Site Search Report
Looker Studio reports offer customised charts and statistics for any webpage within warwick.ac.uk. These can be shared as static PDF documents or can provide ongoing updates through shareable links.
Simply create a google account to gain access to the looker studio report.
You can register the account with your warwick email, simply enter your work email when the option appears, this is typically when auto-generated google email addresses are offered there is an option to 'add your own email address'.
Reports are built based on a requirement. If you would like to discuss a new report please get in touch.
Return to full list:
Site Search Report, Homepage Course Search Report and search.warwick.ac.uk Search Results
Explore the search terms users are inputting into University of Warwick search bars
This looker studio report, launched in June 2024 is based on google tag manager custom properties that indicate the 'search elements' and 'search terms' that are input on search bars present on pages across the university site.
The report allows users to change the date range in the top right-hand corner and has the following elements:
- Homepage search results
- Insite search results
- Undergraduate site search results
- Postgraduate site search results
- All search results, including drop-down and search functionality to explore specific pages and their results
New for 2025: See whether users select 'UG' or 'PG' before searching
This looker studio report, launched in February 2025 is based on google tag manager custom properties, in addition to the search terms, we can now present whether users opt for 'undergraduate' or 'postgraduate' from the course search drop down on the homepage.
The report allows users to change the date range in the top right-hand corner, data will generate about dropdown performance from Feburary 2025.
search.warwick.ac.uk report
Warwick's search platform, search.warwick.ac.uk operates in a cookie-less fashion. We can't track individual user details due to cookie consent not being possible, but we can track the query string after each update to the page, meaning we can present the terms users search for as they appear in the url.
This does not pull through pageviews or location data, but offers a snapshot of searches directly in warwick's search platform.
Please note: The report in its current form does not distinguish where traffic has come from, meaning searches performed on warwick.ac.uk are brought through to this platform and duplicated from warwick.ac.uk, therefore please treat results as part of a users wider search journey, and not as terms performed purely on search.warwick.ac.uk