Have you ever stared at your traffic graph wondering what caused that sudden spike two weeks ago? Or worse, trying to figure out why visitors dropped off without any obvious explanation?
You know you made changes. You remember doing something important. But what exactly? And when?
This frustrating situation happens constantly in SEO. Until now.
Google rolled out annotations for Search Console and Dan Jones, the AI Optimisation King, believes this single feature will change how businesses track optimisation efforts. Here's everything you need to know about using annotations effectively.
The Tracking Problem Every SEO Faces
Most businesses juggle multiple systems for tracking changes.
Content updates go in spreadsheets. Technical improvements get logged in project management software. Server changes live in calendar notes. Strategy discussions hide in email threads or Slack messages.
Everything exists somewhere. Nothing exists in one place.
Then your traffic changes and the detective work begins. You open Google Analytics. You scan through old spreadsheets. You search your email for keywords like "schema" or "migration". You ask team members what they remember happening three months ago.
Sometimes you piece it together. Often you don't.
Dan Jones has managed SEO for countless businesses and this scattered tracking approach creates consistent problems. The disconnect between taking action and measuring impact slows down learning significantly. You can't identify winning strategies quickly. You waste time repeating failed experiments because you forgot you already tried them.
Client reporting becomes awkward. When someone asks why their traffic improved, "we probably changed something good around then" sounds unprofessional at best.
Annotations fix this completely.
How Annotations Change The Game
Imagine seeing your entire optimisation history in one place.
Traffic increases appear on your Search Console graph with notes explaining exactly what you implemented beforehand. Traffic decreases show up with context about what changed. Every spike, every drop, every fluctuation connects directly to specific actions you took.
No more detective work. No more guessing. Look at the graph, read the annotation and understand what happened.
Google should have built this years ago. Now that it exists, there's no reason to skip it.
Knowing When To Create Annotations
Create an annotation whenever you make changes that might influence traffic.
Content work: launching new pages, deleting outdated content, refreshing existing articles with current information.
Technical improvements: code updates, speed optimisation, Core Web Vitals corrections, structured data additions.
Structural changes: URL updates, category reorganisation, menu modifications, linking pattern adjustments.
Infrastructure updates: server downtime, hosting provider switches, content delivery network setup, SSL certificate changes.
The goal is documenting anything that could appear as traffic movement later. Small changes sometimes create big impacts, so err on the side of over documenting rather than under documenting.
Creating Your First Annotation
The actual process is simple once you understand the interface.
Open Search Console and select Performance from the left menu. Your traffic graph appears.
Find the specific date when you made your change. Right click directly on that date in the graph.
Select "Add annotation" from the dropdown menu. You get 120 characters for your note. Write something clear and specific enough that you'll understand it months later.
Strong examples:
"Implemented breadcrumb schema across entire site"
"Deleted 50 outdated blog posts from 2019"
"Switched to new hosting with better server response times"
"Published 6 comparison pages targeting bottom funnel keywords"
Click Add and your annotation appears on the graph immediately. Click any annotation later to view what you wrote.
Working Around The Interface Quirks
The annotation tool has some annoying behaviour you should know about.
Mouse sensitivity makes selecting precise dates harder than necessary. Additionally, you often cannot select today's date or yesterday's date using the standard clicking method.
This becomes problematic when you want immediate documentation. You finish implementing structured data, open Search Console to record it and discover the system blocks today's date selection.
There's a straightforward workaround.
Right click anywhere on your traffic graph and choose "Add annotation". Rather than clicking specific dates on the graph itself, use the date picker located at the top of the calendar that appears. Select your target date there.
For annotating today specifically (which normally gets blocked), click "More" followed by "Custom". Open the calendar for the end date and you'll find today's date available. Click OK, hit apply, then right click to create your annotation.
This method eliminates frustration when documenting changes immediately after implementing them. Dan Jones relies on this approach exclusively because it's faster and more dependable than the standard method.
Managing Existing Annotations
Need to modify or delete an annotation? Quick process.
For deletion, click the annotation in your graph. A rubbish bin icon appears at the top. Click it and the annotation disappears.
For editing, delete the existing annotation and create a fresh one with corrected information. Google didn't include a direct editing feature but the workaround takes minimal time.
Maintain annotation accuracy religiously. If you discover incorrect dates or inaccurate descriptions, fix them straight away. Six months from now when you're analysing traffic patterns, accurate annotations make all the difference.
One critical thing about annotations that most SEOs don't realise: Google can see everything you write. This means certain types of changes should never be documented in annotations. We've got a complete breakdown of what to include and what to keep private on our site. Check our full annotation guide to avoid making costly documentation mistakes.
Beginning Your Annotation Practice Today
Most SEO tools promise to make your life easier. Most fail to deliver.
Annotations actually work because they solve a real problem that every single person doing SEO faces daily. You make changes. Time passes, then results appear. You can't remember what caused them.
That cycle wastes money, destroys credibility with clients and keeps you repeating the same mistakes because you forgot you already tried something six months ago.
Annotations cost nothing to implement. They take seconds to add, and they save hours of frustration every single month.
The businesses that start documenting changes now will have months or years of data showing exactly what works and what doesn't. The businesses that ignore this feature will still be guessing why their traffic moves.
Which one sounds like a better position to be in?
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