Google analytics reality check?
-
Looking back over a 9 month period tracking analytics with getclicky my site showed a 29% bounce rate, with only about 1/4 of visitors spending 1 minute or less on my site.
I've recently implemented GA (removed old clicky code) and although traffic is strong, my site now shows a bounce rate of about 82%. Engagement stats also show that 82% of visitors spend between 0-10 seconds on my site.
My site is built on Wordpress and the GA tracking code wasn't placed directly in the footer, my developer built a field in the admin area to insert the UA number which automatically adds the code to all pages. I've checked the code and the tracking seems to appear on all pages.
I took a look at AW Stats. It corroborates GA and says that 80% of visitors are spending 0-30 seconds on the site.
Potential issues/clues:
browser tests show small loading problems in Internet Explorer 7,8,9 (the phone number at the top of the header loads on the wrong side of the page) and major issues in Internet Explorer 6 (site doesn't load at all in IE 6). The thing is no one who uses IE 6 is coming to the site.
Second, the site gets a grade of C in YSlow, it's not lightning fast at the moment. GA is showing average page load of 2.4 seconds, but don't think either of these issues should cause an 82% 0-10 seconds engagement number.
My site is content rich/focused with very minimal advertising. Content is accessible well above the fold.
My question:
Does the fact that AW Stats and GA agree mean that those numbers are accurate, or is there a bug I should be looking for? How to explain the clicky numbers?
-
I haven't run into any analytics related IE issues thank heavens, but no doubt, every time you build a website there are IE specific workarounds you have to make, especially when you're targeting older browsers.
I feel like demographics play a really big role in that though. I manage a news talk site, old browsers. On one of my spanish music radio properties... mobile browsers... specifically Android. These days... who knows what people are on. Go Look. It's crazy and never what you think.
I'm a coder but I don't fool myself, I can only image some of the backwards compatibility built into these plugins and all kinds of who knows what. They've been working on it for years and offer them as commercially supported and all that junk, they're nuts about it. Lucky us!
-
Delton, thanks for the answer. I'm using a few browser testing tools to look into the IE issues. What IE issues have you run into?
-
Don't use a GA tool your friend built. There are very powerful tools available inside a variety of plugins.
http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/google-analytics-for-wordpress/
This is a commonly used and great plugin by a highly respected developer. That's step 1.
Step 2 (Arguably Step 1)... resolve your issues with IE immediately... we're web guys but the majority of the people out there are using "The Blue E" as they so lovingly refer to it. Ug. We're all practically all using Chrome or Firefox because we care about our browsing experience and utilize web development tools... they don't use these tools and don't know better. Problems with IE are HUGE problems in my experience. All the bosses i've ever had use IE and I like to keep them happy at the very least.
-
Hmmmmm then I dont know what it could be....I spent a good few hours watching on my site to see if what I saw matched what I was seeing in GA.
If you are not seeing the same behaviour then I would suggest something may be wrong.....I'm sure someone with better knowledge than me will be on shortly to give you some solid ideas....
Sorry I couldnt be more help.
-
Thanks Nicola. Clicky has a "spy" feature where you can watch the visitors who come to your site in real time. I didn't do it obsessively, but i did utilize spy frequently. What I saw was solid engagement, either a second/third pageview or a good bit of time on the site.
-
I once had a similar problem and I used a program to actually watch what and where visitors on my site did & went. I cant remember for the life of me what it is called but it was really cheap and gave me a good insight. I spent hours at an end watching what they were doing and then the program gave me an option to talk to the person visiting.....in a live chat type scenario.
In the end GA turned out to be correct and it was due to the fact that the customers coming to my site didnt want what I was offering.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Do modal pop-ups impact the Google Analytics of the host page?
We have an instance of a page where visitors can click a button to start an interactive quiz. The quiz pops up in a modal window that references another domain (the interactive content provider). Will the person completing the quiz in the modal pop-up still be counted as an active visitor on the original host page during the time they are completing the quiz?
Reporting & Analytics | | MuhammadInc0 -
Referral issue in Google analytics
We have an eCommerce website that counts paypal as a referral source in Analytics. The site takes people to Paypal to make a payment and then back to the website to a Thank You page once that payment has been made. Due to this, Analytics sees this as a conversion that has come from Paypal, and also records it as a referral source, when we know this is not really the case. This also distorts the data in analytics and prohibits us from clearly seeing which channels sales have come from. Is there anyway in Analytics to include Paypal as a part of the website so that it does not record Paypal as a separate referral website?
Reporting & Analytics | | Gavo0 -
Identifying Bots in Google Analytics
Hi there, While you can now filter out bots and spiders in Google Analytics, I'm interested in how you identify a bots and spiders in the first place. For example, it used to be thought that Googlebot wouldn't appear in GA as it 'couldn't process Javascript' but now Google has announced new developments for its crawler with regards to interpreting javascript and CSS, this argument isn't as cut and dry. I'm not suggesting Googlebot appears in Google Analytics, but I am saying that you can't make the case that it won't appear only because it can't interpret JavaScript. So, I'm interested to see what metrics you use to identify a bot? For me, the mix of Users > Browser, Users > Operating System Version is still quite handy, but is it possible to identify individual bots and spiders within Google Analytics? And would Googlebot appear?
Reporting & Analytics | | ecommercebc0 -
No Google Analytics code on page BUT reporting is active
How could Google Analytics be reporting data if my pages don't have the GA code on them? Mike
Reporting & Analytics | | Mike_c0 -
Google Analytics-Unique visitors?
Does organic search data show unique visitors or all visits? For example, if someone ( a single person) visits my site multiple times after searching the same keyword phrase, does that show in my analytics data as 1 hit from that keyword, or all hits? Thanks!
Reporting & Analytics | | RickyShockley0 -
X2 Google Analytics affect page rank ?
Hi there, If you had 2 Google Analytics Accounts one to the main site and another to the blog, could this affect the page position in Google? We've suddenly noticed a drop in our KWs and it was shortly after we added another Google Analytics Account. The blog has 68% Bounce rate and the main site has always been about 48%. Any help would be much appreciated. Many thanks Paul
Reporting & Analytics | | webdesigncwd0 -
Google analytics - help
Hello, What is meant by campaign expiration in Google analytics ? The default value is 6 months. what does it mean ?
Reporting & Analytics | | seoug_20050 -
How to measure number of visits from Google News coming from Google Universal Search (NOT referral coming directly coming from news.google.com) with google analyitcs
I'm running a news site, and I have a problem of accuratly measuring which traffic is REALLY coming from google news. I analyzed a lot of individual articles and I come to the conclusion, that the visits, that come from the google news section in the universal search results are counted as "normal" search engine traffic in google analytics. So if you do a Google search for a topic that includes links from Google news, you don't get an accurate referral count. As an example, if you do a search for "eBay", incorporated into the page 1 search results you may also see Google news results as well.
Reporting & Analytics | | Mulle
If someone clicks on that Google news link that appears in Google search, it shows up in Google analytics as a referral from Google search, when it was actually from a Google news referral. I was already checking google analytics and google news help forums and searched SEO blogs for this. But I wasn't able to find a working solution. Can anybody help me out with this problem? Thanks so much, Matthias0