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Five Simple but Powerful Ways to Use Google
Analytics
By Anna Williams (c) 2009
If you haven't started using Google Analytics on your
website(s) or blogs, I highly highly recommend it. If you've set
up an account but rarely look at it - I recommend you start
looking.
First of all - what is Google Analytics?
Google Analytics is a free analysis tool which gives you
information on where your website visitors are coming from,
which pages they visit, how long they stay, and a lot more.
There are plenty of paid stat counters available which present
data in different ways, but Google Analytics is one of the best,
and it's free.
One can over-analyze or under-analyze any website. Some
people spend too much time checking stats, analyzing, and
planning, and don't spend enough time writing good content and
getting new readers to their blogs.
On the other side of the pendulum, you could go on week after
week, blindly publishing content and flailing along with offsite
promotion, without seeing what results your campaigns are
getting, which type of content is the most popular for your
visitors, and which traffic-generation techniques are getting
the best results.
The first is like tuning your car's engine every day without
ever turning on the ignition, the second is like driving in the
dark.
In between, we have a happy balance.
I find that the best times to check stats are when I don't have
a lot of time to do a more intense project, or when I am a bit
too tired to do anything more "heavy." Sometimes just before I
go to bed at night is a good time to check into what has been
happening between my visitors and my websites' pages. I can
browse and poke around in my Analytics account and learn quite a
lot - even with minimal energy.
Here are five simple and powerful ways to use Google Analytics:
1. Find out which of your website's pages
are getting the most traffic, and optimize those pages.
If you are running ads on the pages, make sure they are properly
placed and updated. If you are linking to affiliate products,
make sure your links are up-to-date and that you aren't missing
any links, or new products which should be there. If you are
using that page for some other purpose, such as to generate
subscriptions or whatever the case may be, make sure that the
page is laid out as well as possible. This can be helpful if you
have a large website which has a long "to do" list and many
things to optimize or tweak. By just starting with the most
heavily-trafficked pages, you will get the maximum results from
your efforts and also know where to start.
2. Find out which
referrers are generating the most traffic, and continue any
actions you have been taking to generate traffic from those
referrers.
For example, if you see that Twitter is generating a large
amount of targeted traffic, you can increase your activity on
Twitter. If you see that your article submissions are getting
new visitors from article directories, you can make a note not
to drop those out - or possibly increase them. Conversely, if
you see that you have been spending time/money on a
traffic-generation method which is not getting very far, you can
stop wasting your time on it (presuming you have given it time
to take effect).
3. Find out which keywords you are ranking
the best for, and see which ones you can "push to the top."
If you had a website on dogs, for example, and found that you
were ranking at #30-#40 on Google for many keywords, but ranking
#11 for, lets say, "dog chew toys," you might want to work on
increasing your rankings on dog chew toys and focus more of your
SEO efforts on this term (of course there are other factors you
would consider as well, such as the searches and competition for
this term). Climbing from position #31 to #20 will generally not
get you a huge increase of traffic. But climbing from position
#11 to position #3 almost certainly will. Focus first on
keywords or key phrases that have the best chance of ranking
high in the near future, and then move on to the others.
4. Find out which pages keep your visitors'
attention for the longest.
If the average visitor on Page A stays for 5 seconds, while the
average visitor to Page B stays for 150 seconds, the likelihood
is that your visitors find Page B's content more interesting
than Page A's.
5. Look at the graph of your bounce rate.
This tells you how many people left your site without visiting a
second page. Depending on the website and the page, this may be
a good or bad thing. But if you have a blog or a content site,
it is usually a good sign when people stick around to view more
of your posts and content before they leave. If your bounce rate
increased or decreased after you made a certain change, you can
opt to revert that change (if bounce rate increased) or keep it
(if bounce rate decreased). For example, if I changed the theme
of my Wordpress blog and then noticed a date-co-incident
increase in my bounce rate, I might consider changing it back :)
This statistic can be used in many ways - it will depend on the
nature of your blog.
There are many, many other ways to use Google Analytics. The
above are great ways to start, if you aren't familiar with or
used to using this tracking system. Google Analytics can give
you a far greater understanding of what's happening on your site
and can guide you to continue on successful actions and drop the
unsuccessful.
About The Author
For more information on how to use Google Analytics, including
video tutorials, and links to free information including a free
eBook download on this subject, visit Anna's blog, at
BuildingFromNothing.com.
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