What’s Actually in a Monthly Website Performance Report
If you pay someone for website “maintenance” or “SEO,” a monthly report is how you find out whether anything is actually happening — and whether it’s working. A good one turns an invisible service into something you can see, judge and act on. This explains what a genuinely useful website performance report contains, and the red flags that mean you’re paying for a line item, not a result.
It’s written to be useful whether or not you ever work with us — the point is to help you hold any provider to a real standard. It’s part of our wider series on keeping a site healthy after launch; the bigger picture sits in the post-launch decay pillar.
In this article:
Why reporting is the proof your site’s being looked after
A monthly report is the proof your website is actually being maintained: it makes ongoing work visible, so you can see what was done, how the site is performing, and what’s coming next — instead of taking “we’re on it” on trust.
Most website upkeep happens out of sight. Updates, monitoring, fixes and optimisation either happen or they don’t, and without a report you’ve no way to tell which. That’s the real job of reporting — not to produce pretty charts, but to show whether the value you pay for every month is real. A provider confident in their work reports clearly; one who can’t, or won’t, is often the tell that not much is going on. Measuring this well matters more than ever as search shifts towards AI answers, which we cover in measuring SEO performance in an AI era.
What a good monthly report includes
A genuinely useful monthly website report covers six things: a performance and Core Web Vitals trend, uptime, security and updates applied, SEO movements and fixes, AI-search visibility, and a clear summary of what was done this month and what’s planned next.
- Performance & Core Web Vitals trend. Not just today’s score, but the direction over time — so you can see the site staying fast, or quietly slipping.
- Uptime. Whether the site stayed up over the month, and how any incidents were handled.
- Security & updates applied. Which core, theme and plugin updates were made, and any security actions taken — the unglamorous work that prevents disasters.
- SEO movements & fixes. Ranking and visibility changes, plus the specific fixes made — Search Console issues resolved, broken links repaired, indexing and meta or internal-linking corrections. The kind of ongoing technical SEO work that keeps a site visible.
- AI-search visibility. Increasingly, whether your site is being surfaced and cited by AI engines — a new but fast-rising line in any serious report.
- What was done + what’s next. A short, plain-English narrative: this month we did X; next month we’ll do Y. The part that turns data into something you can actually follow.
Notice how much of that is actions, not just numbers. A report should tell you what happened, and what changed because of it — not simply that it was measured.
What to ignore: vanity metrics
Vanity metrics are numbers that look impressive but tell you nothing actionable — raw impressions, total pageviews, or “keywords tracked” with no context — and a report padded with them is often hiding a lack of real work.
Big numbers with no comparison or meaning are filler. “Your site had 40,000 impressions” says little without trend, intent or conversion context. “We track 500 keywords” isn’t an outcome. The test is simple: does the number tell you whether your website is doing its job — attracting and converting the right visitors — or does it just sound busy? If it’s the latter, mentally set it aside.
Red flags your “maintenance” is just a line item
The clearest red flags in a website report are no actions, no narrative, and a jargon dump — all signs that “maintenance” is a recurring charge rather than recurring work.
- Metrics, but no actions. Charts with no “here’s what we did about it.” Monitoring on its own isn’t maintenance.
- No narrative. A data dump with no plain-English summary of what it means and what’s next. If you can’t understand it, it isn’t really for you.
- Jargon as a smokescreen. Dense technical terms that obscure rather than explain — sometimes a way to look busy without showing results.
- The same report every month. Identical numbers and boilerplate suggest a template on autopilot, not genuine attention.
One unclear report isn’t proof of neglect. But a pattern of them usually means the work is thinner than the invoice.
What to demand from any provider
From any provider — whether or not it’s us — you should demand a monthly report that shows what was done, ties it to how the site is performing, flags what needs attention, and says what’s planned next, in language you can understand.
It’s a short checklist you can hold anyone to: actions taken, not just metrics; trends, not just snapshots; a plain-English summary; and a clear next step. If your current provider can’t produce that, it’s a fair question to ask them why.
That’s the standard we hold ourselves to. With Agile One — our premium web subscription, a monthly performance report is part of the fee, not an extra — covering performance, uptime, security, the SEO and AI-search work done, and what’s planned next, so the value of the £500 a month is visible every month rather than assumed. It’s the reporting side of a site that’s built to get better over time, not drift: more on the numbers in the complete guide to website performance, and on why steady monthly gains beat the rebuild cycle in the compounding value of continuous optimisation. It’s all included in the £500 a month, with no lock-in.
FAQ
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