March 24, 2022 By Revival Pixel

6 Useful Google Analytics Features to Optimize UX and Website Metrics

Share:

Concentrating on user experience creates incredible functionality throughout a website and encourages user engagement. However, success should be measured alongside the objectives of your business always. Ensuring smooth UI/UX design offers a great customer experience that'll help lower churn. The UX designers need to have sufficient Google Analytics knowledge and know the marketing objectives of your business. 

Successful user experience is not just about excellent usability but also the habit of enhancing conversion rates continually via that usability to boost revenue. If you wish to access your website design, begin by first understanding usability metrics that you can utilize to measure the user experience. There's a completely free tool provided by Google, i.e., Google Analytics, that offers enormous insights and data on how you can improve your website. 

How Google Analytics can help with UX design?

To start with, Google Analytics allows you to check the links users are visiting and which areas of your website they are leaving. Additionally, this also allows you to understand how your site is performing. Such kinds of insights offer a basis for you to start correcting UX-related problems one at a time. 

So, without wasting any more time, let's discuss the six Google Analytics features that can help you enhance your website's user experience.

Audience Insight:

audience

The Audience Insight feature offered by Google Analytics is helpful data that the UX designers can get their hands on. Firstly, this data comprises who actually your user is. Audience insight outlines details such as demographics, location, interest, frequency of engagement, devices they utilize, etc.

Want an example of how audience insight can help improve user experience?

  • Demographics-based: This data displays insights related to your audience's interest, gender, and age that can help you experiment with the content presented on the landing page or homepage.
  • Location-based: In case you find your target audience originates from an area or country that uses English as their second language, you can use this data to introduce translations or even publish content as per their preferred language using geo-targeting.
  • Time-based: If your visitors visit your website largely at midnight, you can offer an option of a night mode version of the website or the app.

These audience patterns are major opportunities to create more specific and improved UI/UX design.

Pageviews:

page-view

The number of pageviews on your website is a great way to measure user engagement. Ideally, the higher the page views, the higher is the audience engagement on your website. However, remember that this is not always true.

Track how your pageviews are progressing compared to the conversion rates. Having more pageviews with low conversions is not great and entails that the users are shifting from one webpage to another as they can't find the information they are looking for. This might be due to various reasons like a poor navigation system or broken links coupled with inefficient content.

That's where Google Analytics plays an important role. It allows you to track the patterns in real, actual users of your website. Analyze the data to identify the areas in your website design that need improvement.

Behavior Flow:

behavior-flow

The behavior flow tool offered by Google Analytics helps you identify pages, volume, and paths of the traffic, like the common routes the users take to land in and then out of particular pages. The data offers a better view of the traffic flow around a particular page or customer journey. When compared against the time a user spends on your website, behavior flow allows you to identify the pages that are areas or bridges of the website, which are the major conversion hubs. 

To sum it up, behavior flow helps you determine:

  • The landing page of your users
  • Whether they are new or existing visitors
  • Other website pages they visited
  • Which links or CTAs grab their attention the most?
  • Which website section or page do they spend maximum time on?
  •  Whether or not they converted

Evaluating the behavior data through behavior flow helps UX designers to optimize the UI/UX design to provide meaningful steps and encourage users to convert.

Session Duration:

session-duration

An average session duration refers to the time a visitor takes for performing an array of interactions under a particular period on your site. It is calculated by dividing the overall time of all the sessions in seconds by total sessions. This Google Analytics tool is very insightful for informational websites or blogs. 

For instance, a longer session duration for blogs implies that the visitors are dedicating their time to go through your content. On the other hand, low session durations on the website could imply revising or changing the content to know what will boost user retention. That can further help make any required changes to the UI/UX design.

Bounce Rates:

bounce-rate

Simply put, bounce rate refers to the number of visitors who landed on your website and left (or bounced) without doing anything. In another way, they did not bother clicking through any internal links, navigating the website's menu bar, etc. 

A high bounce rate can indicate that:

  • Your visitors did not find the information they wanted
  • They discovered what they required and immediately left
  • There is a need to improvise your website design, as the above two scenarios signify that there's nothing in your webpage that captures their interest and makes them stay longer. 

Meanwhile, if your website caters to reporting or informing the latest news and stories, then the reflections of a high bounce rate are not truly bad. That's because post opening a new informative article that a visitor finds interesting, they will leave the page right after reading or switch to another article on the website. Hence, besides articles, try giving your visitors the choice to subscribe to your newsletter.

Event Tracking:

event-tracking

Last, but not least, Event Tracking is another incredible tool to measure the user-friendliness of links you have inserted into your webpage. It lets you track particular clicks such as navigation, links, CTA buttons, or anything that is interactive. In simple words, event tracking allows you to determine if visitors are interacting with a particular interactive element present on your website. 

For instance, you could test if your new CTA strategy or button performs as per your needs. It's also a great tool for tracking ad clicks, video plays, flash elements, pop-ups, and measuring downloadable items. And based on the final results your website produces, you can introduce new changes to the website design and do testing again. 

Conclusion:

UI/UX design is an ongoing process of getting your website optimized to meet the varied needs of your users. And that's where Google Analytics plays a crucial role in helping UX designers better understand how visitors behave on a website. 

Apart from the six features mentioned above, it is significant to analyze and compare the other kinds of data or insights provided by Google Analytics. That way, you will get a complete idea of what's working or not working for your visitors and make tweaks to the website design.

About Author

Revival Pixel

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. In quam ante, facilisis sed tortor vitae, cursus hendrerit mi. Sed semper quis nunc sit amet vulputate.

You may also like

Submit Your Comment

Subscribe our newsletter to get
latest news & updates

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipiscing elit