I don't think I did. I think you skipped the second half of step 10. Here's my original text, with bold.
- Highlight the cells from H1 to H12. Grab the black square in the bottom right of the border box. Drag this selection down all the way to H2000. **Copy all your cells from A1 to H2000 and paste values to remove any formulas. We want just text now. **
---------------------
Instead of copying and paste values for Column H, I just said do the whole thing. At this point you only want text so it makes sense. I was going to edit but I think the correct step is already in there.
-
I'm glad you liked the answer. Sometimes it's difficult to take the time to write up a long answer like that but once in awhile it just happens and comes out. I had a feeling others may like being able to mess with that sort of data so why not, right?
I'll write it up soon - I think I may do a bit on "playing with your food data in Excel."
I'm going to go make a few edits to my post so it has all the right steps. Thanks! I see that I messed up my Bs and Hs. After awhile I think I lost track of typing up each step and tried to recreate in my head what I had done. lol
-
Excellent, did it, got data, very happy.
Just incase anyone else comes across this there is 1 correction to the above, and 1 missing step:
- To match keywords to their change line, follow this specifically. In H4, type =B1 This should now say your keyword. Manually type in a few of these, so go to B8 and insert the formula =B5, then do the same with B12. The formula is =B9. You should see three keywords in Column H.
should be
- To match keywords to their change line, follow this specifically. In H4, type =B1 This should now say your keyword. Manually type in a few of these, so go to H8 and insert the formula =B5, then do the same with H12. The formula is =B9. You should see three keywords in Column H.
So you only put this formula in Column H, referencing column B.
Then, between Step 10 and 11 you need to copy column H and do Paste Values, otherwise when you sort in step 11 you will end up with #REF errors.
This has yielded some excellent data for me to slice and dice.
-
WOW!
That is the most detailed response I have seen in a Q&A. Thanks for going to so much detail.
Definitely write this up as a YouMoz, as I have a feeling this would be a great interest to a lot of people, and could well get promoted to the main blog.
Right, I'm off to fire up Analytics and Excel and see what I can see.
This truly is brilliant. Thanks so much.
Keri, thanks for the heads up on the alerts blog post. I have used alerts, but for some reason I just didn't think to use these to identify changing trends in keyword usage. So I will give this a look also.
Thanks Guys
-
Ahh, the problem is that the OP changed jobs, and the new person removed those custom alerts. I hadn't realized that until just now. Thanks for letting me know, and I'll see if we can do anything to get it fixed.
-
Thanks for the endorsement Keri! Appreciate that.
From the post you linked - it doesn't look like the Grab It link works with the new Analytics. Those are great alerts to setup but maybe someone can write up a 2013 version.
TY!
-
Awesome response here! I'd also like to add we did have a great YouMoz post two years ago about essential alerts for GA that would email you when certain events happened. It's at http://www.seomoz.org/blog/7-essential-google-intelligence-custom-alerts-that-keep-me-sane.
-
Sure, you mostly care about ones that have already jumped up in impressions or clicks, right? I'm going to be very specific on the steps but this isn't as hard as it looks.
-
Go to Traffic Sources > Search Engine Optimization > Queries
-
Select a date range and then use "Compare to" and use "Previous Period."
-
Set Show Rows to 500.
-
Sort the table by Impressions.
-
Copy all the data from the table starting from "1. keyword" and finishing with the end of the table (last change%). Paste this data directly into Excel. You should have columns A-F used, it'll look very messy. Something like the attached "sorting1.jpg"
-
Find & Replace "% Change" with "Change"
-
In Column G put this formula: =IF(LEFT(B1,6)="Change","Yes!","") Copy this formula from G1 to G2000. Every line that says "Change" should now say "Yes!" at the end.
-
Copy column G and use "Paste Values" to remove the formula and leave only the "Yes!" in place.
-
To match keywords to their change line, follow this specifically. In H4, type =B1 This should now say your keyword. Manually type in a few of these, so go to H8 and insert the formula =B5, then do the same with H12. The formula is =B9. You should see three keywords in Column H.
-
Highlight the cells from H1 to H12. Grab the black square in the bottom right of the border box. Drag this selection down all the way to H2000. Copy all your cells from A1 to H2000 and paste values to remove any formulas. We want just text now.
You should see a list of keywords in column H now, every 4 cells or so. Check Sorting2 attached. The rest is very simple.
-
Sort by Column G, Sort by Values, Z to A. This should be looking valuable now.
-
Delete Rows 501-2000. All rows should be "Yes!" now.
-
Delete Columns A, B and G. Feel free to move Column E to Column A if it makes you feel better.
-
Insert a new Row 1 at the very top. Label each like this:
Cell A1: Impressions
Cell B1: Clicks
Cell C1: Avg Pos.
Cell D1: CTR
Cell E1: Keyword
- Highlight Row A and push View > Freeze Panes > Freeze Top Row. Highlight all the data, press Ctrl T to create a Table. Now you can easily sort any row and sort through your data. See sorting3.jpg attached.
It's really not as complex as it looks. Just use the two formulas, follow the steps and boom, sortable and pretty data.
(I may write this up as a YouMoz post with better screenshots, maybe a video tutorial or something, so thanks for giving us the chance to help!)
-
-
The fact that you went from generating 35 impressions per day to 2000 impressions per day, could mean that one of your pages is on the first page of a SERP that has high traffic. However, that can also mean that it is in the last spot and not driving any conversion.
To find out the keyword go to secondary dimension and select: Traffic sources > Keywords
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Keyword ranking with competitors with lower #s
When analyzing a keyword ranking, our term is consistently on P1 P3-5. Looking more closely, I find that the numbers don't make sense to me. Our competitors have lower Page Authority 3s, lower # Root Domains Linking to Page, Lower Domain Authority 3#s and lower Root Domains linking to the Root Domains Linking to the Root Domain #s. What explains the consistent_ ranking discrepancy? Any ideas?_
Reporting & Analytics | | Chermak1 -
Regular Expressions in Google Analytics
Hi All I've been struggling to create a regular expression for a Google Analytics goal step that would match the following: ^/specifictextstring/anytextstring/anytextstring/
Reporting & Analytics | | Cabbagefeet
^/specifictextstring/anytextstring/ However I don't want it to match any URLs that end with: /anytextstring**_**phonecall or /phonecall, for example: /specifictextstring/anytextstring/anytextstring/anytextstring**phonecall
/specifictextstring/anytextstring/anytextstring**phonecall
/specifictextstring/anytextstring/anytextstring/phonecall
/specifictextstring/anytextstring/phonecall Does anyone have any ideas? Thanks in advance for all contributions.0 -
How do I cancel a scheduled Dashboard report in Google Analytics?
I created a few Dashboards in Google Analytics and scheduled them to be emailed for the next 6 months. Now I want to cancel those scheduled emails and am not finding those Dashboard reports/emails anywhere so I can cancel them. Do you know how to stop these emails from being sent?
Reporting & Analytics | | cindyt-170380 -
Google Analytics - Still Seeing Keyword Data
Hi, I hope you can answer this question for me, obviously I'm aware of the changes regarding "not provided" in analytics however I am still getting keyword referral data in analytics (not much of course!) in the section Acquisition>Keyword>Organic Can anybody explain why I am still seeing organic keyword data even up until yesterday for the odd term? I cannot find an answer anywhere!!! Many thanks
Reporting & Analytics | | splendidapple1 -
Google Analytics: Multi channel funnel
Hi 🙂 I have a little problem. In Multi-channel Funnel Overview I see 50 conversions from Paid Search (screenshot 1). But when I click on Assisted Conversion and then choose Paid Search, I see 31 Assisted Conversions and 32 Last Interaction Conversion. (screenshot 2) So my question is - why the number of converstions in overview (50) is different than number in Assisted Conversions (assisted or last interaction conversion, or both together)? Probably, the answer is so simply, but I can found out it! 🙂 thanks a lot. X6UihL7.png lCNsw4T.png
Reporting & Analytics | | visibilitysk0 -
Keyword Diversity: What Does it Mean?
I recently read this awesome article by Ian Lurie on the Portent blog: http://www.portent.com/blog/analytics/seo-analytics-middle-earth-style.htm However, I keep getting stumped by what he means under the "Grade Yourself" section by "keyword diversity." Of course, I've tried to ask him, but he hasn't yet responded. Besides, I like to get the opinion of the SEOMoz crowd anyway. So what is "keyword diversity"? Is it the total number different link texts out there linking to my site? The total number of keywords I'm actively tracking and optimizing for? The total number of phrases for which I rank in a Google search engine (if it's even possible to know that)? Thanks, Benjamin
Reporting & Analytics | | 1000Bulbs0 -
Google Analytics and backlinking
Let say I have my main site and my secondary site that is optimized for a slightly different set of keywords (nonetheless still relevant to my main site). I have several links from a secondary site to my main site. Secondary site is on a different C-block. Do you ladies and gentlemen think that if I put both websites under the same google analytics account, Google is going to penalize me or remove some of the juice that is flowing from secondary site to the main site because it would detect through GA that both sites belong to the same entity?
Reporting & Analytics | | SirMax0 -
Tracking Required Form Fields in Google Analytics
I tried searching for this elsewhere but am having a hard time finding a good answer. Is it possible to track the effect of required form fields on conversions in Google Analytics? In other words, how do I track whether or not more/less people fill out a form if I make "Last Name" a required field? Thanks 🙂
Reporting & Analytics | | kylesuss0