This webinar introduces the basics of Google Analytics – from getting started and understanding how it works so you can get your website running with the powerful tools offered through Google Analytics. This webinar highlights the importance of using it for tracking of your website or marketing campaigns so you can make better informed decisions, understand your users, and use that data to provide a better digital experience. We will also explore how you can incorporate Google Data Studio with your Analytics for amazing interactive reports that are sure to impress any board meeting.
2. Description
This webinar introduces the basics of Google Analytics – from getting
started and understanding how it works so you can get your website
running with the powerful tools offered through Google Analytics. This
webinar highlights the importance of using it for tracking of your website
or marketing campaigns so you can make better informed decisions,
understand your users, and use that data to provide a better digital
experience. We will also explore how you can incorporate Google Data
Studio with your Analytics for amazing interactive reports that are sure to
impress any board meeting.
3. Resources
Get Certified (it’s free!)
https://analytics.google.com/analytics/academy/
Periodic Table Of Google Analytics
https://www.datadrivenu.com/google-analytics-guide/
Case Study (2007)
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.googl
e.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1121&context=libphilprac
6. Tracking Code
Easy to Implement and Install – JavaScript added to each page you want
tracked OR use a Plugin:
WordPress
https://wordpress.org/plugins/google-analytics-for-wordpress/
Drupal
https://www.drupal.org/project/google_analytics
Mailchimp
(https://mailchimp.com/help/integrate-google-analytics-with-mailchimp/
7.
8. Track Visitor Activity
The idea of a tracking code is it allows you to understand where your users
came from, how long they stayed on the site, and some basic information
about them.
Each time a visitor arrives at your site, it is called a “Session”
Sessions end after 30 minutes of inactivity
Depending on the integration when using a plugin, you can track other
types of data like how users flow through a check out process, errors they
run into,
You can filter the data you receive
For example, filter out traffic from Employees who visit the site while at work.
9. What You Can Track
The Thing Why You Want It
Demographic Data
(Age, Gender, Location)
Understand the type of users you attract
and position marketing accordingly
User Technical Data
(OS, Browser)
Ensure that your site works and displays
properly on the most popular technical
specs
Site Usage
(Time On Site, Abandon Rate)
Did the user find what they were looking
for?
10. Getting Started
If its for work related things – you should either create a Google Account
for this purpose. (Don’t use your personal email)
https://marketingplatform.google.com/about/analytics/
Click Start For Free
Sign Up or Sign In
12. Setting Up
Organization (Library Name)
Property – These can be separate things you would like to track
independently of each other
Keep in mind, visitor information cannot be merged between properties
Examples: Emailing, Website, Friends Page, Internal Site
Each Property gets their own Tracking Code/ID
Views are ways to split up your data. If you are using views, a pro tip
would be include one for ALL Data, then other views to segment things out
better.
Goals: These are items you are trying to get users to finish – such has
signing up for email or a library card
14. Google Dashboard - Reports
Real Time
Let’s you see users on your site in real time (right now)
Audience
Get data about who visits your website
Acquisition
Describes how users go to your site (Search Engine, Directly, Social Media)
Behavior
How did users navigate through your site. What did they do on it?
Conversions
This is based on goals you define
15.
16. Google Analytics - Dashboards
Dashboards are nice ways to show data
They can be shared – and each user they are shared with can tweak the data as
they need but it won’t affect other people’s dashboards.
17. Key Terms
“Users Metric” measures users that had at least
one session on your site in the given date
range
“Bounce Rate” is the percentage of visits when
a user landed on your website and exited
without any interactions
“Metrics” are the numbers in a data set often
paired with dimensions.
“Dimensions” are an attribute of a data set that
can be organized for better analysis.
20. Understanding Acquisitions
Tracking Mediums:
Organic – Someone searched for you
CPC – paid click advertising (Google Ad Words)
Referrals – Came from somewhere other than a search engine
Email – Users clicked on a link through an email
None – Direct Access to Page
We want good traffic quality:
Low Bounce Rate
Spent Time On Site
Did something (Conversions)
21. Traffic source dimensions
Source: Every referral to a web site has an origin, or source. Possible sources
include: “google” (the name of a search engine), “facebook.com” (the name of
a referring site), “spring_newsletter” (the name of one of your newsletters), and
“direct” (users that typed your URL directly into their browser, or who had
bookmarked your site).
Medium: Every referral to a website also has a medium. Possible medium
include: “organic” (unpaid search), “cpc” (cost per click, i.e. paid search),
“referral” (referral), “email” (the name of a custom medium you have created),
“none” (direct traffic has a medium of “none”).
Channels are grouped Mediums/Sources
Campaign is the name of the referring Google Ads campaign or a custom
campaign that you have created.
22.
23. Tracking Search Engines
https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/2795821?hl=en
You’ll want to make sure this is set up and configured.
Keyword: When SSL search is employed, Keyword will have the value (not
provided).
Pro Tip: To fix this, use Google Webmaster Tools (another feature set) to get
better data.
24. Marketing Campaigns
Adding Parameters to links you post on social media with a campaign tag
Medium – notes one of the mediums (email, social, etc)
Source – specific location of where it came from (google, twitter, newsletter)
Campaign – name of the marketing campaign
Content – can be used to identify which campaigns are working good
Term – used to be identified paid search campaigns (for paid searches)
All these fields are case sensitive!!!
Don’t worry, there is an easy tool called the URL Builder
https://ga-dev-tools.appspot.com/campaign-url-builder/
Or if you have a lot of links you want to manage:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1tf3_SczMMTTf-
ZJ9Bkb70xps_DPGLBTd4wkHPyadKSA/edit?hl=en_US&;usp=sharing&hl=en_US
25.
26. Quick Tips
Its important that you have readable URL’s on your site
Drupal can be done with Pathauto Module
Wordpress can be enabled to use clear links (If you want to change your permalink
structure in WordPress, go to Settings > Permalinks. Don’t use “plain” and use one
of the better options. Recommend to use “Post Name” as the URL.
You can put a tracking url across all your EZProxy links to get better data
analysis of which databases users use.
Monitor Search Terms people use to find your site – and do a search yourself.
Make sure you are at the top of those results.
Pages with the most traffic – should be part of a “quick links” section on your
site.
Set up reports so department members know impact.