
If you don’t own the Search Console, you don’t own the data. And if you don’t own the data, you’re guessing.
Google Search Console (GSC) is the single source of truth for how a site actually performs in Google — the real clicks, impressions, queries, and positions, straight from the source. It’s also where you submit sitemaps, request indexing, watch for manual actions, and disavow bad links. So on every personal-brand site we build, verifying GSC is a required step — not an afterthought. Here’s exactly how we do it, using trentonsandler.com as the live example.
https://yoursite.com/Step 1: Add the property (use URL-prefix)
In Search Console, you choose between a Domain property and a URL-prefix property. We use URL-prefix, and the reason is practical: a Domain property requires DNS verification, which means touching the registrar or DNS host for every site. URL-prefix allows multiple verification methods — including the HTML tag — so we can verify straight from inside WordPress without ever leaving the site.
For Trenton, that meant adding https://trentonsandler.com/ as the property and continuing to the verification screen.
- Verify from inside WordPress
- No registrar/DNS access needed
- Works on every fleet site the same way
- Requires a DNS TXT record
- Different for every registrar
- Slows the build down
Step 2: Verify with the HTML tag via Rank Math
On the “Verify ownership” screen, Google offers several methods. We use HTML tag, which gives you a single meta tag like <meta name="google-site-verification" content="…" />.
Every site we build runs on WordPress with the Rank Math SEO plugin, and Rank Math has a field made for exactly this. Go to Rank Math → General Settings → Webmaster Tools, paste the tag (or just the code) into the Google Search Console field, and save. Rank Math outputs the tag in the site’s <head> on every page. Back in Search Console, click Verify.
For Trenton, Google auto-verified within seconds of saving the tag. One detail worth stating plainly: don’t remove that tag later — if it disappears from the homepage head, the property loses verification.
Step 3: Share access with the team and the client
Verifying makes one Google account the owner. But a personal brand is a team effort, so we immediately add the people who need it. On every property, under Settings → Users and permissions → Add user, we grant access to three parties:
| Account | Role | Why |
|---|---|---|
| access@localservicespotlight.com | Full | Team operating account — pulls data, submits sitemaps, manages the property long-term |
| 668sierra@gmail.com | Owner | Verifying account — keeps owner-level control |
| The client’s Google email | Full | It’s their brand — they should always be able to see their own data |
The client’s email is the one variable. We collect it up front with a simple intake form, because it has to be a Google account (a Gmail address, or a Google Workspace email) — GSC can only share access with Google accounts. Get that one field right at onboarding and Step 3 takes about thirty seconds.
A note on roles: “Owner” can add and remove other users and manage verification; “Full” can see all data and take most actions but can’t manage users. We keep the verifying account as Owner, the team account at Full (or Owner, if it will manage the fleet), and the client at Full.
Why this is a standard, not a one-off
The reason we hard-code this into the build is the same reason we run a weekly MAA report: what doesn’t get measured doesn’t get improved. A site with no verified Search Console is a car with no dashboard. Once GSC is verified and shared, the weekly report can pull real search data — the queries a person is starting to rank for, the pages getting impressions, the brand-name searches that signal a Knowledge Panel is coming. That’s the feedback loop that turns a new site into a ranking one.
Verify the site. Share access with the team and the client. Then let the data run the strategy. It’s three steps, it takes a few minutes, and we do it on every single property — no exceptions.
Verifying Search Console is Phase 3 hygiene in our repeatable build. See the whole thing in The Young-Athlete Personal Brand System, the worked example in the Trenton Sandler case study, and how we measure it every week with MAA.
Dennis Yu is the CEO of Local Service Spotlight. A former search engine engineer, he teaches the Dollar a Day and Personal Brand methodologies and helps young athletes and entrepreneurs build measurable, owned authority online.

