Weekly Search Trend Analysis: 5 SEO Queries Creators Can Own Now

Weekly Search Trend Analysis: 5 SEO Queries Creators Can Own Now

This week’s radar turns new Search Console and GA4 reporting shifts, plus live SEO forum questions, into five low-competition content opportunities for search-driven creators.

Search behavior is fragmenting across Google, AI assistants, short-form platforms, and shopping feeds. The raw daily trend board is still dominated by broad news and sports terms: SEO Review Tools' July 10 global list puts "Vegetable parasite outbreak" at 10,000 traffic and several sports or celebrity terms at 1,000-2,000. 1 That is not where small creators get the easiest wins.
The better opportunity this week is in operational searches: people asking how to measure AI traffic, how to see search demand for social posts, and how to turn platform reports into content decisions. These are high-intent queries with a useful gap: official docs explain the feature, but searchers still need workflows, screenshots, examples, and plain-English limits.

Weekly search trend analysis

Two signals are unusually actionable for SEO writers and tutorial creators this week.
First, Google has pushed creator-facing measurement into places that were previously hard to connect. Search Console now has platform properties for Instagram, TikTok, X, and YouTube, with performance reporting for how that content appears on Google Search, Discover, and News when applicable. 2 Google's help page says each account or channel must be added as its own property, data can take a few days to appear, and the reports do not measure impressions inside TikTok, Instagram, X, or YouTube themselves. 3
Second, AI-referral reporting has moved from workaround territory into mainstream analytics. Google Analytics added an "AI Assistant" channel on May 13, assigning matching referrers to the ai-assistant medium and grouping visits from tools such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude under the AI Assistant channel. 4 The source explains traffic source classification, not the original prompts users typed into a chatbot. That distinction is the content gap.
Community demand is already visible. A July 7 r/bigSEO post asks how to know which search terms drive sessions from ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude. 5 A July 9 r/SEO thread is already circulating the GA4 AI Assistant update. 6 These are the searches creators should answer now, before the first page fills with generic "AI SEO" posts.

Top 5 surging keywords

Exact keyword or phraseUser intentWhy it is a good opportunity right nowBest content formatSuggested title
"Search Console platform properties"Set up the new property type and see which Google queries send traffic to Instagram, TikTok, X, and YouTube content.Google announced platform properties on July 7, and the help page says the rollout is gradual and platform-specific. 2 3 A July 8 r/SEO post about the update drew visible discussion inside a 495,000-member SEO subreddit. 7Setup tutorial with screenshots, then a short keyword-mining workflow for creators."How to Use Search Console Platform Properties to Find the Queries Behind Your TikToks, Reels, X Posts, and YouTube Videos"
"GA4 AI Assistant channel"Find out whether ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, or Perplexity are sending traffic, and where the report lives in GA4.GA4 now has a dedicated AI Assistant channel and ai-assistant medium for recognized AI-assistant referrers. 4 The topic is already being shared in r/SEO, but many results will stop at news coverage instead of showing how to segment landing pages and conversions. 6GA4 walkthrough plus a Looker Studio starter dashboard."GA4 AI Assistant Channel: How to See ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude Traffic Without a Custom Regex"
"how to know for which search terms we are getting sessions from LLMs"Learn whether analytics can reveal the original AI prompt or search phrase behind an AI referral.The exact problem appeared in r/bigSEO on July 7. 5 It pairs with the GA4 update, but the answer needs nuance: GA4 classifies AI-assistant traffic sources; it does not magically expose private chatbot prompts. 4Myth-busting explainer with a decision tree: what GA4 can show, what server logs can show, what cannot be known."Can You See the ChatGPT Search Term That Sent a Visitor? The Honest GA4 Answer"
"Google Trends daily request limits"Build a repeatable trend-research workflow without getting throttled or relying on one tool.A July 2 r/bigSEO thread asks about caching, batching, alternative sources, and how to stay within normal usage while doing keyword research. 8 The broader daily trend list shows why validation matters: raw trend boards can be noisy and dominated by news terms outside a creator's niche. 1Workflow guide with a spreadsheet template: seed list, batch cadence, cache fields, validation sources, and decision rules."A Google Trends Workflow for Keyword Research That Does Not Break When You Hit Daily Limits"
"Google Merchant Center product title sweet spot"Decide how long product titles should be, which keywords to front-load, and whether to use every character.A July 10 r/SEO post asks whether to use all available characters, whether there is a title-length sweet spot, and how to handle model names, voltage, and other product specs. 9 Google's Merchant Center doc gives concrete constraints: title values run 1-150 characters, important details should come first, users often see only the first 70 or fewer characters, and AI-generated titles must use structured_title. 10Product-feed teardown with before/after title formulas by category."Google Merchant Center Product Titles: The 150-Character Rule, the First-70 Rule, and When to Stop Adding Keywords"

What to publish first

Start with "Search Console platform properties" if your audience includes YouTubers, TikTok creators, or social-first publishers. It has the clearest news hook and the most direct creator payoff: people can connect an account, wait for data, and turn query rows into video or article ideas.
If your audience is more advanced SEO or analytics teams, lead with "GA4 AI Assistant channel" and pair it with the longer LLM-search-terms question. That lets you rank for both the short feature name and the painful long-tail question: "Can I see what people typed into ChatGPT before they clicked?"
The fastest content package would be a three-part cluster:
  1. A screenshot tutorial for Search Console platform properties.
  2. A GA4 report walkthrough for AI Assistant traffic.
  3. A worksheet that turns both reports into a weekly content brief: query, source, landing page, current answer quality, proposed format, and next action.
That cluster is more defensible than another broad "AI SEO in 2026" post. The searcher is not asking for a manifesto. They are trying to open a report, understand a field, or decide what to publish next.

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