This post originally appeared on Single Grain, a growth marketing agency focused on scaling customer acquisition.
- Figure out where your leads and revenue are coming from
- Discover which aspects of your website are seeing the most traffic
- Understand what’s accounting for your highest ROI
- Track the popularity of a certain trend or theme of your blog posts
- Streamline systems by getting rid of inefficient pages and blog themes
In this post, we’ll go over the different methods for tracking your website’s revenue with Google Analytics.
1) Track Revenue from E-commerce Transactions
If you’re selling a product (whether physical or digital), you’ll want to track it and the best way to do that is through the use of custom code embedded in your shopping cart. This type of tracking will allow you to determine a few things:
- Which pages on your site are leading to the most conversions
- How people arrive at these “money” pages
- Which products represent the highest value in your store
In essence, you’ll discover which parts of your website are most effective for your sales funnel – and which ones aren’t doing you much good. You might find, for instance, that one of your landing pages is leading to a 20% conversion rate while another is underperforming at 5%, in which case you might want to reconsider how you built that landing page. Knowing the proper steps to building – and testing – a dynamite landing page can be transformational for your conversion rates. Learn more: 5 Important Landing Page Elements You Should Be A/B Testing But before you can play with the data, you’ll first need to enable e-commerce analytics by logging into Google Analytics and switching the “E-Commerce set-up” radio button in the Main Website Profile Information from “Off” to “On.”
2) Track Revenue from Non-E-commerce Sites
Now, suppose you don’t sell any products on your site, but instead use your page to generate leads for an offline business. In this case, every visitor to your site has a monetary value, although this isn’t determined by the number of sales that result from a traditional shopping cart system. Ideally, the revenue generated from the time and effort you invest into promoting your website should increase over time. To track whether or not this is the case, you’ll want to make use of “Goals” within Google Analytics. To do so, log into your Analytics account and navigate to “Conversions” > “Goals” where you’ll have the option of setting up new Goals.
3) Integrate Analytics with AdWords
Tying your Google Analytics account to your AdWords accounts can give you some very valuable information about the efficacy of your PPC campaigns, including which keywords result in conversions, what AdWords visitors do once they land on your site, and much more.
- Log in to your AdWords
- Select the Reporting tab and click ‘Google Analytics.’
- Click ‘Edit’ next to the profile that you would like to edit.
- Click ‘Edit’ in the upper right corner of the ‘Main Website Profile Information’ box.
- Check the ‘Apply Cost Data’ checkbox.
- Click on the ‘Save Changes’ button.
For those who are more visual, here’s a short how-to video:
4) Integrate Analytics with AdSense
As with the Google AdWords/Google Analytics integration described above, pairing Google’s website statistics manager with your AdSense account can result in several types of useful data, including the ability to view earnings based on user visits (rather than just page impressions). For instance, if you’re blogging (and you should be), this is a fantastic way to analyze the trends in your blogs to see what’s working for you. You can view:
- Which topics are getting the most attention, so that you can create similar posts in the future.
- Whether the length of your blog determines how well it converts.
- Which posts are bringing in a higher CPM (if you’re selling ads), or if one of your pages is a prime candidate on which to put an additional ad.
Finding out this information allows you to open up channels for additional revenue or see what is actually helping your website to convert. And those are just some of the things you can discover. You’ll also be able to view click data based on user location, browser type, and referral source – all of which can help you refine your content-based ad monetization strategy. It can even help you discover which areas require growth. If, for example, you see that the majority of your web traffic comes from New York but the majority of your sales come from Los Angeles, you can rethink your strategy to compensate for a specific region.
5) Use Google Analytics to Measure the ROI of Different Traffic Types
One final way you can use Google Analytics to track website ROI is to break out revenue stream by traffic type. Most webmasters advertise their sites in a number of different ways, including PPC ads, content marketing, social networking, forum marketing, etc. However, since it’s likely that not all of these activities result in the same ROI, it’s a good idea to break them apart to see which traffic source results in the most income. This will help you determine how to best allocate future promotional efforts. To do this, you’ll need to set up Advanced Traffic segments, which allow you to break out visitors based on referral sites to see which types of traffic are converting best for you. Start by clicking on the “Advanced Segments” tab under the “Standard Reporting” tab of your Google Dashboard. You’ll see that some default segments have been included, but you can also use the button in the lower right-hand corner to create your own segments based on specific sites or types of sites.
- Traffic from Facebook versus Twitter (use the “Source” criterion to set up this option)
- Visitors from blogs you comment on
- Traffic from forums on which you participate
Once these segments are set up, filter your Goal conversions by segment to compare which traffic streams are most profitable for your site.
Transforming Your Revenue Streams
If this is your first time attempting to track your revenue through Google Analytics, it might seem daunting. Whenever you feel overwhelmed, just remember that these techniques can and will contribute to your bottom line:
- Understanding which of your blog topics people are following can help you shape your brand into a more influential entity.
- Being able to see where your visitors are coming from can help you tweak (or even transform) your buyer personas and target new markets.
- Cross-referencing that information with the success of your previous white paper can make all the difference in deciding what you should write your next one on.
Even if you aren’t actively tracking your website ROI, keep in mind that your competition sure as heck is. These tools are helping them acquire new clients that you could be getting! That’s why knowing how to properly measure revenue and conversion rates can help you stay ahead of the curve. Remember: online businesses make $1.2 million per 30 seconds, or about $3.5 billion per day. How much of that are you taking home? Need help tracking your revenue with Google Analytics? While other agencies love to talk about “ad spend,” at Single Grain we’re all about the ROI. [sg_alert type=”success”]Get a free consultation right now to see how we can help grow your business![/sg_alert]