How to access and personalize your master dashboard
Your master dashboard is the quickest way to see all your connected sites in one place. Use it to get a portfolio view of performance, then tailor that view with filters, tags, favorites, and comparison dates so the data matches how you work.
Before you start, make sure you’ve connected your Google Search Console account. If you’re still setting things up, start with Connect Google Search Console to SEO Gets.
Access your master dashboard
Sign in to SEO Gets.
You'll automatically be routed to your master dashboard.
Review your connected sites in the portfolio view.
If you don’t see data yet, check that your connected properties are available in Google Search Console and/or Google Analytics 4 and that the correct account is connected. For helping connecting your account, visit How to connect your Google account to SEO Gets.
Personalize the dashboard
You can adjust the dashboard so it shows the sites, data, and trends that matter most to you.
Select your date range: Use preset date ranges or customize your date range to show performance over your preferred time period.
Update search type: Track web, discover, news, image, or video performance from GSC.
Filter your portfolio: Apply filters to your dashboard, including query, page, country, device, and branded/non-branded queries.
Use tags: Group related sites with tags, then filter the dashboard by those tags. Tags are user-specific, so your setup won’t affect anyone else on your team.
Mark favorite sites: Click the star icon to mark the properties you check most often so they’re easier to find.
Hide sites: Do you have sites connected to your account that you're no longer interested in monitoring? Click the eyeball icon to hide them.
Make your master dashboard more useful
A simple structure is usually best. Create tags around how you actually review work, such as by client, market, location, or site type. Then use the master dashboard as your daily starting point for spotting changes, checking priorities, and deciding where to dig deeper.
If you want to use tags to monitor a change across multiple sites, see How to Track Site Migrations.