SEO
7 viktiga tips och tricks som du kanske inte känner till

It may not look like one of the fancy, paid SEO tools you’re used to logging into, but Excel remains one of the most versatile and powerful tools in an SEO professional’s toolbox.
You can use Excel to track and analyze key metrics such as rankings, website traffic, and backlinks.
Use it to create and update meta tags, track and analyze competitors’ SEO strategies and performance, build automated reports, and take care of many of the data tasks you’ll encounter every day.
Combine your Excel knowledge with Python, Tableau, R, and other tools, and there is nothing you can’t do.
If you’ve never worked with data before, you’ll find Excel has a bit of a learning curve, but you can use it right from the start. And it’s flexible enough to scale and grow as your site grows.
Why Excel For SEO Tasks?
While many paid tools can help you do the same tasks, Excel is a fantastic option to enhance, combine, or replace those tools.
- It’s affordable and comes with a range of tools you already use.
- There are a ton of resources and courses to help you learn.
- Easily handles large amounts of data.
- Sorting and de-duplicating – a feature often missing when you need it.
- Create and manage databases with simple formulas.
- Data ports easily to other tools and is available for other tasks.
- Pivot tables and smart charts.
1. Combine Multiple Data Sources
You will often find yourself having to merge data from multiple sources.
This is intuitive and quick in Tableau, Python, or R, but you can do the same in Excel using Power Query.
There are a few steps to this process, but it’s not as complicated as you might think – even if you are new to working with data or Excel.
Power Query has automated and simplified tasks that required a lot of time and skill.
And it is probably THE best Excel feature for business and SEO professionals.
Seem a bit daunting? Don’t worry. There are several courses and tutorials on YouTube to get you started.
What It’s Good For:
- Building reports.
- Analytics and sales data.
- Combining data sources to identify opportunities and gain insights.
2. Data Cleaning
Much of your time is lost simply preparing data for analysis. It doesn’t have to be that way.
Large lists are often larger than they need to be. Finding and manually removing all the duplicates, however, can be a serious pain.
Excel can do this instantly for you. Simply go to the “Data” tab and click “Remove Duplicates.”
Unwanted spaces and blank lines tend to cause havoc with many tasks, formulas, and statistics.
Excel will remove them for you simply by going to Edit > Find > Go To. Select “Special,” “Blanks,” and tell Excel how it should handle them.
“Convert text to columns” can be a lifesaver, especially if you’ve received data where the addresses or names are all in the same cell or you need to extract domains from email addresses.
Go to Data > Text to Columns. Then, indicate what to use for Delimiters (comma or space) and preview the results. When you’re ready, click “Next,” choose a destination, and click “Finish.”
When To Use It:
- Data analysis.
- Data processing.
- Processing and cleaning lead databases.
- Working with any data.
3. Power Excel With Add-On Tools
Some of the more complex tasks, such as crawling, require a bit of coding knowledge.
If you don’t have that in your skillset, however, there are tools you can download, integrate with other tools, and add on.

SEOTools offers off and on-page SEO tools, integrations, connectors, spiders, and several other tools that make it easy to customize your Excel and create custom projects.
SEOGadget brings the power of Moz, Grepwords, and Majestic to Excel.
Analysis ToolPak is for serious data analysis. This add-on improves and automates in-depth statistics, perfect for forecasting, trending, regression analysis, and more complex data analysis tasks you might otherwise perform in R or Python.
When To Use It:
- Reporting.
- Regular data analysis.
- Presentations.
- Integrating and coordinating with other teams.
4. Infographics And Charts
Data is useless if you can’t understand it.
In fact, data visualization and storytelling are likely some of the most important skills you can have. This is where tools like Power Query and PivotTables come in.
Built right into Excel, pivot tables are the other valuable tools you have for this purpose.
However, instead of just creating a straight pivot table and a related chart, save yourself some steps by creating a master “template” first that you can then replicate as needed and adjust to suit your needs.

In many instances, however, you will need to work with dates or segments of the data. For that, you’ll want to enter splicers and timelines.
- To splice data into segments: Select the pivot table and go to PivotTable Tools > Analyze > Filter > Insert Slicer. Then, simply input how you would like to segment the content (e.g., by product or topic).
- To utilize timelines: Click the pivot table’s tools option, go to Analyze > Filter > Insert Timeline. Once there, you can choose what you’d like to use, style it, add captions, and more.
If you’ve never used Excel’s PivotTables before, a short tutorial will have you on your way to analyzing data in no time.
Still want a little more? Make your reports, social media, and updates even better by upping your data visualization game with add-ons like People Graph.
When To Use It:
- Reporting.
- Daily updates.
- Surface data analysis.
- Team collaboration and integration.
5. Automate Common Tasks With Macros
SEO, particularly agency SEO, is full of repetitive tasks like weekly reporting that consume much of your time. Excel’s macros are the answer. And they’re really easy to use.
Under the “View” tab, click “Macros” and “Record Macro.”

Fill out the details.
The macro is now recording. So, simply walk through the steps that you’d like to automate. And when you’re done, go back to the ribbon and stop the recording.
When you’re ready to run the automation, go to the macro button in the ribbon, click “View Macros,” and select the desired macro from the list.
If you have some macros that you use more often than others, you can add them to the Quick Access Toolbar.
When To Use It:
- Sorting.
- Calculations.
- Reformatting data.
- Setting up new site documents or new pages for reports.
6. Easily Import Feeds And Data Into Excel
If you use Google Alerts or publicera frequently, automatically importing feeds into Excel can be a huge time saver.
To start, simply grab the RSS feed address. (Or, create an alert for Google Alerts and have them delivered as an RSS feed.)

Then, go to Google Sheets and use the IMPORTFEED function to bring the updates straight into a spreadsheet.
Alternatively, you can add the information to separate columns.

From here, you can regularly download and import the data into Excel, combine it with other related data, or integrate it into your custom dashboards.
If you need something a little more automatic, use Google Apps Script or one of the add-ons available to automate the process.
Want a little more data behind your reports? You can scrape and import Google Search Results into Excel, too.
7. Backlink Analysis
To analyze backlinks with Excel, collect backlink data with tools such as Ahrefs, Majestic, or Google Search Console.
Then, import it into Excel and use it to analyze your backlinks in a number of ways:
- Who links to you: Use Excel’s sorting and filtering tools to filter the data and use the IF function: IF(logic, true_value,[false_value]) to sort and identify domains linking to you.
- What do people link to: Sort and filter to see the anchor text used most often for your backlinks (using frequency/count).
- When did people link to you: Organize the data by date to see how old your links are and when most of your backlinks were acquired.
Find trends or patterns in your backlink profiles with pivot tables, groups, charts, and graphs by combining your backlink and sales or conversion data.
Highlight specific data based on certain conditions with conditional formatting. This makes it easy to spot backlinks from high-authority websites or backlinks with specific anchor text.
Sammanfattning
Many people overlook Excel either because they think it’s too basic to be of much use. Or it looks too intimidating or daunting to learn.
But those of us who use it understand just how powerful it can be and the unlimited possibilities it provides.
Hopefully, these tips will help you craft better strategies, find new opportunities, and tell your story with better reports and dashboards.
Utvald bild: Paulo Bobita/Search Engine Journal
SEO
10 Optimization Tips to Build a Mobile-Friendly Site

A majority of all website visits worldwide are attributed to mobile devices. Optimizing your website for mobile has never been more important in SEO.
In this article, I’ll kick things off by explaining what mobile SEO is and why it’s important. I’ll then get to the core focus of this article, sharing my top 10 tips for effective mobile optimization.
Mobile SEO is the process of optimizing the mobile version of a website to drive organic traffic from search engines. Mobile optimization is focused on providing the best experience on mobile devices where technical implementations, such as using responsive design, play a key role.
Enligt Statista, mobile devices generated 59% of worldwide mobile traffic in the final quarter of 2022.
It’s not just users that predominantly view your site from a mobile device, but Googlebot too.
In 2016, Google announced mobile-first indexing. As a result, Google predominantly crawls the web via the Googlebot smartphone user agent. This means that Google will primarily use the mobile version of content for indexing and ranking.
Mobile-first indexing began rolling out in 2018. By 2021, a majority of sites moved over to the new format of crawling.
For many years, this was a hot topic among SEO professionals. However, mobile-first indexing is now “part of life,” as put by John Mueller from Google.
So now we know why mobile optimization is so crucial, here are my top 10 tips to ensure you effectively optimize for mobile.
Tip 1. Use responsive design
When it comes to picking your approach to serving content to different devices, you have a few options to choose from.
Responsive design (recommended)
With responsive design, you serve the same HTML file regardless of the device. CSS then alters the rendering of the page to suit the dimensions of the device’s viewport. This also means that you use a singular URL to serve all versions of your content.
Responsive design ensures you can effectively load the same piece of content, oriented to suit your device.

Responsive design is the recommended choice, not just among SEOs but in Google guidance too.
Back in 2019, John took to Reddit to state, “At some point all of these sites with separate mobile URLs should just move to a responsive design.”
Ultimately, there’s no SEO gain by using responsive design. However, it is much easier and cleaner to maintain. For example, you won’t have to worry about canonical issues or Googlebot misunderstanding which URL to serve in the mobile/desktop rankings.
Separate domain/URL structure (not recommended)
An approach used commonly in the past is to serve the mobile version of a page via a separate URL or domain structure. A common example of this is the m. structure.
Desktop: example.com/page
Mobile: m.example.com/page
When a user loads your page, the server will have to determine which device the user is using and then direct them to the appropriate URL.

This approach is not recommended, as using multiple URLs for a single page leads to a messy scenario of URL management.
Even with the correct signals in place, there is the added risk of Googlebot not interpreting these signals appropriately. This can lead to indexation issues or even Google identifying the pages as duplicate content.
If you currently work with this setup, you should ensure you follow the below canonical tag structure.
Desktop: Self-referencing canonical tag
Mobile: Canonical tag to target desktop URL
You’ll also want to implement a rel=”alternate” tag on the desktop version.
<link rel="alternate" media="only screen and (max-width: 640px)" href="https://m.example.com/">
That said, the best solution in the long term is to move to a responsive design setup.
Dynamic serving (not recommended)
Similar to responsive design, with dynamic serving, you’ll be serving content suited to different devices via a singular URL.
However, the main difference with dynamic serving is that you’ll serve different HTML files pre-defined to suit the respective device.

This approach certainly trumps the separate URL/domain structure option, as you have the advantage of serving content to multiple devices via a single URL.
However, dynamic serving is not recommended. History teaches us that this approach is renowned for technical issues.
With dynamic serving, it’s up to your web server to determine which device the user is browsing on. Quite often with dynamic serving setups, the desktop version of the page is accidentally shown to users on a mobile device.
Tip 2. Optimize for page speed on mobile devices
In the era of Kärnwebben Vitals, you could argue that strong page speed performance has never been more sought after by SEO professionals.
In fact, when Google first rolled out Core Web Vitals as a ranking factor in 2021, it focused solely on mobile performance. Google then waited until February 2022 before using desktop Core Web Vital performance as a ranking factor. It’s clear to see which device Google prioritizes.
Google applies mobile and desktop Core Web Vital ranking signals to the respective search results. So for mobile search results, Google will focus on Core Web Vital performance from mobile devices.
A great starting point to see how your site performs against Core Web Vitals is to head to the dedicated report in Google Search Console (GSC). You can navigate to this report via left-hand navigation under the Experience section.

Clicking into the mobile report, you can see how your site has been performing against each Core Web Vital metric over the past three months. This data is gathered via CrUX (Chrome User Experience Report) from real users on your site who used a mobile device.

What’s great about this report in GSC is that the issue URLs are bucketed together into groups of similar pages. This means you can note down a list of key page templates that you need to work on.

For a more detailed insight into issue areas and potential fixes, Page Speed Insights is always worth a check.
PageSpeed Insights is simple to use. Just enter in the URL of the page you wish to test and hit “enter.” By default, the tool will automatically review the mobile version of your page.

You’ll initially be presented with some insights under the heading “Discover what your real users are experiencing.” This report is the main one I focus on, to start with.
This report utilizes real user data via CrUX. Not only is it important to understand the experience of real users as opposed to bots, but Google also uses this data source within its ranking algorithm.
Here, we can see that Ahrefs’ homepage has passed all three Core Web Vital metrics.

Further down the report, you can also find some actions under the “opportunities” and “diagnostics” sections. These make for some great starting points when having conversations with developers about improving Core Web Vital performance.

When using PageSpeed Insights, don’t forget to test the URLs of multiple page templates within the tool. Page speed performance often varies considerably across different page types.
We’re only scratching the surface here, though. GSC and PageSpeed Insights are only great starting points for auditing page speed.
Check out Patrick Stox’s dedicated guides on page speed och Kärnwebben Vitals to take your page speed knowledge, analysis, and action plan to the next level.
Tip 3. Test and monitor your site for errors
It’s good practice to regularly test your site for key mobile usability errors.
There are multiple tools for this, but a great place to start is via GSC with a dedicated “Mobile Usability” report. You can find this report under the Experience section of the left-hand navigation.
Here, you can keep track of the number of URLs with mobile usability issues. GSC provides a three-month velocity graph. This is handy for identifying spikes in errors, allowing you to correlate them with development releases.

By scrolling down, you can see the exact mobile usability issues that occur on your site. By clicking through to the individual reports, you’ll also be able to see which URLs are affected.

Outside of Search Console, you can also use Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test tool to uncover mobile usability issues.
This is especially useful if you don’t have GSC access to the site you wish to review. Gaining access is recommended though, as you’ll automatically have a wider range of URLs covered.
To use the Mobile-Friendly Test, simply enter the URL (or code) for the page you wish to test to see if your page is deemed as mobile-friendly.
In this case, the tools show that the Ahrefs homepage has passed the test.

On the other hand, if your tested page isn’t mobile-friendly, you’ll be hit with a message saying it’s not usable on mobile with a list of reasons why.

Keen to read more about specific mobile usability issues and how you can address them? Google has some great documentation that goes into more detail.
Tip 4. Make your content mobile-friendly
Making sure your website is optimized for mobile isn’t all about technical foundations. You’ll want to ensure your content is produced with mobile users in mind too.
Many SEOs prefer to use shorter paragraphs and sentences. This aligns nicely with mobile optimization practices.
This approach ensures that your content is readable on mobile devices. Who lands on an article and wants to read a big wall of text? Not me.
As a general guide, aim for a maximum of three sentences per paragraph. If a paragraph naturally just has one sentence, that’s OK too.

When proofing copy drafts, it’s good practice to break long sentences into shorter sentences where possible.
The same rule applies to introductions. In fact, you should apply these rules most strictly here. These should be short, snappy, and to the point.

To further enhance readability, you’ll want to break your copy up by including various elements and media.
These can include:
- Bullet points
- Numbered lists
- Quotes
- Images
- Videos
See what I just did there?
When using different types of media, you’ll want to make sure these display correctly on mobile devices. It’s so frustrating for users when an image loads way out of proportion.
Tip 5. Optimize for mobile SERPs
Mobile SERPs (search engine results pages) can vary quite considerably between the mobile and desktop versions.
When browsing the SERPs for a chosen keyword, it’s important to manually check both the desktop and mobile results.
Here’s an example. Let’s take this wikiHow search result for the query, “how to fry an egg.”
On the desktop search results, we have a pretty standard search result.

On the mobile results, however, we can see that Google has included the how-to images rich result.

SERP estate is crucial. Gaining rich features like in the example above helps your result stand out from the crowd.
This shows how important and relevant schema markup is for mobile optimization. In this example, wikiHow did a nice job by including how-to schema.
Looking to switch device in the search results but don’t want to grab your phone? With Ahrefs’ SEO Toolbar, you can load the results from another device directly in your desktop browser.

Tip 6. Include mobile-friendly navigation
One of the biggest considerations when optimizing your site for mobile devices is the choice of implementation for the header navigation.
This is quite easily one of the most complicated areas of the site to get right for a mobile device.
The hamburger menu has become a popular option in the mobile-first world. It gets its name because the button often looks like a hamburger (apparently).
Here’s an example of the hamburger menu in action on Amazon.

Once you click on the “hamburger” icon, usually located at the very top of the page, the menu will then open out.
In this case, the menu opens out from the left-hand side with options to further expand into navigation subcategories.

Hamburger menus are hotly debated among SEOs and UX professionals. In my opinion, however, you can’t beat the hamburger navigation when it comes to optimizing for mobile.
Not only is this approach clean and compact, but users are also becoming more accustomed to these types of menus on mobile.
It’s OK to go with the “mega menu” approach for your desktop site and switch to the hamburger menu for your mobile site.
The number #1 rule is to ensure that the links within both menus are the same. You’ll want to make sure that you include the exact same links on both your desktop and mobile navigation.
Here, we can see that Apple displays the mega menu on desktop.

And on its mobile site, it uses the hamburger menu but shows the exact same links seen on the desktop version.

For e-commerce websites, faceted navigation is a big consideration too.
Let’s take a look back at Amazon. It has tons of filter options on its product listing pages.
To keep the faceted navigation compact for mobile users, it uses a similar approach to the hamburger menu.

Allowing the faceted navigation to expand on a simple button click keeps your page neat and compact. Perfect for mobile users.
Keen to learn more about site navigation? Be sure to check out Sam Underwood’s article on mastering website navigation.
Tip 7. Keep your content the same
Parity between your site’s mobile and desktop versions is essential. As we mentioned earlier, Google will predominantly crawl the mobile version of your website.
If you were to remove content from the mobile version of your page, you’d run the risk of weakening your content in the eyes of Google.
This rule should be applied to all types of content, from the copy itself to imagery. This rule also applies to technical items, from canonical tags to internal linking.
A great way to test mobile parity is to run a crawl on your mobile site and compare it against a crawl on the desktop version of your site.
Setting up a crawl via Ahrefs’ Site Audit, you have the option to switch between the mobile and desktop user agent.
You can locate this setting under the “Robots instructions” section of the crawl settings.

To test mobile parity via Site Audit, start two separate crawls. One with the user agent set to “AhrefsSiteAudit (Desktop),” and the other with “AhrefsSiteAudit (Mobile).”
You can then compare these crawls in the project history side by side to check for parity between the desktop and mobile crawls.

Notice significantly more errors on the mobile crawl compared to the desktop crawl? This can indicate that your technical elements aren’t being implemented correctly on mobile.
I Site Audit, it’s well worth comparing the HTML source code between your mobile and desktop crawls. This allows you to easily identify any unexpected differences between the mobile and desktop code of your page.
In the example below, we can see that the header menu code has changed between the mobile and desktop crawls. Luckily in this case, this code difference is expected.

You should also consider rendering JavaScript in the crawl settings for websites that heavily rely on that. You can then compare the rendered HTML between the crawls with different user agents. Check our guide to JavaScript SEO for more information.
Tip 8. Avoid intrusive interstitials
Interstitials (also known as pop-ups) that are intrusive and distracting are frustrating for users. This is often an even stronger frustration for mobile users, as pop-ups often take up an even bigger portion of the screen.
Not only could you be decreasing your conversion rate with annoying and intrusive pop-ups, but you’d also get a thumbs-down from Google.
As part of Google’s Page Experience set of ranking signals, Google approves more subtle interstitials as opposed to the large interstitials that cause great frustration.

The big exception to the rule here is that the interstitial may be required by law. Common examples include cookie consent and age gate pop-ups.
For example, on alcohol-related content, the supplier could land in hot water if they didn’t force a user to enter their date of birth before accessing the content.

Tip 9. Review mobile performance
It’s good practice to regularly review the devices that drive your website’s organic traffic.
Starting off with GSC, you can filter by device type in the search performance report.
Simply add a new filter by clicking the “+ new” button above the report and select “Device…”

Here, you can filter your organic performance report via device, allowing you to see just how much organic traffic you’ve acquired via mobile devices. You also have the option to compare traffic by device.

Similar to the “Mobile Usability” report in GSC, it’s worth keeping an eye out for any unexpected fluctuations and traffic drops in mobile traffic. This can be a sign of mobile optimization issues that need further investigation.
You can also view traffic by device in Google Analytics 4. Head to the “Device Category” report by loading Reports > User > Tech > Overview.
Here, you’ll want to click “View platform devices” for the full analytics by device.

You’ll then be presented with data tables, charts, and graphs based on traffic by device type. Don’t forget to add an organic traffic filter to ensure you’re looking purely at “SEO traffic.”

Tip 10. Track rankings on a mobile device
When it comes to tracking keywords, it’s easy to forget that rankings can vary between the desktop and mobile SERPs.
Luckily, switching between desktop and mobile on Ahrefs’ Rank Tracker is simple, making it super easy to see how your site is ranking on either SERP.
What’s also great about Rank Tracker is that you don’t need to specify a device as a setting when you first track your keywords. Keywords are automatically tracked within both the mobile and desktop SERPs.
Simply load your keyword report and switch between mobile and desktop reviews in the top left corner.

Slutgiltiga tankar
You may be wondering, “Should I just ditch the desktop version of my site and focus on mobile optimization?”
Steady on. It’s true that mobile is now the dominant device, but you won’t want to completely disregard the desktop experience.
Not only will some of your users visit your site via desktop, but Googlebot will also crawl via a desktop user agent from time to time (just not as frequently as the mobile version).
In fact, many websites continue to predominantly drive traffic through users on desktop. This is particularly the case for SaaS companies and many B2B-focused websites in general. For example, the Ahrefs Blog has over 70% of organic traffic coming from users on desktop devices.

To sum it up, the key takeaways are to:
- Show the same content on your mobile site as you would on your desktop site.
- Understand that responsive design is the way to go.
- Prioritize your mobile pages for page speed optimization.
- Not be afraid to use the hamburger menu for mobile devices.
- Regularly monitor and track mobile usability and mobile traffic/rankings.
Have any questions? Ping me på Twitter and let me know.
SEO
Google Search Console Tutorial: Analyzing Traffic Drops

In a YouTube video, Google’s Search Advocate, Daniel Waisberg, offers valuable tips on quickly spotting and analyzing the reasons for a decline in Google Search traffic.
The timing of this informative guide is perfect, as Google just wrapped up its March 2023 core algorithm update. Many people are now evaluating its impact on their websites.
If you’re trying to figure out how the update has affected your site, the Search Console Performance report is an excellent starting point.
Waisberg demonstrates how, when combined with Google Trends, the Search Console Performance report can help you investigate shifts in traffic patterns.
Main Reasons For Organic Traffic Drops
There can be several reasons for a drop in organic traffic. Waisberg highlights these main causes:
- Technical issues: Errors that prevent Google from crawling, indexing, or serving your pages to users. These could be site-level or page-level technical issues.
- Manual actions: If your website doesn’t follow Google’s guidelines, some pages or the entire site may be less visible in Google Search results.
- Algorithm updates: Core updates may change how some pages perform in Google Search over time, leading to a slow decline in traffic.
- Search interest disruption: Changes in user behavior or external influences could affect the demand for certain queries.
- Seasonality effects: Regular traffic fluctuations due to weather, vacations, or holidays.
- Reporting glitches: Sudden major changes followed by a quick return to the norm could indicate a simple glitch.
Analyzing Traffic Drops Using Search Console Performance Report
The Search Console Performance report is an effective tool for understanding traffic fluctuations.
To access the Performance report in Google Search Console, follow these simple steps:
- Log in to the Google Search Console website at search.google.com/search-console.
- Click on the website you want to analyze.
- In the left-hand sidebar menu, click on “Performance.”
You’ll now see the Performance report for your selected property, displaying data such as total clicks, impressions, average click-through rate (CTR), and average position for your website.
Waisberg suggests several ways to analyze the data:
- Expand the date range to 16 months to view the drop in context and identify any patterns or trends.
- Periodically export and store data to access more than 16 months of information.
- Compare the drop period to a similar period (e.g., the same month last year or the same day last week) to pinpoint the exact changes.
- Explore all available tabs to determine if changes occurred only for specific queries, pages, countries, devices, or Search appearances.
- Ensure you compare the same number of days and preferably the same days of the week.
- Analyze different Search types separately to understand if the drop was limited to Search, Google Images, Video, or News tab.
Using Google Trends For Industry Analysis
Google Trends provides insights into web, image, news, shopping, and YouTube search trends.
Waisberg recommends using it to:
- Analyze general trends within your industry or country to identify changes in user behavior or competing products.
- Segment data by country and category for more relevant insights into your website audience.
- Examine queries driving traffic to your site for seasonal fluctuations or trends.
Sammanfattningsvis
Understanding the reasons behind Google Search traffic drops is crucial. Using the Search Console Performance report and Google Trends, you can identify and analyze the causes of these drops, helping you stay ahead of industry trends and maintain your online presence.
In his next video, Waisberg will explore more ways to analyze search performance, including using a bubble chart.
Featured Image: Screenshot from YouTube, March 2023.
Källa: Youtube
SEO
Google Announces Ads Transparency Center And Safety Report

In an effort to prove its commitment to safe and transparent advertising for users and businesses, Google announced the launch of the Ads Transparency Center and the release of the 2022 Ads Safety Report.
What Is The Ads Transparency Center?
De Ads Transparency Center, rolling out to users worldwide over the next few weeks, offers a searchable database of all advertisements on Google Search, YouTube, and Display.
Tycka om ads transparency efforts from its peers in Big Tech, Google aims to ensure that users are well-informed about the ads they see. For instance, if you are interested in a product or service you saw in a Google Search ad, you can use the Ads Transparency Center to learn more about the brand before visiting its website.
The Ads Transparency Center shows key information about ads, including advertiser details, where/when an ad appeared and ran, and its format.

Google offers more transparency for political advertising. Additional details for political ads include the amount advertisers spent, the number of times the ad was shown, and the location targeting criteria.

Using The Ads Transparency Center As An Advertising Research Tool
Advertisers can use the Ads Transparency Center as a research tool to analyze competitors’ designs and ad copy to create Google Ads campaigns.
Meta offers similar ad information in the Facebook Ad Library, where advertisers and users can browse ads from brands in several fields, including politics, housing, employment, and credit. Ad details include the design and copy for all ad variations, the platforms where the ad is displayed, and when the ad was launched.

In addition to the Ads Transparency Center, you can visit My Ad Center in your Google Account. Launched in October, it allows you to review ads you’ve seen recently on Google. You can control the ads shown to you by category, brand, and sensitive topics.

Insights From The 2022 Ads Safety Report
I relaterade nyheter, Googles Säkerhetsrapport för annonser 2022 ger detaljerade insikter i dess ansträngningar för att förhindra bedrägeri, erbjuda transparens och skydda yngre användare.
Enligt rapporten lade Google till eller reviderade 29 policyer för annonsörer och utgivare förra året.
Baserat på dessa policyer togs över 4 miljarder annonser bort eller begränsades, och 6,7 miljoner annonsörskonton stängdes av.
Google utökade sin certifieringsprogram för finansiella tjänster, vilket kräver att annonsörer är auktoriserade av lokala tillsynsmyndigheter för att förhindra bedrägliga annonser.
Trots utmaningar från sofistikerade bedragare – som skadlig programvara som utger sig för att vara riktiga mjukvarumärken i Google Ads för att sprida skadlig kod – Google blockerade och tog bort 142 miljoner annonser för felaktig framställning och 198 miljoner annonser för kränkningar av finansiella tjänster.
Google tacklade desinformation genom att blockera annonser med skadliga hälsopåståenden, falska valpåståenden och klimatförändring avslag. Tiotals miljoner annonser som bröt mot denna policy, innehöll olämpligt innehåll eller marknadsförde farliga produkter togs bort.
Google verifierad 5 900 nya annonsörskonton som publicerar valannonser i USA, och över 2,6 miljoner overifierade valannonser blockerades.
Google förbjudna annonser avfärda, utnyttja eller tolerera kriget i Ukraina och avbrutna annonsaktiviteter i Ryssland. Över 17 miljoner annonser relaterade till kriget blockerades och annonser från över 275 statligt finansierade mediasajter togs bort.
Äntligen expanderade Google barnsäkerhetsskydd för användare under 18, blockering av annonsinriktning baserat på ålder, kön eller intressen och förbjuda vissa annonskategorier för tonåringar, inklusive dejtingappar, tävlingar och viktminskningsprodukter.
Hur annonsörer kan dra nytta av annonstransparens
Det finns fördelar med att granska innehållet i Ads Transparency Center.
De som ser annonser på Googles egenskaper kan lära sig mer om annonsörerna innan de köper. Annonsörer kan lära sig hur man skapar annonser som är bättre anpassade för sin målgrupp.
Annonsörer bör också granska Google Ads policycenter uppdateringar för att säkerställa att annonskampanjer inte blockeras, begränsas eller tas bort. Den erbjuder också alternativ för att åtgärda problematiska annonser, kontrollera statusen för ditt Google Ads-konto och rapportera Google Ads som bryter mot dess policyer.
Utvald bild: rafapress/Shutterstock
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