Search Console export → dashboard

Your Search Console export, your clicks dashboard.

Export Performance from Search Console, drop the CSV, and see total clicks, the trend over time, your top queries, CTR and average position — without wrestling a pivot table.

01 · How it works

Export, drop, done.

Search Console is great for spelunking, slow for a quick read. Export the Performance CSV and this builds the view you actually want: total clicks, the trend, top queries, and CTR and position at a glance.

i. export

Export from Search Console

Performance → Export → CSV. The Queries and Dates tabs come with Clicks, Impressions, CTR, Position and Date — all we need.

ii. detect

Clicks becomes the metric

The Clicks column is recognized as the primary number and Impressions as a second. Date becomes the time axis.

iii. read

Clicks, queries, CTR

Total clicks, daily/weekly trend, top queries by clicks, plus CTR and average position — click any bar to filter.

02 · The views

The performance read Search Console scatters.

Everything you check before a content review, arranged automatically from the raw export.

  • 01

    Clicks & impressions together

    Total clicks up top, impressions alongside, so reach and demand sit in one view.

  • 02

    Top queries by clicks

    The Query column becomes a breakdown — see which searches actually drive traffic.

  • 03

    CTR and position in context

    Average CTR and position ride along, so a high-impression, low-click query is obvious.

  • 04

    Private by default

    Your search data is parsed locally. It never leaves your browser — verify in DevTools → Network.

"I drop the Performance export and the query picture is just there. No more manual sort-and-filter every Monday."
— an SEO
03 · FAQ

Search dashboard questions.

Which Search Console export works?
The standard Performance export (Performance → Export). Any CSV with Clicks, Impressions and either a Query or Date column works — the Queries and Dates tabs both load.
Yes. Clicks is the headline metric and Impressions sits beside it, while CTR and average Position come straight from the export, so under-clicked high-impression queries stand out.
Yes — click any query bar and the whole dashboard recomputes for that search, so you see its clicks, CTR and position on their own.
No. Parsing and aggregation happen entirely in your browser. The file never touches a server.
Load whichever tab you need — Dates gives the trend over time, Queries gives the breakdown. The Performance export bundles them, so you get both the time axis and the per-query view.