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Official statement

Historically, Google has chosen to develop features such as showing all backlinks or performance metrics for Googlebot in Search Console, rather than detailed ranking reports, directing their resources towards these developments.
2:13
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 2:45 💬 EN 📅 05/03/2009 ✂ 3 statements
Watch on YouTube (2:13) →
Other statements from this video 2
  1. 0:03 Faut-il arrêter de tracker vos positions SEO avec des outils automatisés ?
  2. 1:13 Faut-il vraiment arrêter de surveiller ses positions dans les SERP ?
📅
Official statement from (17 years ago)
TL;DR

Google deliberately prioritizes the development of technical features in Search Console — backlinks, crawl budget, Googlebot performance — at the expense of detailed ranking reports. This approach stems from a desire to control strategic information about positions and to push SEOs toward paid third-party tools. For practitioners, this means supplementing GSC with external position trackers to gain a complete view of their performance.

What you need to understand

What choices does Google make when developing Search Console?

Google has limited resources to develop features for Search Console. Every quarter, its teams must prioritize among hundreds of user requests and internal needs.

This statement reveals that technical reports (backlinks, Googlebot metrics, crawl) consistently take precedence over ranking reports. This is not by chance: it is a deliberate choice that reflects Google's product philosophy.

Why do backlinks and crawling take precedence over positions?

Backlink and crawl performance data are exclusive information that only Google can provide. No third-party tool can match the completeness of this data coming directly from Googlebot servers.

In contrast, positions in the SERPs are easily measurable by external tools such as Semrush, Ahrefs, or SE Ranking. Google therefore has no strategic interest in competing with these players, who, paradoxically, depend on its API.

Does this strategy hide a desire to limit transparency?

The answer is probably yes. By only providing aggregated data (impressions, average CTR, average position), Google maintains a degree of opacity around the actual distribution of positions.

Detailed ranking data would allow SEOs to reverse-engineer algorithms much more precisely. Google therefore prefers to provide just enough to be useful, but not enough to be dangerous.

  • Assumed priority: exclusive technical features (backlinks, crawl, indexing) take precedence over all
  • Ranking data: deliberately limited to aggregated averages in Performance
  • Product philosophy: provide what no one else can measure, delegate the rest to the third-party ecosystem
  • Information control: avoid giving overly precise tools to analyze ranking mechanisms

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with observed practices?

Absolutely. Since the launch of the new Search Console in 2018, Google has indeed developed reports on crawling, Core Web Vitals, page experience, indexable videos, but nothing new on positions.

The Performance report has remained almost identical: 16 months of maximum data, average positions per query, without detail on actual distribution (how often in position 1 vs. 10 for the same query). [To be verified]: Google has never published a roadmap explaining why this 16-month time limit remains fixed.

What are the unspoken truths behind this official justification?

The constraint of resources is partially true, but it is also a facade argument. Google has the technical means to provide more granular ranking data — proof of this is that YouTube Studio does it for videos.

The real issue lies elsewhere: detailed ranking reports would cannibalize third-party tools that pay Google to access certain APIs. And above all, it would give SEOs an advantage in understanding algorithmic fluctuations in real time.

Attention: Google rarely communicates completely transparently about its product choices. When a feature has not existed for 7 years, it is no longer a matter of priority but of a deliberate strategy.

In what cases does this rule not apply?

There are a few exceptions where Google has developed detailed visibility reports: Google Discover (impressions per article), Google News (editorial ranking), Shopping (product performance). Why this difference?

Because these interfaces serve Google's direct commercial interests (monetization of ads, market share against Facebook or Amazon). Classic organic search, however, is already dominant: Google has nothing to prove and prefers to keep control of the information.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely to compensate for this lack?

The first reality is that Search Console alone is not enough to drive an SEO strategy. It is essential to invest in a third-party position tracker (Semrush, Ahrefs, SE Ranking, Monitorank) to obtain daily data and a keyword view.

The second imperative is to cross-reference sources. GSC provides the actual queries that generate traffic (including the invisible long tail in tools). Trackers provide precise positions on a panel of strategic keywords. Both are complementary, not substitutable.

What mistakes should be avoided in interpreting GSC data?

A classic mistake is to think that the average position reflects a stable position. In reality, a keyword can fluctuate between position 3 and 15 depending on personalized queries, and GSC will just show an average of 9. This can be misleading.

Another trap is relying solely on 16 months of data to analyze trends. For seasonal industries or sites with a long history, it is necessary to regularly export and archive data; otherwise, you will lose memory beyond this window.

How can you build a robust tracking system?

The optimal approach combines three layers of data: GSC for real queries and technical diagnosis, position tracker for strategic keywords and competitive benchmarking, Analytics for post-click behavior and conversions.

Set up a weekly dashboard that cross-references these sources: tracking position changes vs. GSC traffic vs. GA4 conversions. This is the only way to quickly detect an algorithmic penalty or a content opportunity.

  • Invest in a third-party position tracking tool (minimum budget of €100-300/month depending on site size)
  • Export GSC data every month to build a history beyond 16 months
  • Create a dashboard that cross-references GSC, position tracker, and Analytics
  • Identify 50-100 strategic keywords to monitor daily in the tracker
  • Never take the average GSC position as absolute truth - always manually check SERPs for critical queries
  • Regularly audit backlinks via GSC to detect negative SEO or disavow opportunities
Given the intentional limitations of Search Console, a multiclass tracking system becomes essential. These infrastructures can be complex to develop and maintain, especially for multilingual sites or large e-commerce catalogs. If your team lacks the resources or expertise to effectively orchestrate these tools, hiring a specialized SEO agency can provide personalized support and help avoid costly interpretation errors that damage visibility.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Pourquoi Google ne fournit-il que 16 mois de données historiques dans la Search Console ?
Google justifie cette limite par des contraintes de stockage et de performance, mais c'est aussi une façon de limiter les analyses rétrospectives profondes. Pour les sites saisonniers ou les stratégies de contenu long terme, cette fenêtre est insuffisante et oblige à archiver manuellement les exports.
Les données de positions dans la GSC sont-elles fiables ?
Elles sont exactes mais incomplètes : la position moyenne masque les variations réelles (un mot-clé peut osciller entre 1 et 20 selon la personnalisation). De plus, la GSC échantillonne certaines requêtes très longue traîne. Pour les mots-clés stratégiques, un tracker externe reste indispensable.
Quelles fonctionnalités techniques de la GSC sont vraiment utiles au quotidien ?
Le rapport de couverture d'index (erreurs, pages exclues), les Core Web Vitals par URL, et surtout les backlinks qui sont une source exclusive et gratuite. Le rapport d'expérience sur la page permet aussi de prioriser les optimisations techniques.
Est-ce que Google va un jour ajouter des rapports de ranking détaillés ?
Peu probable à court terme. Cette déclaration confirme que c'est un choix stratégique assumé depuis des années, pas une simple question de priorisation temporaire. Google préfère laisser ce marché aux outils tiers.
Peut-on contourner les limitations de la GSC avec l'API ?
L'API Search Console donne accès aux mêmes données que l'interface, avec les mêmes limites (16 mois, positions moyennes). Elle permet juste d'automatiser les exports et de croiser avec d'autres sources dans vos propres dashboards. Pas de données cachées supplémentaires.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Links & Backlinks Web Performance Search Console

🎥 From the same video 2

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 2 min · published on 05/03/2009

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