This is the third part of our free Google Analytics series, designed to help SMEs understand how the tool works and the ways to get the best from it. Please feel free to pass this on.
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Mercury1 Google Analytics Part3
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ABOUT GOOGLE ANALYTICS (PART 3)
DOCUMENT CONTROL
Document title About Google Analytics (Part 3)
Version 1.0 Status Release Reference M1Goo-003
Author Tara Wilson Date 03 July 2009
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CONTENTS
1. About this Document ............................................................... 3
2. Recap ...................................................................................... 3
2.1. Left-hand navigation menu .................................................... 4
2.2. Visitors ............................................................................... 5
2.3. Some Definitions .................................................................. 6
3. The Breakdown ....................................................................... 6
3.1. Benchmarking ...................................................................... 6
3.2. Map Overlay ........................................................................ 8
3.3. New vs. Returning .............................................................. 10
3.4. Languages ......................................................................... 11
3.5. Visitor Trending.................................................................. 11
3.6. Visitor Loyalty .................................................................... 13
1.1.1. Loyalty ................................................................................ 13
1.1.2. Recency ............................................................................... 14
1.1.3. Length of Visit ...................................................................... 14
1.1.4. Depth of Visit........................................................................ 14
3.7. Browser Capabilities ........................................................... 15
3.8. Network Properties ............................................................. 16
1.1.5. Network Location .................................................................. 16
1.1.6. Hostnames ........................................................................... 17
1.1.7. Connection Speeds ................................................................ 17
4. Next time... ........................................................................... 17
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1. ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
This instruction document is the third in a series about Google analytics. It is designed to give you an
in-depth introduction into using Google analytics. Each document in the series will focus on a certain
section of the Analytics
This document is an in-depth look at the Visitors section of your Google Analytics report.
2. RECAP
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This is the main page you will see when you log in to view your report the dashboard.
2.1. LEFT-HAND NAVIGATION MENU
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2.2. VISITORS
This month we are focusing on the Visitors section of the report. You can access this by clicking on the
Visitors link on the left-hand navigation menu:
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2.3. SOME DEFINITIONS
PAGEVIEWS the number of times the page has been viewed within the specified
time frame
TIME ON PAGE the average amount of time each visitor to the page lingered for
BOUNCE RATE a bounce is measured when a person views a webpage and then
immediately navigates away by clicking the back button. The bounce rate is
measured as the percentage of visitors who bounced from the page
% EXIT this is the percentage of visitors who navigate away from the website
entirely after viewing the page
3. THE BREAKDOWN
3.1. BENCHMARKING
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Benchmarking is a service of Google Analytics which you can chose to use it is disabled by default
when you create your account. Once enabled (well, after 2 weeks once the data has collected and
categorised...) the benchmarking section will show a comparison of you websites statistics as
collected by Analytics, against benchmark data of other participating industry websites.
To enable benchmarking, an account administrator needs to share your account data:
From the account overview page, click Edit account settings (section 3.2, Google Analytics Pt1)
Then, under Share my Google Analytics data... tick Anonymously with Google and others
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Remember to click save changes after ticking this box.
Then , you need to navigate back to the benchmarking page in your Analytics report and click
Accept on this page.
On the same page, you will be able to choose which industry vertical to compare your data to the
data for the chosen industry will automatically appear on all the graphs within this section.
3.2. MAP OVERLAY
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The map overlap is a great visual section, and is especially useful for those who work either
internationally, or aim their business towards a specific region. The different shades of green
represent the volume of traffic to your site from each particular country/continent/city the darker
the green, the higher percentage of overall visits from that area.
At the bottom left-hand corner of the map, you will see a key for the shades of green on this
particular map ranging from 1 to 238. The top figure will differ depending on the number of visits to
the site during your selected time frame. The top figure will always display the number of visits from
the most popular region in this case, the 238 refers to the number of visits from the UK during the
month of February (number 1 in the table underneath the map).
You arrange the statistics by city, country, sub-continent region, or continent by using the detail level
links underneath the map:
You can also zoom in the view a particular continent/country by clicking on the map, or selecting the
area from the table below. For example, by city, viewing the UK only would show the view:
By default, the map shows the number of visits, but you can change this to display to a range of other
statistics, such as average time on site. To do this, click on the tab (Visits) at the top right-hand
corner of the map and select one of the options displayed:
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3.3. NEW VS. RETURNING
This page is nice and simple it just shows the number of new visitors to the site, and the number of
returning visitors. And by default, it displays these figures in the hand form for a table and a pie chart.
You can change this if you wish to just a table, a bar chart, or a comparison bar chart by using the
buttons on the top-right of the table:
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As these two visitor type account for all the traffic to the site, the graph at the top is just the same
visitor graph as displayed in the dashboard.
3.4. LANGUAGES
Again, a simple page. This shows the split of language of visitors to your site. This information is taken
from the computer settings that people use to visit the site. This is useful for websites targeting
specific countries and languages to see if the right nations are visiting the site. If this section is vastly
important to you, be aware that a lot of UK computers still have the language on their computer set
up as US English, rather than UK English!
3.5. VISITOR TRENDING
Visitor Trending is split into 6 different sections:
- Visits
- Absolute Unique Visitors
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- Page Views
- Average Page Views
- Time on Site
- Bounce Rate
Each page contains a graph, and a bar chart. This is great for splitting the values for these variables
into different time frames to study them more closely. You can view them by Hour, Day, Week or
Month by using the buttons to the topright hand corner of the graph:
The bar chart displayed below the graph shows a bar for each value you have chosen to display, for
example, if you click Hour then there will be 24 bars one for each hour of the day. The data for
these is a result of the average number of visits during that hour for your entire date range. If you
click on Day, it will have a bar for each day within your set time frame.
Here is our example, by Week:
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As you can see, there is a bar for each week during the set time frame (including one for just the last 3
days which do now quite make up a week).
The numbers at the end of each bar refer to the percentage of visits for the time frame that this week
makes up, and the actual number of visits this equates to (in brackets).
Its a good idea to use this section to show the trends in the visits to your site (hence the name Visitor
Trending!). This way you can see if there is a certain time of the day, or day of the week your site is
most popular or even a season when your visits are boosted. If you have an Adwords campaign
running alongside you can also use this information to refine the scheduling of your campaign so you
know your adverts are showing at times when people are looking for your services.
3.6. VISITOR LOYALTY
Visitor Loyalty is also split into sub-sections:
- Loyalty
- Recency
- Length of Visit
- Depth of visit
Where new visits to your site are important to keep expanding the reach of your brand, it is also good
to retain custom from people too. This section helps you to see if you are achieving this by recording
the IP address of visitors to the site, and using these to store the number of times they visit.
1.1.1. LOYALTY
The Loyalty page shows you the percentage of visitors that have visited your site 1 or more times in
the set time frame. If you have a large number of new visitors, you will find that a large percentage of
visitors to the site have only visited once.
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1.1.2. RECENCY
This is also a good way of determining the impact your brand is having on visitors and this shows how
long it has been visits. Visitors are categorised here by how many days since their last visit to the site
hence new visits are included in the 0 days ago row. The further down the chart visitors are (i.e.
over 300 days ago), the longer it has been since they visited which would demonstrate a rather weak
connection with your company as they do not visit often.
1.1.3. LENGTH OF VISIT
This page separates out all visits during the set time frame into percentages of how many visits
slotted into different time intervals:
Again, this is useful to see how interested visitors are in your products the longer they stay on site,
the better.
1.1.4. DEPTH OF VISIT
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Depth of visit relates to how many pages a visitor visits whilst on the site. Again, this data is separated
into percentages of visitors and the more pages a visitor views, the generally more interested in your
products they are. If the graph is top heavy and very few people are visiting more than 1 page, and
also not many people stay on your site for longer than 10 seconds then this would call for some work
on the layout and content of your site. It needs to be aesthetically pleasing, have good calls to action,
and have easy navigation in order to encourage visitors to visit more pages.
3.7. BROWSER CAPABILITIES
This section is also split into sub-sections that cover a range of different technical specs for the
computers visitors are using:
- Browsers
- Operating Systems
- Browsers and OS
- Screen Colours
- Screen Resolutions
- Flash Versions
- Java Support
It is likely that your visitors use a range of different browsers, operating systems, screen resolutions
etc. there will be a variety of different setups. This information comes in handing when testing your
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website. If you have a lot of visitors with a high bounce rate but you cannot figure out why they would
be leaving so soon you have tested the content and the layout of the site a good place to look
would be in this section. Firstly, check the browsers:
Check how your website looks in these browsers it may be that a majority of your visitors are using
one particular browser which does not display your website properly resulting in visitors leaving
directly.
The same goes for screen resolutions and colours the colours used in your site may look completely
different from one computer screen to another and a large percentage of your customers may have
their screens set up differently to you.
Also flash and java support if you have any flash or java that is integral to your site, it may be an idea
to check that your visitors have the right software versions in order to view it.
3.8. NETWORK PROPERTIES
The sub-sections under here are:
- Network Location
- Hostnames
- Connection Speeds
1.1.5. NETWORK LOCATION
This page tells you when Internet Service Providers that your visitors use.
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1.1.6. HOSTNAMES
This is a list of the different hostname visitors arrive at your site from. This could show visitors from
organisations that are interested in your products enabling you to identify these companies and
possibly target more marketing in their direction.
1.1.7. CONNECTION SPEEDS
Knowing the connection speeds of the computer of visitors is useful again for testing your site. If your
website is image rich it may tend to load up slower than a more basic site. Combine this is slow user
connection speeds then you may push your bounce rate up. This can be used to see the speeds of
your visitors in order to help you to optimise your site for fast loading for the majority of visitors.
4. NEXT TIME...
Look forward to more in-depth instructions on using the Traffic Sources section of
the report. We will explain each sub-section as we have here and help you to gain
that little bit of extra knowledge to help optimise your sites performance.
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