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Google Analytics is a completely free tool that helps measure your website traffic and gather essential information about your site visitors. It can enable you to push past anecdotal feedback or perceptions to see how your website is actually performing with (extremely) detailed data.

Google Analytics Audience Reporting

Audience reporting reveals practically everything about the demographics of your site traffic. It allows you to dig deeper into their age or gender, interests, and how engaged have they been with your site and your company. You can use this reporting to figure out who your audience is and what their interests are - and then create content based on those metrics.

  • Audience: Who those visitors are
  • Acquisition: Where they came from
  • Behavior: What they did while they were there
  • Conversions: Who acted on your call to action
  • Real-time: Who is on your website at the moment

You can also track new vs. returning visitors, the type of technology they are using, and create custom reporting and benchmarks. Is your audience primarily mobile users? In that case, you want to optimize your site for mobile including site speed, button size, ease of navigation, and readability.

Real-Time Reporting allows you to monitor the activity as it happens on your site or app. You can see where your current active users are located, what traffic sources sent that traffic to your site, view the content they are seeing, and set up events to view in real-time reporting (button clicks, form submissions, video interaction, and more). It can be beneficial for determining the success of content scheduled to be posted at a specific time.

Google Acquisition Reports

Acquisition Reports tell you how your visitors got to your website including organic, paid, direct, and referral traffic.

  • Organic: Visitors who came from a search on a search engine and didn’t click on a paid ad.
  • Paid: Visitors that came to your site from a paid result.
  • Direct: Visitors that came directly to your site by typing in the URL.
  • Referrals: Visitors that came from links from other websites

Content Idea: Is most of your traffic from paid efforts? If so, this will help you determine those crucial keywords, find what content resonates with them, and how can you take those insights and optimize your website to boost your SEO to ramp up organic traffic.

Next Level: Dig down into your Google Adwords connected data, connect your Google Search Console, and look at how social and other campaigns are working together as you develop bigger strategies and plans. You can also adjust your budget and spend on paid search based on your organic results and how you like to see them switch up in the future.

Google Behavior Reports

Behavior Reports explain how visitors use your site. This includes average time on site, page views, unique page views, bounce rate, and exit rate. It lets you know the effectiveness of your content and how engaged people are with it - and where potential troubles may lie. Knowing bounce and exit rates will show you where you are bleeding traffic and what pages need attention.

The Behavior Flow Report is a visual guide of where people enter and then exit your site, revealing the most popular path through your website. Think of it as a graphic that mashes up the data from other reporting. This data can help you prioritize the changes you want to make to your sites such as adding images, FAQs, testimonials, and more to high traffic pages.

If you see that returning visitors are staying on your site considerably longer than new visitors, now is the time to develop content that will immediately entice and appeal to new visitors once they land on your page.

For a lot of people, the internet is the first stop for information. Your web presence can help your company rise or fall - and one of the key parts of web presence is web page design. To help make connections with your clients and customers, apply these design principles in your planning.