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AWR Cloud; Cloud Services

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AWR Cloud is an intuitive, easy to use tool with best-in-class search position monitoring that earns an Editors’ Choice and a smattering of features across all the SEO buckets. While its breadth of functionality isn’t as deep as our higher-rated ECs, AWR…
AWR Cloud (which begins at $49 per month) is a search engine optimization (SEO) tool that specializes in rank tracking that can do a little bit of everything across your business’s SEO strategy. Of the three main categories of SEO tools—ad hoc keyword research, ongoing position monitoring, and website crawling—AWR falls primarily into the middle category. AWR, which stands for Advanced Web Ranking, is best known for and focuses most heavily on the search positions for which your site is currently ranking, and whether you’re gaining or losing ground. On the rank tracking front, AWR Cloud has the best automated monitoring of the tools we tested. The platform’s search engine and website comparisons and rankings across websites and keywords will keep your business up to date on every upswing and down-slide in content and landing page search rankings on a particular keyword or topic.
While the rest of its SEO functionality isn’t quite as robust as our other Editors’ Choices tools Moz Pro and SpyFu, AWR Cloud sports an intuitive interface for SEO users of any skill level. It isn’t lacking for basic features across crawling, and domain auditing and backlinks. It covers ad hoc keyword research and targeting through Google Analytics and Google Search Console integrations. On the strength of its ongoing search position monitoring and ranking tracking plus a solid suite of complementary SEO functionality, AWR Cloud earns our Editors’ Choice ranking.
AWR Cloud starts at $49 per month for its Starter plan, which the company markets at small to midsize business (SMB) website owners. This plan gives you 2,000 keywords per week, but AWR doesn’t otherwise cap users in terms of reports, tracked websites, users, social media tracking, or auditing and crawling. This lack of quotas on users, tracked sites or projects, and reports is atypical of the tools I tested and makes AWR Cloud a more affordable option as compared to other do-it-all SEO platforms such as SEMrush and Ahrefs that charge for more quotas and add-ons. There is also a free 30-day trial on all plans. The rest of AWR Cloud’s pricing tiers are as follows:
AWR Cloud is among the most straightforward to use of all the SEO tools tested. The interface is a clean and responsive dashboard with a streamlined left-hand navigation similar bar with a home icon atop it and clearly labeled tabs: Rankings, Links, Google, Reports, Social, Crawling, and Settings. For the SEO novice, it’s a far easier user interface (UI) to navigate than the more convoluted layouts of platforms such as Majestic, which on top of an antiquated design also inundate you with an overwhelming array of disparate tools. AWR Cloud packages its SEO features into one simple layout similar to a narrower tool like DeepCrawl, but with functionality closer to what the Editors’ Choices offer.
When you first log in, the main Websites dashboard gives you at-a-glance position monitoring right away. This sortable list of all the websites you’re currently monitoring shows each website with any associated keywords for which you’re tracking search rank, along with a small trending graph, overall visibility percentage of your site across search results, and bright green and red Changes metrics showing your cumulative gain and loss in keyword rankings. Before you dig down into specific sites and keywords, AWR Cloud’s search position scoreboard gets straight to the point.
For each website and collection of associated keywords your business is monitoring, you can then drill down into a deeper breakdown along with a number of associated ranking tools. In the Overview section of my PCMag test website, AWR Cloud gave me a host of metrics and rankings stats right away. I saw that my site had a visibility percentage of 77 percent across the keywords I’m tracking and various search engines, the “ranked value” or how many times the site has appeared in Google Search Engine Results Pages (SERP) , along with how many keywords have moved up or down in rankings over a given time period. In the interactive line graph below the headlining stats, I was able to toggle the time period to anywhere from a week to six months.
Below that are a number of rankings distributions, showing the percentages of my website’s tracked keywords holding the top spot in search results, top three, top five, top 10, and top 20. Below that I found several interactive pie charts breaking down those SERP rankings and page distributions even further, along with how many of my keywords were ranking as opposed to not ranking. For each metric is always a plus/minus showing change over my given time period, a button to view a full visibility or rankings report, and explanations of how AWR Cloud calculates each score and metric when you hover over a stat. Despite throwing a ton of information at you on every page, AWR Cloud always remains an extremely user-friendly experience.
Another ranking feature AWR Cloud provides is a Search Engine Comparison showing website visibility and keyword rakings compared across Google, Bing, and Yahoo search engines. There is also a Website Comparison engine allowing me to plug in another website and chart specific rankings on my tracked keywords in line graph and list format. There’s also a straight-up Website Comparison allowing me to add multiple sites and compare standing on a particular one of my keywords on a specific search engine with a button on the top right to generate a Quick Report on that data at any time.
There’s also a fair bit of keyword management associated with AWR Cloud’s rank tracking. Tabbing over to the Keywords overview or scrolling down to the Keyword Rankings tab, I was able to view ranking breakdowns of specific keywords across the same custom parameters I could set with different search engines and tracked websites. The Keyword Rankings gave me plus/minus ranking changes for each keyword in addition to traditional metrics like cost-per-click (CPC) , average monthly search volume, and a low or high “competition” score pulled from Google AdWords. While the competition score is a rather general and paltry substitute for the 1-100 keyword difficulty score found in our Editors’ Choices and keyword research tools like KWFinder.com, I was given the option to integrate my Google Search Console account to pull in more granular data.
Plenty of the tools we tested offer some level of automated position monitoring, including Searchmetrics, SEMrush, and our other Editors’ Choices, Moz Pro and SpyFu. None offered nearly the depth of rank tracking, search position comparison, or overall position monitoring vectors I found in AWR Cloud. It wasn’t even particularly close. This is the no-brainer tool to see how your target keywords are performing.
Rank tracking metrics are baked into AWR Cloud throughout, but the platform also offers a capable array of functionality in keyword research, link tracking, and crawling plus a few standout bells and whistles. The catch with much of this functionality is that AWR Cloud prompts you to connect your Google Analytics (GA) and Google Search Console (formerly Google Webmaster Tools) accounts to access much of it, but every business should be checking Google’s free SEO tool regularly anyhow. Going straight to the source, be it in GA, Search Console, or Google AdWords, is the most effective way to double-check the often conflicting numbers you may see from different SEO tools on the same metric (though Google has plenty of its own accuracy snafus, a fact regular GA users know well) .
When it came to keyword research and management, I found AWR Cloud had surprisingly powerful keyword grouping and categorization. At any point, I had the ability to click into a keyword’s options and create a new group for it or add to an existing group along with the ability to color-code keywords and groups.

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