The last 28 days of Google Console data show a wide global distribution of readers accessing mediapatriot.co.id, with Indonesia remaining the dominant source of traffic. During this period, Indonesia recorded 6,055 clicks and 351,796 impressions, making it the primary driver of search visibility. The high number of impressions indicates that the site’s content reaches a broad domestic audience, particularly through keywords related to regional government, public policy, criminal cases, and general information services that are widely searched within the country.
Malaysia ranks next with 14 clicks and 2,164 impressions. Traffic from Malaysia is primarily influenced by Indonesian diaspora communities residing in Kuala Lumpur, Johor Bahru, and Selangor. News about Indonesian politics, governance, and entertainment maintains strong relevance for this audience. A portion of impressions also comes from Malaysian users searching in Bahasa Malaysia, which frequently overlaps with Indonesian-language keyword patterns.
Cambodia follows with 8 clicks and 859 impressions, reflecting typical Southeast Asian search behavior in non–Indonesian-speaking markets. Impressions from Cambodia often arise from English-based searches where universal or institution-related keywords appear across languages. Google may surface Indonesian content when relevance signals—such as names of organizations or officials—match global search indices.
The United States generated 7 clicks and 7,521 impressions, one of the highest impression counts among non-Asian countries. This pattern shows significant visibility but limited interaction. Most impressions come from generic or globally used terms that appear within Indonesian articles, such as job titles, geographic labels, or abbreviations often indexed internationally. States with large digital activity—California, Texas, and New York—contribute most to this traffic, including users of Indonesian descent.
The Netherlands recorded 6 clicks and 283 impressions. Dutch traffic commonly stems from interest in Indonesian social issues, historical connections, and government updates. Search overlap also occurs on political and institutional terminology shared across languages. The relatively smaller impression volume reflects the narrower Indonesian-speaking demographic in the Netherlands.
Singapore reported 5 clicks and 900 impressions, driven largely by Indonesian professionals working in the city-state. Articles related to governance, economics, and public safety often surface in Singaporean search results, particularly when similar topics appear in regional English-language media. The impression count shows that several Indonesian news terms still hold cross-border relevance in Southeast Asia.
Japan contributed 5 clicks and 500 impressions, a pattern typical of countries where Indonesian is not widely used but where certain keyword structures—numbers, abbreviations, or international terminology—can still trigger appearance in search results. Impressions from Japan also come from Indonesian residents or students accessing domestic news updates.
Australia matches this trend with 5 clicks and 326 impressions. Indonesian students and migrant communities in Sydney, Melbourne, and Perth contribute to the local visibility of the site. Australian search behavior often surfaces foreign-language content when titles contain universal administrative terms or references to institutions, which are common in news articles.
Saudi Arabia logged 4 clicks and 222 impressions. Indonesian migrant workers represent the key audience here, particularly those seeking updates on domestic events. Search impressions from Saudi Arabia tend to remain stable, especially for topics involving regional government, national news, and issues with cultural or religious context.
Hong Kong recorded 4 clicks and 139 impressions. Similar to Saudi Arabia, the traffic originates largely from Indonesian migrant workers. These readers typically search for homeland news, especially regarding criminal cases, policy developments, or local events in Indonesia. The relatively modest impression count reflects the niche linguistic presence of Indonesian within Hong Kong’s search ecosystem.
Beyond the leading countries, hundreds of others contribute smaller volumes of impressions and clicks. Nations such as Brunei, Taiwan, South Korea, the United Kingdom, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Turkey often appear with mid-range activity. These regions typically host Indonesian migrant workers, international students, or globally mobile professionals who continue to follow news from Indonesia.
African countries including Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa produce sporadic impressions. These usually result from global keyword matches involving technical or institutional terms rather than targeted searches for Indonesian-language content. Similar patterns occur in Latin American countries such as Brazil, Mexico, and Argentina, where impressions emerge incidentally due to universal terminology embedded in news headlines.
Western European nations—including France, Germany, and Spain—also contribute minor impression counts. Their search visibility is influenced by the volume of global web indexing rather than direct user interest in Indonesian-language reporting. Countries such as Russia and Ukraine show occasional impressions stemming from numerical or institutional keywords that transcend linguistic boundaries.
Across the Middle East—Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, and Jordan—traffic generally stems from Indonesian migrant communities. These countries frequently show small clusters of impressions reflecting interest in national news, government announcements, and community-related topics.
In South Asia, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka generate impressions at modest levels. Their visibility emerges from the overlap of global search results involving formal terms, official titles, or place names that appear across multiple languages.
In Southeast Asia beyond Malaysia, Cambodia, and Singapore, countries such as Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, and the Philippines record minimal but consistent impressions. Search visibility in these nations often arises from international events or official terminology that aligns with global indexing algorithms.
Pacific nations including New Zealand, Fiji, and Papua New Guinea reflect extremely low but periodic impressions, typically triggered by geographic or administrative terms in headlines.
Overall, the data shows that mediapatriot.co.id has been crawled and indexed in a wide global spectrum. A total of 168 countries appeared in the 28-day dataset, illustrating extensive reach across nearly all continents. Although Indonesia remains the overwhelmingly dominant source of clicks and engagements, international impressions highlight the site’s structural consistency in indexing and the global visibility of its keyword architecture.(Team Editor)
