Statistics Dashboard: Reading Your SEO Metrics

Analytics
by Anton S
Minimal 3D illustration of an abstract dashboard panel on a pastel platform, representing reading SEO metrics statistics.

Open Seokai and the statistics dashboard is the first thing you see. That's by design. It pulls the signals that actually tell you where your store's SEO stands into one screen, so you don't have to dig through every product to know what needs work. Here's how to read it.

What you're looking at

Two things, mostly: how much of your store has been optimized, and how strong that work is. The dashboard rolls up coverage across your products, collections, pages, and blog articles, sets it next to your SEO scores, and shows recent activity. You get the wide view and the details that explain it in the same glance.

The numbers, and what each one means

  • Optimization coverage: how many of your entities have complete, quality metadata versus how many are still missing it.
  • SEO scores: a per-entity rating reflecting how good each item's titles, descriptions, and other signals are.
  • Recent activity: a running log of what's been optimized lately, so progress is visible instead of guessed at.
  • Items needing attention: direct shortcuts to the entities with gaps or low scores, so the next thing to fix is one click away.

Making sense of an SEO score

Every entity gets a score that sums up how well its metadata is set up. A high score generally means titles and descriptions are present, well-written, and clear of the usual problems. Read it as a triage signal, not a grade: low scores are your best candidates for the next round of work, high scores can wait. You don't need to chase a perfect number on every item.

From numbers to next steps

  1. Open Seokai. You'll land on the statistics dashboard.
  2. Read your overall coverage to see how much of the store still needs attention.
  3. Sort or filter to surface the lowest-scoring entities, and start there.
  4. Run Seokai's generation tools on those items, then watch the scores and coverage climb.

Getting the most out of it

Check in regularly rather than once. A single snapshot tells you where you are; a few of them tell you which direction you're moving, which is the part that matters. Pair the dashboard with weekly email reports so progress reaches you between visits. As coverage rises and scores improve, you build a clear, data-backed record of what your SEO work is actually doing, useful the next time someone asks whether any of it is paying off.

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Blurred article main image. Minimal 3D illustration of an abstract dashboard panel on a pastel platform, representing reading SEO metrics statistics.