What Is a SERP?
A SERP (Search Engine Results Page) is the page you see after entering a search query in Google, Bing, or another search engine. Modern SERPs contain much more than traditional blue links — they include paid ads, featured snippets, People Also Ask boxes, knowledge panels, image packs, video carousels, local packs, and AI overviews. Each result type is called a SERP feature.
Why SERPs Matter for SEO
Understanding SERP layout for your target keywords is essential for SEO strategy. If a keyword triggers a featured snippet, you should optimize for snippet capture. If it shows a local pack, you need local SEO. The rise of SERP features means that ranking #1 organically may still appear below the fold. Analyzing SERPs helps you understand search intent and optimize content accordingly.
How to Analyze SERPs
Manually search your target keywords and study the result types shown. Use tools like Semrush, Ahrefs, or Moz to track SERP features at scale. Monitor your visibility across different SERP features. Track click-through rates to understand how SERP layout affects your traffic. Use CrawlBeast to audit your pages for SERP feature eligibility (structured data, meta tags, etc.).
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