EDITOR’S NOTE: Google Analytics is the most valuable tool for website analytics. It collects data on your users, which will help you understand how people are interacting with your site, what they’re searching for, and whether or not their questions are being answered from your content. SEM Rush breaks down 35 insights from Google Analytics and how you can use them to improve your marketing and SEO. Real time is the first category, which shows you who is currently active on your website and what pages they’re on. In the audience category, you’ll learn all about who is visiting your site: their gender, age, location, and what device they are using to view your site. These help you understand if you’re targeting the right audience and also how to market to them. Acquisition shows you where your audience is coming from. It tells you your site’s most powerful traffic sources and which campaigns are working, and where most of your business is likely coming from. Behavior tells you which pages are being viewed on your site, what keywords brought them there, and when users either bounce back or continue to interact with your site. Goals is a tab that needs to be set up manually, but we highly recommend using it, especially if you sell products on your site! It gives insights on behavior flow, conversions, and how much money people are spending on your site.
Google Analytics is arguably one of the most valuable and powerful tools for website analytics. Let’s explore 35 valuable data insights Google Analytics offers and how you can use them to improve your marketing and SEO.
Google Analytics is a web analytics tool designed to collect user data. It sorts the data into easy-to-read reports via a customizable dashboard.
In Google Analytics, a metric is a single, measurable piece of data. Metrics can appear in sums or ratios.
Some common Google Analytics metrics include pages per session, screen views, bounce rate, and time on page.
This metric indicates how many active users are on your site in real-time. You can also use this metric to double-check if you’ve set up Google Analytics correctly on your website.
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Use this metric to track the most active pages on your website in real-time. If you’ve launched a new blog post and you’ve pushed it through your marketing channels, this metric can indicate if your new content is drawing any traffic.
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The Goal conversions metric helps you track conversions on your website. You can also use this report to review any buttons, forms, or transactions used to complete a conversion.
You’ll have to set your goals in Google Analytics first before you can see this data. When a user completes a specific event, Google counts it as a conversion towards your goal.
You can also use this metric to determine whether your website can track conversions correctly. Note that this metric only tracks conversions completed in the last 30 minutes.
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You’ll mostly use this to understand or refine your target audience. Review this metric to track the average age range of your website’s visitors.
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Similar to the above, this metric is great for understanding your user demographics. Combine this with other audience metrics to verify your target market is responding to your campaign.
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This chart tracks the locations of users visiting your site. It can also indicate which language your user’s browsing in.
This metric can be useful for marketers working on international campaigns who want to better understand their reach.
Depending on the number of international users, you may need to consider an alternate language version of your website.
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This chart easily segments your overall visitors into new or returning visitors. New visitors are visitors that have never landed on your website before. Returning visitors are visitors that have visited your website more than once in the past two years.
An influx of new visitors can indicate a successful marketing campaign, popular content, or an increase in brand awareness.
Returning visitors can provide more insight into popular pages on your website, valuable content you can repurpose, or even a compelling product to highlight. You can also target returning users with loyalty rewards or a more enticing CTA.
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This chart segments visitors by device. Compare mobile to desktop visitors to determine how visitors primarily access your website.
If your marketing campaign targets one or the other, this metric can help you track its success.
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This metric shows you the journey of a user on your website. You’ll be able to see which websites lead visitors to yours, or which websites they visited after leaving your site.
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This insight looks at a user in the first 90 days after they have visited your site. If you have someone sign-up for a service, this metric is essential.
You can set the metric to measure page views, conversions, or other goals you want to select. You can then start to determine how this user will use your site and be a great customer for you in the future.
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This is arguably the most important acquisition metric. This shows your site’s most powerful traffic sources and which campaigns are working, where most of your business is likely coming from.
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This metric tells you the number of first-time visitors to your website. If you’re launching a new campaign to get new visitors and new signups, this is the metric you need to focus on.
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If you’re running PPC ads, this metric can show you the effectiveness of your ads or their landing pages. If a blog post or web page suddenly becomes popular, you’ll be able to review their metrics with this chart.
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A session is a unit of time — usually 30 minutes. This widget tracks how many sessions a user has been active on your website. A single user can have multiple sessions.
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How many sessions were created from a social source, such as Facebook or Instagram? This widget is your best bet for monitoring any social media traffic or campaign results.
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Urchin Tracking Modules (UTM) are unique URLs that track the effectiveness of specific marketing campaigns.
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This metric averages the session length of your visitors. It is a helpful metric for comparing different marketing channels and campaigns.
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The bounce rate is a percentage of single-page visits or sessions where the user did not interact with the site. High bounce rates indicate users leave your site quickly.
If you have high bounce rates, you’ll need to create a strategy to help visitors stay on your website longer.
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This shows you which pages on your website people are interacting with the most. It shows you which pages and which content catches people’s attention.
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The user flow metric shows the volume of users from different locations. However, Behavior Flow indicates what users do once they land on your website. It can show you the order of pages visited and time spent per page.
Do users follow internal links to other pages? Do they follow a logical path of browsing, adding to the cart, and checking out?
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This shows you which page users left your site. Use this widget to determine if there’s a specific issue with the page, like a poor call to action, broken links or
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This metric is good for the Core Web Vitals, as page load speed is one of the critical components in Google’s page ranking.
Issues affecting page load speeds can be a slow server, image compression, lazy loading, and page layout shift.
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You can set up goals with your website. Completion of these goals by users will return this metric to you. These goals can include completing a form, watching a video, or making a purchase
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Like the previous metric, this gives you a percentage of goals completed by visitors to your website.
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Again, following up from the above, you can follow the path they took to get there for those who did complete the goals.
This helps track the user’s journey, and you can find spots along the way to strengthen your message and increase the conversion rate.
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This insight gives you the average dollar amount per order on your website. It provides a good indicator of the ROI for your marketing campaign and can give you an idea about setting prices for your products and services.
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This metric shows you when a customer checks out and pays for their items or leaves the cart entirely. It’s suitable for triggering abandoned cart emails and for understanding the customer’s journey.
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With this insight, you can investigate which channels are giving you the most conversions on your website. You can combine channels to give you an overall conversion amount as well.
Use this metric to determine where you should invest more of your marketing budget to get better ROI.
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Check out what are the most successful paths users take to your website and then conversion. This gives you some insights into your target audience and how well your marketing campaigns are going.
These insights can also reveal to you a target audience you didn’t know you had.
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With this insight, you can investigate where Google places your users. “In-market segments” is the same kind of analysis used by Google Ads. These are people who are actively looking for your products and services; Google groups them by their search intent.
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This is an interesting metric because it can predict the probability of a user converting through your channels. This gives you insight into which marketing channels are working and hitting the right target audience with your marketing message.
You can focus more money on the channels which predict higher conversions to get a better ROI and let the lower prediction channels ease off.
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If your website has search functionality, this insight will tell you what people search for once they land on your website. This allows you to put more resources toward the category or products they’re searching for, build a channel directly to those pages, with marketing and backlinks.
It can also show you which pages they are searching, if there is a content issue, such as descriptions being misleading or not clear enough for the user.
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Some hidden insights and metrics are not immediately available in “out-of-the-box” Google Analytics. Adding some of these metrics can give you insights you might not have known you needed.
You can integrate your Google Ads account with your Google Analytics account. This allows you to see the number of clicks for a PPC by the word count in a search term.
You can choose the number of words in a Google Ad, the length of search terms, and help budget for more effective campaigns.
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Link your Google Search Console with your Google Analytics account to see which search queries your website receives impressions. You can see clicks and view your click-through rate as well.
This integration means you don’t need to look at your Google Search Console. You can find the information in one place.
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Hidden keywords, or ‘not provided’ keywords, are common within Google Analytics. You can find this information under Acquisition.
Our Organic Traffic Insights tool is an excellent workaround as well for this. It can;
For more information about the Organic Traffic Insights tool, check out our knowledge base.
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You can integrate your Google Analytics account with your SEO Dashboard to see all these great insights in one place. No need to switch screens and copy data from one page or dashboard to another.
You can quickly and easily see the metrics and insights, compare them to your keywords and your competitors’ marketing.
Check out our knowledge base to learn how to link Google Analytics to Semrush, and what metrics and insights you can uncover when you do.
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The more you know about your customers, the better you can develop your content to serve them and get more ideas on building your business.
With some tweaks, you can gain even more insights into your customers, their behavior, profiles, and more with Google Analytics.
Originally posted on SEM Rush.
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