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Official statement

Google Search Console is a useful tool that, when used alongside other tools like Site Kit, helps improve the overall online presence of a website.
3:05
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 3:36 💬 EN 📅 17/12/2020 ✂ 6 statements
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Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google positions Search Console as a central tool for enhancing online presence, explicitly mentioning its use alongside other tools like Site Kit. For an SEO practitioner, this statement confirms that GSC remains the backbone of technical diagnostics, but it must be paired with other data sources to obtain a complete view. The challenge: identify which data GSC does NOT provide and fill those gaps with appropriate third-party tools.

What you need to understand

What does Google really mean with this statement?

Aurora Morales, Google's official spokesperson, reminds us that Search Console is not designed to operate in isolation. The explicit mention of Site Kit — Google's own WordPress plugin — indicates a desire to promote an integrated ecosystem where GSC data is enriched by other metrics.

This statement comes at a time when many beginner SEOs still believe that GSC alone is sufficient to steer a strategy. Google subtly corrects this perception by insisting on the complementarity of tools. The choice of the word “together” is not trivial: it implies a necessary multi-source approach.

Why can't Search Console do it all on its own?

GSC excels in three areas: indexing (coverage, robots.txt, sitemaps), search performance (impressions, clicks, average position), and technical issues (Core Web Vitals, structured data, mobile-first). But it remains silent on critical aspects.

No real traffic data with user journey, no conversion tracking, no insight into on-site behavior. No complete backlink monitoring, nor competitive analysis. GSC tells you what Google sees — it doesn't tell you what your visitors do or what your competition earns.

Site Kit: just a showcase or a real asset?

Site Kit connects GSC, Analytics, AdSense, and PageSpeed Insights into a unified WordPress dashboard. For small sites or beginners, it's convenient — it centralizes. But for an SEO working on dozens of domains, the tool remains superficial.

The real message from Google here: use our ecosystem. It's a strategy for retaining users within Google products. Nothing wrong with that, but a serious practitioner knows that it’s essential to cross-reference with Screaming Frog, Ahrefs, SEMrush, or Botify depending on budget and needs.

  • Search Console remains the go-to tool for diagnosing indexing, coverage, and organic search performance
  • It must be systematically paired with Analytics (real traffic), a crawler (architecture), a backlink tool (link building), and a position tracker
  • Site Kit simplifies access to Google data but does not replace a complete analysis stack for a professional SEO
  • The statement confirms that Google encourages a multi-tool approach rather than exclusive dependence on GSC
  • The absence of mention of specialized third-party tools (crawlers, position tracking) is revealing: Google promotes its own ecosystem

SEO Expert opinion

Does this statement really bring anything new?

Let's be honest: no. Any SEO who has been working for more than two years knows that GSC alone is not enough. This statement feels more like a pedagogical reminder for beginners than a strategic revelation. What’s interesting is the timing and the choice of words.

Google increasingly insists on the 'conjoint' use of its tools. Why? Because they probably see that many webmasters exploit only a fraction of the available data. By explicitly mentioning Site Kit, Google is promoting its own product — which makes sense commercially but limits the objectivity of the message. [To be verified]: no public data demonstrates that Site Kit actually improves SEO compared to other tool stacks.

What data does Search Console still not provide?

Despite regular improvements, GSC still has major blind spots. No historical tracking beyond 16 months (unless regularly exporting manually). No real-time traffic data. No complete view of the inbound link profile — the sample provided remains partial and biased.

Search performance data are sampled when the volume becomes significant, which skews fine analysis. And most importantly, no data on competitors: you only see your own site. For a complete audit, you must necessarily cross-reference with a professional crawler, a position tracking tool, and a backlink solution.

When does this multi-tool approach become essential?

On a site with fewer than 1000 pages with a local or niche strategy, GSC + Analytics + a free position tool may suffice temporarily. However, as soon as we talk about an e-commerce site with several thousand references, a media site with high volume, or a multilingual B2B portal, the equation changes.

The crawl budget, managing facets, precisely tracking internal linking, analyzing server logs — all this requires specialized tools that GSC does not replace. And when you manage 20 clients across 20 different domains, centralizing solely in GSC becomes quickly unmanageable. You need a stack that aggregates, correlates, and automates part of the analyses. This is where professional third-party tools (Botify, OnCrawl, Sistrix depending on markets) become non-negotiable.

Attention: Google never mentions competing tools in its official communications. This statement intentionally directs towards Site Kit, but it does not necessarily reflect the best technical choice for a high-stakes business website.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you practically do with this information?

If you are currently only using Search Console on its own, the urgency is to map your blind spots. Conduct a quick audit: are you really tracking user behavior post-click? Are you regularly crawling your site to detect 404 errors, redirect chains, or internal linking issues before Google alerts you?

The pragmatic approach: pair GSC with Google Analytics 4 (or Matomo if you want to remain GDPR-friendly without Google dependency), a crawler (Screaming Frog free up to 500 URLs, or paid beyond that), and a position tracking tool (Ranks, SEMrush, Ahrefs based on budget). This minimal stack already gives you a usable 360° view.

What mistakes to avoid in this multi-tool approach?

First classic mistake: multiplying tools without methodology. Having ten dashboards open is pointless if you don’t know what data to look for and why. Define clear KPIs for each tool — GSC for indexing and technical health, Analytics for behavior, crawler for architecture, backlinks for link building.

Second trap: believing that Site Kit replaces a professional stack. For a 50-page WordPress showcase site, why not? But when we talk about several thousand pages, e-commerce filters, dynamic content, or international strategy, Site Kit quickly shows its structural limits. Do not confuse ease of use with depth of analysis.

How to check if your site is properly monitored?

Ask yourself these questions: if Google deindexes 500 pages tonight, how and when do you know it? If your organic traffic drops by 30% on a specific category, how quickly can you identify the cause? If a competitor steals 10 major backlinks from you, how many days does it take to detect it?

If you hesitate on any of these answers, your monitoring is incomplete. A solid setup includes: configured GSC alerts (Search Console Insights + automated emails), automated weekly crawls, daily position tracking on top keywords, monthly monitoring of the link profile. And most importantly, a unique dashboard that correlates these sources — Data Studio, Looker, or a custom solution.

  • Connect Search Console AND Google Analytics 4 (or alternative) on all managed sites
  • Set up an automated weekly crawl (Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, OnCrawl depending on volume)
  • Configure position tracking on at least the top 50-100 strategic queries
  • Monitor the backlink profile with a dedicated tool (Ahrefs, Majestic, SEMrush) — at least a monthly crawl
  • Create a unified dashboard crossing indexing (GSC), real traffic (Analytics), technical health (crawler), and link building
  • Set up automatic alerts for indexing drops, peaks in 5xx errors, and sharp variations in organic traffic
Search Console remains the central tool for any serious SEO management, but it must integrate into a complete stack. The multi-tool approach is not a luxury — it’s an operational necessity once you go beyond the stage of a personal blog. If this orchestration of tools and data seems too complex to structure on your own, reaching out to a specialized SEO agency may prove wise: they already hold the licenses, refined analysis processes, and experience to quickly identify the priority levers in your specific sector.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Search Console seule suffit-elle pour piloter le SEO d'un site e-commerce ?
Non. GSC fournit indexation et performance de recherche, mais ne suit ni le comportement utilisateur post-clic, ni l'architecture fine du site, ni le profil de backlinks complet. Un site e-commerce nécessite crawler, Analytics et suivi de positions minimum.
Site Kit remplace-t-il vraiment les outils SEO professionnels ?
Pour un site vitrine WordPress simple, Site Kit centralise commodément les données Google. Mais il manque profondeur d'analyse, crawl technique, suivi concurrentiel et monitoring de backlinks — indispensables sur sites à fort enjeu business.
Quels outils doivent obligatoirement compléter Search Console ?
Stack minimale : Google Analytics (trafic réel), un crawler (Screaming Frog, Sitebulb, OnCrawl), un outil de suivi de positions (Ranks, SEMrush), et un outil de backlinks (Ahrefs, Majestic). Cette combinaison couvre indexation, comportement, technique et netlinking.
Pourquoi Google ne mentionne-t-il que Site Kit et pas les outils tiers ?
Google promeut son propre écosystème pour garder les utilisateurs dans ses produits. Aucune communication officielle ne cite Screaming Frog, Ahrefs ou Botify — ce qui ne signifie évidemment pas qu'ils sont inutiles, au contraire.
Comment détecter qu'on a des angles morts dans son monitoring SEO ?
Teste : si tu ne peux pas identifier en 5 minutes la cause d'une chute de trafic organique de 30%, ou si tu découvres des problèmes d'indexation plusieurs jours après leur apparition, ton monitoring est incomplet. Il manque corrélation et alertes automatisées.
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