Read Search Console by page type.

Search Console can’t tell a product page from a blog post. We label every URL by its role on your site — listing, detail, home, blog — inside your own warehouse, so every report compares page types, not single pages.

Maps
URLs → home · listing · detail · blog
Lives in
Your own BigQuery
Source
Search Console

One template, thousands of rows

In Search Console every URL is its own row — even when a thousand of them are the same template. A whole page type — every product detail, every listing — can drift together while no single URL looks bad enough to notice.

And Search Console has no idea which row is a listing and which is an article. The question you actually want — “are my detail pages or my listings losing ground?” — has no field to group by.

Labelled once, in your own warehouse

Not a filter you re-apply each session — a rule set that lives with your data and runs on every report.

  1. Step 1

    Map your page types

    We read your site structure and write the rules that label each URL by its role — home, listing, detail, blog, and whatever else your site has. Drawn from your real URLs, not a fixed list.

  2. Step 2

    Labelled in your warehouse

    Every page gets its page type once inside your own BigQuery, next to the raw Search Console data. The mapping is yours, not trapped in a tool.

  3. Step 3

    Every report splits by type

    Clicks, impressions, and average position roll up per page type across all of your reporting — no regex to retype.

Your types come from your site

There’s no universal list. The rules read each site’s structure, so a shop and a SaaS site end up with labels that fit them — sharing little more than a home page.

E-commerce site page_type
  • home /
  • product-listing /category/running-shoes
  • product-detail /product/air-zoom-pegasus
  • blog /blog/how-to-clean-sneakers
SaaS marketing site page_type
  • home /
  • feature /features/reporting
  • solution /solutions/content-groups
  • pricing /pricing

Example mappings. Your page types are written from your own site structure.

What labelling changes

Because the page type lives in your data layer, it shows up everywhere your numbers do.

  1. Whole page types, not single URLs

    See every product detail or every listing move as one line. A template-wide slide shows up immediately instead of hiding across a thousand separate rows.

  2. Your labels live in your warehouse

    The page type isn’t a throwaway filter inside someone else’s dashboard. The rules run in your own BigQuery and join into every report you already get.

  3. New pages labelled automatically

    Publish a page and it inherits the right type the moment it appears in Search Console. No re-tagging, no maintenance backlog.

The difference from doing it by hand

You can split pages with regex in Search Console — until the session ends. Here’s what changes when the page type is managed in your warehouse instead.

Telling templates apart
Search Console has no page-type field
Every URL labelled by role
Saved across sessions
Rebuild the URL filter every time
Defined once, always on
Where the data lives
Inside the tool’s account
Your own BigQuery warehouse
New pages
Re-filter to include them
Labelled automatically
In your reporting
A view you rebuild by hand
Joined into every report

Frequently asked questions

Still wondering about something? A discovery call clears it up fast.

We read your site’s URL structure and write rules that label each URL by its role — listings, detail pages, home, blog, and any other template you have. Every URL is matched to a type inside your warehouse.

Label your pages. See every type at a glance.

Talk to us

Free discovery call · No commitment