Jan
The Novice Guide to Google Analytics
This is a guest blog post by William Eve. If you are interested in writing a guest post for this blog, contact me.
Google Analytics is an internet website analytics program that keeps you up to date on how your website is performing with regards its marketing and traffic effectiveness. It is a powerful tool that is quite flexible and has very easy to use features. With Google Analytics you will be able to target your ads more precisely and build your marketing skills. This will result in you getting a better conversion rate on your website. The beauty of Google Analytics is that it is free and arguably the most effective reporting tool available.

In order to take you through how Google Analytics works it is best if we start right at the very beginning. This obviously is the actual logging in process. Once inside you will immediately see a list of all your web sites or blogs. This is because Google Analytics tracks all the sites you manage within your particular account. From here you simply click on ‘view reports’ for whichever site you are interested in, and you are taken straight to the dashboard.
Dashboard
Once you’ve brought up the dashboard you’ll notice images of all the various reports the dashboard contains. These will be such things as visitors, content, traffic sources, map overlay and more. You can customise these if you wish. Near the top you’ll notice a section labelled ‘Site Usage.’ Inside this section you’ll come across the following:
- Percentage of new visits. It is here where the percentage of new visits you get on your site are compared to all the visitors you’ve received. In this way you’ll find out how many visits are repeat customers and how many are new.
- Average time on site. This tells you the average amount of time visitors stay on your site.
- Bounce rate. The bounce rate gives a percentage of visitors to your site who left as quickly as they arrived, hence the term ‘bounce.’ This could indicate your site seemed too complicated for them to navigate successfully so they left. It could also mean they visited by mistake. If it remains high you will need to do something about it.
- Page visits. Simply the average number of visits to each page on your site.
- Page views. Similar to page visits but this one will give you the actual number of visitors who actually viewed each page.
- Visits. The total number of visitors your site attracted at any given time.
Google’s default setting will display the activity your site has enjoyed over the last month. You change this setting to suit yourself or to compare one period against that of another. This can be carried out by clicking on the ‘date range’ at the top right corner and making alterations to the ‘comparison’ drop down from ‘site’ to ‘date range.’ You will then be able to alter the dates to whatever you are seeking information on.
Reports
There are many reports you can glean information from, however for beginners there are five you should take particular notice of on a regular basis, these are:
- Top content. This tells you the pages on your site that are most visited. It will give you an idea on why most of your visitors are attracted to your site. Pages that are rarely visited can therefore be deleted and pages that are regularly visited can be built up.
- Keywords. An important feature that tells you what keywords were effective in getting traffic to your site. This is the way you will find which keywords are powerful and which are not. The report will actually give you detailed information on the effectiveness of each keyword you use. It also tells you how long your visitor stayed on the site, how many pages they looked at while they were there and if they converted their visit or not by purchasing something from you, completing a subscription, or interacting with you in some other way.
- Referring sites. You will find this report under Traffic Sources. It tells where your visitors were before they came to your site.
- Traffic sources overview. Where the referring sites report told you where your visitors had been before visiting your site, this report will tell you which search engine they used to find you, did they use your URL, or did they use a key phrase or key word. In this way this particular report lets you know exactly where your traffic is coming from.
- Visitors’ overview. This is the overview that brings it all together. It tells you how much traffic you received, how many pages were looked at, how long visitors stayed on each page and, of course, your bounce rate. It will even tell you the size of the monitors your visitors are using and whether they are on broadband or dial-up.
In the left hand column on every report you’ll find an ‘About this Report’. When you open this link you get detailed information about the report itself.
This article was written by William from lifeinsurancefinder.com.au. Fisit Life Insurance Finder to compare life insurance.








