A Complete Guide to Google Analytics for E-commerce Stores

If you don’t measure success, you don’t know whether you’ve reached it or only halfway there.

The golden rule of marketing throughout the entire history of times has been: “Measure everything.”

Vlad Flaks, CEO of OWOX BI, a marketing analytics platform, shared that 47 percent of companies are only planning to implement data analysis tools.

Nearly half of online businesses don’t consider data-driven management a priority.  Let’s make sure you’re not one of them.

You Can’t Afford to Lose

Benefits of Tracking Business Data

Measure everything and make data-driven decisions for success.

How to Measure Your Business Performance

To measure success, you need the proper tools. E-commerce business differs from other online companies as it involves direct transactions.

Simple traffic analysis won’t win you the game. You need a tool that combines and blends a broad range of data — web traffic, sales, website performance, and marketing activities.

The only tool at the moment that gives you all of that is Google Analytics (or GA). And it’s free of charge. Over 37 million websites use GA to track their efficiency, according to BuiltWith data. Google Analytics is the most used tool for monitoring online business performance.

Use GA to get all your online store business data in one place quickly and effortlessly.

What is Google Analytics

Google Analytics is a web analytics service offered by Google that tracks and reports website traffic. Google launched the service in November 2005 as a solo service, but it’s currently a part of the Google Marketing Platform.

GA is on a mission to give businesses a free tool to gather and analyze data in one place. This allows you to gain a deeper understanding of customers and make calculated decisions.

For enterprise-level companies, Google offers an advanced solution — Analytics 360. It provides advanced analysis, unsampled reports, Google BigQuery export, data-driven attribution, and more.

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Why Use Google Analytics

Google Analytics is FREE, and it gives you crucial information about your business and your visitors. It provides:

You can use this data to:

How Businesses Use Google Analytics in Practice

We’ve gone through obvious reasons to use GA for measuring effectiveness. But what’s next? How do you use that data? In short: optimize performance and plan your next step to the top.

Let’s see how businesses use the insights revealed during data mining and analysis.

As of 2018, 60 percent of organizations used their data insights to drive costs and processes’ efficiency. While 57 percent of them admitted, they were building their business strategy based on data analysis.


Analytical data gives businesses clarity and efficiency

Google Analytics Alternatives

Google Analytics has plenty of alternatives. Some are free, and some are not. Some offer unique features, while others only copy GA. The following are the most utilized (non-Chinese, by the way) tools sorted by users (based on BuiltWith data).

Yandex.Metrica

(2+ million users)

It’s the only free alternative from the list. In addition to the regular traffic reports, it offers scroll-, click-, link-maps, and forms analysis. Plus, session recordings. Did I mention it’s all free?

Matomo

(780+ thousand users)

These guys are concerned about privacy and data ownership. Matomo is free only if you host it on your server. It mostly copies GA but offers SEO reports. A trending tool that is on the rise!

Hotjar

(760+ thousand users)

More an additional tool to Google Analytics, rather than an alternative. They provide heatmaps, session recordings, polls, and surveys — a trusted brand and reliable partner.

Google Analytics Enhanced Ecommerce

GA Enhanced Ecommerce is a built-in extension of regular Google Analytics. After activating, it starts collecting data about your products, sales, funnel, and marketing activities, blending it with web analytics, thus, creating an actual customer journey.

There are over 14 million e-commerce websites globally, and 10 percent of them (1.5 million) use Enhanced Ecommerce to track their business metrics.

If you are..

..then Enhanced Ecommerce is a must-have for you to stay ahead of 90 percent of the market.

GA Enhanced Ecommerce use cases:

We’ll talk about the benefits of Google Analytics Enhanced Ecommerce more a little later, exploring the reports.

Google Analytics is Free

Totally! But not entirely. Though the free version gives users a huge mass of detailed information, it can’t meet all Enterprise companies’ requirements. Remember the Google Marketing Platform and its Analytics 360 solution? It can. And it’s paid.

But don’t worry, you’re not missing out on anything life-changing. The difference makes sense only for the big players with massive traffic:

How many of these items will make your life easier? Stick with the free version, mainly because it will save you 150,000 USD per year — that’s where the pricing starts.

Use Google Analytics Enhanced Ecommerce for online stores. It’s powerful, accurate, and free to use.

How Google Analytics Works

You can skip this one if you don’t care about the subject. But you’ll miss a few interesting things.

The code

Google Analytics adds a block of JavaScript code on all pages of your website. When users view a page, this JavaScript code references a JavaScript file, starting a tracking process for Analytics. The operation retrieves data about the page request through various means. It sends this information to the Analytics server via a list of parameters attached to a single-pixel image request.

Sounds difficult? Take a look at this easy to follow the flow.


Long data journey. Image source: orbitmedia.com

The admin panel structure

Once the code is in the code, you can log in to the admin panel. You will see the hierarchy structure — Account, Property, and View. We’ll talk about setting up Google Analytics in the next chapter, but first, let’s fly through the structure.

Google Analytics account structure

Account

Using Google Analytics requires at least one Account. This is a home for all your business data — your website, blog, subdomains, or other owned resource. And it’s split into different rooms — Properties.

Each user has the key to enter this house, but not necessarily into any room. Each Account can have up to 50 Properties. If you have several businesses, you may want to use different Accounts for them.

Properties

If you want to split the access to different resources related to one business for different types of users — use Properties. Each property has a personal tracking code. Property = website, app, or subdomain. These are your rooms.

The editorial team may track only the Blog. The human resources team needs to follow the career portal, the e-commerce team will probably care only about store performance. And the business owner can have a separate Property to see the entire picture.

View

But what’s inside the room?

We can compare views with different angles of view or windows. Each view is your data but with different filters. For example, to analyze traffic from a particular country or specific devices. Or, this is a common practice to exclude your company colleagues’ visits and your own.

The same with windows. If you look into the room through different windows, you won’t see the same picture. One Property can have 25 Views.

Watch the video by Google if you still have the questions.

The cookies and identification

To learn that two different sessions or clicks belong to the same user, Google Analytics assigns a unique identifier to each user when they enter your website. It’s called the Client ID and is randomly generated. Any action of the user and the associated identifier is being recorded and stored in the browser cookies.

Using cookies allows GA to identify unique users across sessions in the same browser, but it can fail to identify users entering the website with different browsers or devices.

An HTTP cookie (also called web cookie, Internet cookie, browser cookie, or simply cookie) is a small piece of data stored on the user’s computer by the web browser while browsing a website.

Google Analytics accuracy

It’s hard to admit, but Google Analytics, even Analytics 360, is not 100 percent accurate. Good news: GA accuracy is somewhere between 95-99 percent.

Why does this happen?

Just because we have so many interfaces and devices to communicate with the web, GA is technically incapable of associating every session with an identified user. Visiting a website with different browsers (Chrome or Safari) or apps (Facebook app or Twitter app) — all those can be different users for GA, even if it’s the same person.

That’s why Google Analytics uses sampling. We won’t bother you with the math, just take this example by Google support:

“if you wanted to estimate the number of trees in a 100-acre area where the distribution of trees was fairly uniform, you could count the number of trees in 1 acre and multiply by 100, or count the trees in a half-acre and multiply by 200 to get an accurate representation of the entire 100 acres.”

Google Analytics allows you to organize data of multiple web resources (or even businesses) in one place and explore it from different angles. It uses cookies to identify users, but sometimes it fails and uses statistical synthesis.

How to Set Up Google Analytics

  1. Sign up for Google Analytics. You will be asked to create a Google account if you don’t have one.
  2. Add your website to Google Analytics. This step enables GA to work throughout your site.
  3. Get your web property ID. This is the unique tracking code that GA generates. It can be found in Admin → Property → Tracking Info → Tracking Code.
  4. Add tracking code directly after the  tag of your website. You will need access to your website code.
  5. Verify the code is working. Visit the GA account to do that.

How to Set Up Google Analytics with Ecwid

Setting up Google Analytics with your Ecwid store is almost the same, but does not require dealing with the code.

When you have a tracking ID, login to your Ecwid control panel, go to Settings → Tracking & Analytics and enter the web property ID from into the Google Analytics ID field in UA-XXXXX-YY format.

Within 24 hours, GA will start tracking data about visitors to your store, and you can generate relevant reports to help you optimize your business.

For detailed instruction with screenshots, visit How to Add Google Analytics to Your Online Store.

Best Google Analytics plugins for WordPress

If you’re using WordPress as your primary platform for an online business, then you have an option to use 3rd-party plug-ins to install Google Analytics on the website.

Optimonster, a conversion rate optimization blog, provides the following top list as of May 2020.

Top 3 are:

  1. MonsterInsights — a leader with 2+ million active installations.
  2. ExactMetrics — it’s free.
  3. Analytify — with advanced extensions.

Best Google Analytics plugins for Ecwid

The Ecwid App Market hosts several apps to help with sales reports and traffic analysis in your online store:

  1. Convead. Visualize sales funnels, segment customers, and make personalized product recommendations.
  2. Kliken Stats. Real-time conversions, product and category sales, time to purchase, and your online store revenue.

Setting Up Google Analytics Preferences

Now, when you have a Google Tracking ID installed into your store, let’s dive into the admin preferences. There’re lots of them, but don’t worry, they all have tips about what they mean and why use them.

Here’s the entire structure.


Google Analytics Admin Structure

There are some essential sections you have to check to make sure you get the correct data.

Account

Property

View

Go through all settings one by one and activate all you need. It’s easy with the tips, just needs some time. But clean data is worth the investment.

Google Analytics Reports

Before you can create custom reports, and get insight into your business, familiarize yourself with the Google Analytics dashboard.

GA reports: web traffic

When you first log in to GA, you will see a screen like this:

Explore Google Analytics reports one by one.

Let’s take a look at each element on this dashboard in more detail:

  1. Use this field to change the date range for each report.
  2. This graph shows changes in traffic daily. The default view shows the total number of sessions.
  3. This section shows critical traffic and engagement data, including pageviews, bounce rate, and each visit length. Generally speaking, your objective should be to increase a visitor’s average session duration, reduce the bounce rate, and increase pageviews.
  4. This pie chart gives you a quick overview of the number of repeat vs. new visitors. A larger number of repeat visitors indicates loyal, returning customers.
  5. Use the Customization section to create custom dashboards for you or your team.
  6. The Real Time dashboard shows you traffic and engagement figures on a live, real-time basis.
  7. Use the Audience section to drill down on data related to your audience’s location, browser, platform, demographics, and interests. You can also do cohort analysis and visualize your audience’s flow through your site.
  8. The Acquisition section shows you how you acquired your customers, whether through search, social, referrals, advertising, or direct visits from typing your site’s URL into the browser bar.
  9. Use the Behavior tab to understand how visitors interact with your site. Besides measuring site speed and content popularity on a per-page basis, you can also conduct A/B testing here to identify the best possible page layout for maximum engagement.
  10. The Conversions section is useful for tracking conversion rates for your stated goals. There is also a separate tab for e-commerce tracking, enabling you to check sales and product performance.

It’s easy to get overwhelmed with all these tabs and sections, but as an e-commerce store owner, you won’t need to use more than a few reports.

The most important thing right now is to get comfortable navigating through GA and familiarize yourself with the data in different sections.

For example, if you wanted to see a traffic breakdown by source, you would go to Acquisition → All Traffic → Channels.


Traffic sources grouped by Google Analytics

This would show you how many visitors you received from each traffic source. You can see a further breakdown of traffic by going to All Traffic → Source/Medium.

These reports are incredibly powerful, but they don’t give you all the data you need at a glance. For that, you need a custom dashboard. Continue reading to find out how to create custom dashboards.

GA reports: Enhanced Ecommerce

Advanced reports on shopping behavior will help you understand your customers much better.

Overview

The Overview report displays an overall status of your online store and provides three categories of related metrics:


GA Enhanced Ecommerce reports focus on products and sales. Image source: simtechdev.com

Shopping Behavior

The report lets you see how the customers are going through each stage of the shopping funnel, how many sessions complete their journey, and how many abandon the funnel at each stage. Based on that, you can create user segments and analyze their characteristics. Just click on the blue columns to do that.


Watch how customers flow through your sales funnel with GA Enhanced Ecommerce

As mentioned in Monetate Ecommerce Quarterly Report, the average conversion rate for e-commerce businesses worldwide is in the middle of 2.7 and 3.2 percent. So make sure yours aligns with this benchmark.

Checkout Behavior

Having reached a checkout, visitors are not customers yet; they are still making decisions.


Keep an eye on the checkout behavior. Help customers complete the purchase.

The Checkout Behavior Analysis report gives you a clear overview of where the consumers leave precisely in the checkout process. They made a long way to give you the money finally, but something distracted them or scared them away. Find out what that was.

Product Performance

This report will tell the story about your inventory: Product, Product SKU, Product Category, Product Brand. Analyze product performance and organize them to boost sales.

Sales Performance

The Sales Performance report brings in more financial related data:

Compare your revenue and shipping costs on a diagram. Watch the progress of each feature in dynamics. Use secondary dimensions for more insights about your audience and sales.

Product List Performance

The Product List Performance report helps you understand how blocks, categories, and search results lead to the product.

You may have only one category — “All products.” But if you organize the inventory in multiple categories, using “New,” “Recommended to you,” or “Bestsellers” to stimulate buyers’ interest, the Product List Performance report will tell you which works best and brings you more revenue.

Another use example: combine underperforming products to well-performing categories. You can also run a season sale mixing multiple related products in a “Sale” category.

Marketing

This section provides an overview of how your main marketing initiatives perform. It collects the data about:

We’ll talk about all marketing reports of Google Analytics Enhanced Ecommerce and how to use them to increase sales in another blog post. Let me know if you want it right away, and I’ll get down to writing.

TLDR. Check out this excellent and detailed video by Luc Durand, an expert with a 15-year background in the web industry, to learn how to use GA reports. Luc is a real pro; he helps small businesses to master digital marketing.

How to Use Google Analytics

Now, when you’ve gone through all the settings and reports, you might want to get some action! Enter your Google Analytics account. Let’s go!

Google Analytics dashboard overview and customization

The first thing you will see entering the Google Analytics admin panel is the dashboard. The dashboard is the heart of Google Analytics. While you can view individual reports by navigating to each section, the dashboard gives you critical data about your store at a glance:

These brief reports will be shown in widgets as graphs or tables.

The first thing you’ll want to do in GA is to create a custom dashboard for your store. Once created, you can customize it to show different segments and metrics such as traffic, revenue, conversion rates, etc.

To create a new dashboard, go to the main menu on the left side of the screen. Find Customization → Dashboards → Create. You should see a pop-up like this:


Create a dashboard to see the entire picture quickly

Choose “Starter Dashboard,” give it a name, and click on Create Dashboard.

You should see a screen like this:

This dashboard has space for 12 different widgets. Each widget displays a specific data set of your choosing. You can also add one by clicking on “Add Widget.” You should then see a screen like this:

Here, you can choose a name for the widget and the graph type. You may also change the metric it displays, as well as the widget’s grouping.

Once you hit “Save,” this widget will be added to your dashboard.

You can also create custom Sessions by clicking on the “Add Segment.”

By default, GA shows data from All Sessions — this means it will initially show you all traffic, regardless of the source. You can change this to only show data to your liking, whether it’s new visitors, paid traffic, organic traffic, mobile traffic, etc.

By getting data from different sessions and creating custom widgets, you can get powerful insight into your store’s performance.

Of course, working with all this data can be confusing for anyone new to analytics. If you have specific questions, the odds are that someone else has had them before. Check out the GA help forum to get a better insight into how custom dashboards work.

Essential Google Analytics dashboards for e-commerce stores

One of the most powerful resources for Google Analytics is the GA Solutions Gallery.

This is a curated collection of custom dashboards, segments, and reports from the Google Analytics team. It’s an excellent resource for small business owners struggling to understand how GA reports work.

You can use one of these solutions templates for your store by clicking the Import button that appears next to the template name.

Experiment with Google Analytics dashboards to find the one that works for your business.

Alternatively, you can use these reports by logging into your Analytics account and going to Dashboard → New Dashboard. On this screen, click on Import from Gallery to create a custom dashboard from the GA Solutions Gallery.

You don’t have to use any of the dashboards from this gallery, but it’s highly recommended that you do when you’re starting. Not only will you get a better understanding of how the pros organize their data, but you’ll also save a lot of time.

How to set up and use Google Analytics Audiences

How to separate all your traffic by age, geographical location, average order value, or visited pages?

Use GA Audiences.

You can find the Audience settings in the Admin → Property → Audience Definitions → Audiences.


Find the Audiences in the property settings

What is Google Analytics Audiences?

The Audience in GA is a group of people that fit a filter defined by you. You won’t know their names, emails, or any other private information, but you will have all of them packed into one pocked.

Having them all isolated, you can apply metrics to them only to see their effectiveness, or run promotional campaigns (if GA is synced with Google Adwords) targeting only them.

How to set up GA Audiences?

There are three ways you can do it:

You can also create an Audience based on the Segment, but that’s also Custom, isn’t it? Gog to Segment section (following) to find out more.

Google recommended Audiences

These default Audiences are well enough to cover most use cases, but if you have something more complicated on your mind, Custom Audiences is your way.

Import from the gallery

This is an easy way to explore what people use and find an idea that will work for you.


Read the comments, find out why people like these audiences

GA Custom Audiences

To create a Google Analytics Audience from scratch, you will need to:

Admin → Property → Audience Definitions → Audiences → New Audience


Create custom audiences when you need to improve targeting for better performance

As you see, numerous filters are waiting for you inside. No need for us to go through all of them right now.

Just make sure you know who you’re targeting, why, and what you’re going to do with them.

Ways to use GA Audiences

Using different Audiences will help you better understand your visitors and optimize your website, online store, or even the business: design specific products, services, customer journeys, and, overall, experience.

Meet them, predict them, and fulfill their expectations. In our everyday life, we call it building relationships.

Reese Garcia, Director of Paid Search — eCommerce at KlientBoost, shares his views on how you can use Audiences. And he is talking about remarketing first. He is a real pro and never stops exploring. That’s an example of his Custom Audience.


Reese is playing hard to maximize remarketing performance based on custom audiences

When it comes to creating remarketing audiences in Google Analytics, the options are almost limitless.Reese Garcia

What is Google Analytics Segments and how to use them

GA Segment is an isolated subset of your traffic data based on the filters you set, like age, country, purchasing activity, or devices.

For example, you can create a Segment of users who regularly purchase some sort of product and find out what country they come from. Or on the contrary, a segment based on geographical location will tell you what people from a particular country usually buy.

You might ask: “What’s the difference between Audiences and Segments?”

In simple words — the purpose. Audiences are used for commercial purposes, while Segments are for live reporting and analysis. Nevertheless, your Segments and Audiences can be equal.

How you can use Segments

All these segments can be later compared, converted into graphs, imported to Audiences.

Find the most profitable Segment and create an Audience based on it. Use the Audience for remarketing or search ad campaigns to drive more sales.

That’s how it usually works. No magic.

Creating Google Analytics Segment

… is easy. The only problem you may face is to make a decision: what Segment you need. The variety of filters is crazy!

But like in the case of Audiences, Google is here to help. The first Segments you’ll want to test are the presets. There’s plenty of them.

Open any report, and on the top of the page, you will see the Segments selected. Click Add Segment.

You will see the default Segments created by Google.

Try adding any Segment to the dashboard and compare the metrics. Visualization will give you insights about how it works and what you might want to see next.

This takes us to the next chapter about how you can use Google Analytics to measure your store’s success.

Comparing data in Google Analytics

Comparing data and periods will display dynamic progress (trends) of your store and activities.

Comparing periods in Google Analytics

Why would you want to do that?

For example, you’ve changed your online store’s design and want to know how traffic metrics changed this month compared to the previous month.

To compare two different date ranges, select the Compare checkbox, select Custom, Previous Period, or Previous Year. Use the controls to set the second date range. Click Apply.


Try comparing different periods to find the trends

Comparing Segments in Google Analytics

We’ve talked about this previously, but here’s a picture that tells the story.

Let’s compare All traffic versus Mobile traffic. As you remember, after that, I can leave only one Segment (like Mobile) and continue exploring only it.


Try this simple example. Find out how well your mobile customers perform.

Comparing traffic channels in Google Analytics

You can use Segments to do that for complex analysis, but you can use checkboxes near each channel on the Acquisition → All Traffic → Channels report for a glance. Take a look. Check the boxes, click Plot Rows.


Compare traffic channels to find the one that generates more revenue

Comparing product performance in Google Analytics

What sells best, and what brings all the money? Business is meant to generate profit; otherwise, there’s no point in business at all.

Analyzing your products is a big thing, and you can find a ton of information about how your products are sold in the Product performance report of the Enhanced Ecommerce section. Look into Conversions → Ecommerce → Product Performance to explore:


Focus on what is important. Image source: Patrick Han at medium.com.

Create Segments, compare data, measure everything! Search for the gaps and perspectives.

Advanced Features of Google Analytics and Actionable Tips

You’re doing well. You’ve gone so far!

Now, when you’re reading this, you know all the basics of Google Analytics:

Time to get to advanced features of GA: automation, end-to-end tracking, on-site search, and business reporting.

Google Analytics Insights: ask questions

Did you know that you can ask Google Analytics questions?

For example, you can ask: “What was the average conversion rate last week?” And GA will show you the graph in a few seconds.

Question answering feature is a part of the Google Analytics Insights tool and uses machine learning to analyze your request and get you the most relevant data.

To test the feature yourself, go to any GA view that has data and use the search box on the top of your screen — it’s always there.


Ask Google Analytics for direction

But before using the answering feature, make sure your request is as specific as possible. Machine learning is smart, but it’s still a machine.

Best practices you should follow asking Google Analytics questions:

If the question you want to ask matches the list, you’re good to go.

Watch the following instruction by Neha Bansal from Google. She was the one who designed the Question answering feature.

Custom Channel Grouping: advanced precision

Unfortunately, Google Analytics can’t always be correct, splitting the traffic by the source channels. Sometimes, it just can’t identify it correctly and assigns users somehow near the truth, based on any available triggers.


Sometimes, it is just not enough

The Default Channel Grouping (GA manual) is not perfect, although it contains most major source variants:

You can sometimes find traffic from Facebook (with Facebook referrer) in the Referral traffic, or traffic from uncommonly used search engines (like DuckDuckGo) in the Direct group. Even a small uncertainty may result in significant problems if you make decisions based on the data.


That is how it happens!

If you want your analytics to be as clean and precise as possible, Custom Channel Grouping is exactly what you need.

Create a new channel, add rules which GA will use to assign the traffic to the channel, and launch.

Sounds easy?

And it is, but it will take a lot of time if you have massive traffic from many resources because you’ll have to manually scan all the data.

Creating the grouping rules will require using some of the following parameters: referrer, source, medium, campaign, and others.

Scrolling down the reports, channel by channel, find the anomalies, and add them to the rules one by one.

Pro Tip #1
Setting up the Channels, remember that their position matters. Make sure the Channels that should be filtered out first are at the top of the list. The traffic will be going and filtering through the channel from top to bottom.

Watch how a Google Analytics expert explains the process. The video is a bit old, but it will take you through the admin, which looks almost the same today.

Set up on-site search and search terms

Searchers convert twice better, according to Moz. Moreover, 30 percent of the visitors will perform an on-site search as they visit your store.


Searchers convert x2 better than non-searchers. Image source: searchanise.com

Searching visitors have more specific shopping intent than visitors who are simply browsing. They are willing to buy. Do you want to know the answers to the questions:

No problem. Google Analytics provides a dedicated section for “Site Search” reports.

Pro Tip #2
Track on-site search. Help customers find what they already want to buy.

Setting up Site search tracking with Ecwid

Go to the Admin → View → View Settings. Find and turn on Site Search Tracking. In the Query Parameter field, enter the word “keyword” — this is an internal query parameter. Other search apps could have different query parameters. Read How to identify search query parameters.


Do not forget to activate on-site search tracking in GA!

Automate GA reports with Scheduled Emails

In case you didn’t know, you can save lots of time on entering the GA admin every day to track your favorite reports.

Automate reporting by scheduling emails with these reports and get them right into your mailbox at the specific time.

Open the Report you want to get regularly and click the Share button on the top of the screen. Fill out the dialog box, select the format of the report (CSV, TSV, TSV for Excel or PDF) using the “Attachments” drop-down menu, set up the frequency, add some text to the body and click Send.

That’s it! Now you and everyone from the “To” field will receive the report according to the preferences.

If you want to edit the scheduled emails, track them or delete, go to the Admin → View → Scheduled Emails.

Pro Tip #3
Automate reports, value your time! It’s limited.

Track Off-site campaigns with UTM tags

One of the most convenient ways to measure and analyze traffic from unowned resources is to add UTM tags to all the links you distribute.

UTM tags, or UTM codes, are the variables you add to the links to track and analyze the pages’ traffic sources.

The link with a UTM tag looks like this: “https://yourshop.com/collection/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=BFCM2019”

When visitors click this link, it tells us (and Google Analytics) that they come from Facebook, following a BFCM 2019 offer. Using these parameters, we can filter out all users who went through this link and analyze their behavior.

Read this detailed guide about How UTM Tags Help Analyzing Your Online Shop’s Traffic.

Make sure you use UTM tags to track traffic from:

Pro Tip #4
The basic rule for traffic markup with UTMs:
Source = domain
Medium = Channel Grouping
Campaign = Activity reason

Google Data Studio: Visualization and Automation of GA Reports

Accounts, properties, users, goals, segments, audiences, reports, search parameters: everything seems to pile up on you. Things are getting overwhelming.

But hold on, we have the tool that will organize all your data tracking into beautiful, shareable, and automated reports.

Google Data Studio is a free online visualization tool that lets you illustrate the data in powerful reports.


Your online store performance report can look amazing

Data Studio dashboards help you to:

Google Data Studio is one of our favorite marketing instruments. It’s simple; it’s integrated with the entire Google Marketing ecosystem (only Gmail needed), it saves lots of time for all teams.

And it’s FREE.

Google Data Studio allows us to add several data sources and blend them in a single report, or create separate reports for different teams.

Some of the resources Data Studio can pull data from:

If you can’t find the connector for your data source (which is unbelievable), you can create your own connector.

To start using Google Data Studio (sometimes GDS), Log in to the admin using Gmail and connect your GA. That’s it. You’re clear to create your first report.

Don’t be overly ambitious — start slow.

Data Studio advises you to start by using one of the templates, and we agree.

Open the Acme Marketing template and start exploring the widgets. Don’t be afraid to make a mistake — it’s a natural part of learning.

To help you along the way, here’s a video with a Google Data Studio product manager, explaining how to make your first steps.

We hope you’ll get hooked on GDS and will continue exploring. Let’s search for business perspectives instead of drawing graphs.

If you decide to go deeper, here’s an excellent guide by Aja Frost, a Senior SEO Strategist at HubSpot: The Ultimate Guide to Google Data Studio in 2020. It is highly recommended.

What Google Analytics Can’t Do

It can collect and compare; it can segment and analyze; it can automate and visualize.

Is there anything that Google Analytics can’t do with the data?

The answer is Yes.

I won’t lie if I say that there are plenty more things that GA can’t do, but mostly they will occur in specific circumstances. If you have any on your mind, let us know, and we’ll add them to the list.

How to Master Google Analytics

Good news here, my friends! Google Analytics provides free online courses in their Google Analytics Academy. The Academy also has classes about Data Studio and Google Tag Manager.

If you decide to examine your skills, visit Skillshop — another Google resource for learners who want to test their knowledge in Google’s professional tools and solutions. If you succeed, you will get a completion certificate confirming you are a qualified Google Analytics professional.

If it’s not enough and you want to go deeper with GA  here’s a bunch of courses on Udemy. LinkedIn can also help you with mastering Google Analytics.

Closing

Well, that was quite a long run!

Thank you for reading up to the end. I admire your dedication. I bet you still have questions, and you will have even more when you start digging into the data.

But that’s okay, that’s normal. Google Analytics has so much to offer that sometimes I beg for mercy.

But remember that there are almost 30 million users, we’re all learning together.

Data analysis is a continuous journey, an endless voyage for the truth and insights, from one misty island of opportunity to another. The vital thing that should never leave your mind on your expedition is always knowing where your next island is.

You have to know what you search, why, and what you’re going to do next.

FAQ

What is an Event?

Events are user interactions with content that can be measured from a web-page or a screen load. Downloads, link clicks, form submissions, and video plays are examples of actions you might want to analyze as Events.

What is the Goal?

A goal represents a completed activity, called a conversion that contributes to the success of your business. Examples of goals include making a purchase (for an e-commerce site), completing a game level (for a mobile gaming app), or submitting a contact information form (for a marketing or lead generation site).

What is Segment?

A Segment is a subset of your Analytics data. For example, one Segment of your entire set of users might be users from a particular country or city. Another Segment might be users who purchase a specific line of products or visit a particular part of your site.

What is Remarketing Audience?

A remarketing audience is a list of cookies or mobile-advertising IDs representing a group of users you want to re-engage because of their likelihood to convert. You create remarketing audiences based on user behavior on your site or app, and then use those audiences as the basis for remarketing campaigns in your ad accounts.

What is YoY?

Year-Over-Year (YoY) is a frequently used financial comparison for comparing two or more measurable events on an annualized basis.

Looking at YoY performance allows for gauging if a company’s financial performance is improving, static, or worsening. For example, in financial reports, you may read that a particular business reported its revenues increased for the third quarter, on a YoY basis, for the last three years.

What is a Dimension?

Dimensions are attributes of your data. For example, the dimension City indicates the city, for example, “Paris” or “New York,” from which a session originates. The dimension Page shows the URL of a page that is viewed.

What is Metric?

A metric is a number that is used to measure one of the characteristics of a dimension.

 

About The Author
Max has been working in the ecommerce industry for the last six years helping brands to establish and level-up content marketing and SEO. Despite that, he has experience with entrepreneurship. He is a fiction writer in his free time.

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