Cardinal Path

Using the Segmentation Features of Google Analytics

Not every visitor to your website is the same! Each one is at a different stage in their conversion journey and visits your website for different reasons. Google Analytics allows you to quickly and easily define behaviors and attributes that define a segment of visitors, and allows you to analyze the data in this valuable context.

(The following is an excerpt from our ebook, Google Analytics Tricks for Conversion Rate Optimization.)

A great feature of Google Analytics is its ability to apply a host of pre-defined and completely customizable segments to just about any report you happen to be looking at.

For example, if you’re looking at an Ecommerce Overview report, you have to remember that the data you’re seeing is for everyone that has visited your website (note the “All Sessions” label in the example below).

But as we’ve seen, it’s often interesting to look at this data in the context of various segments, and clicking the “Add Segment” label allows you to do just that.

The first thing you’ll see above is that there are some pre-canned segments you can choose from and apply. You can see that we’ve simply checked the “Mobile Traffic” and “Tablet and Desktop Traffic”, and once we click “Apply”, our report is now going to show its data in the context of these two segments:

Here, we can quickly see that the vast majority of our Ecommerce activity is happening on tablets and desktops. This could lead us to investigate what’s happening with our mobile experience and see what’s causing such a low conversion rate.

Beyond the pre-canned segments, we also have the ability to create our own custom segments. To get started, just click the big red “+New Segment” button and you’ll be presented with an interface that allows you to add all the conditions you want to apply to the segment you’re building.

For example, let’s say we want to create a segment of what we’ll call “Highly Engaged Visitors” and compare that segment against site averages or other segments. We can use the dropdowns and the interface to define this however we want, and below you can see an example where this has been defined as sessions that included more than three unique pageviews and lasted for more than two minutes. Again, you can explore this interface and choose from any number of dimensions, and/ or logic, and even session or visitor scopes to create just about any segment you would like to dive into.

PRO TIP: Remember, you’re not limited to just the dimensions and metrics and the hundreds and hundreds of them that Google collects by default – you can also use custom data that you can inject into the system.

For example, if you have different levels of customers or a loyalty program where someone could reach a platinum, bronze, gold and a silver level, you have the ability to set up your Google Analytics implementation to collect that data and set it as a custom dimension that you can then use in your reports and, of course, in your custom segment definitions.

Download the entire ebook: Google Analytics Tricks for Conversion Rate Optimization

Contact us to talk with an expert about auditing, deploying or re-deploying your Google Analytics implementation, or about upgrading to Google Analytics Premium.

David Booth

David is a founding partner and principal consultant at Cardinal Path, as well as an author, instructor, adjunct professor, and regular speaker. As a consultant, David has advised and worked with companies and organizations across five continents in web analytics and business intelligence, statistical analysis and testing, technology selection and deployment, and online & search marketing. David is the author of Google AdWords Essential Training (Lynda.com, 2011) and Google Website Optimizer Essential Training (Lynda.com, 2010) and served as a technical editor of Performance Marketing with Google Analytics (Wiley, 2010) and Google Analytics Essential Training (Lynda.com, 2011). He is currently working on yet another project to be published in the Spring of 2012, and he teaches a masters level course on web analytics and online marketing at the Monterey Institute of International Studies. As an instructor and speaker, David has keynoted numerous events and has led seminars and sessions focused on digital analytics and search & conversion marketing all around the world for audiences ranging from C-level executives to technical implementation teams. He has been involved in web application development as an engineer and consultant since the late 1990's, beginning his career with Intel Corporation. He was a founder and partner at WebShare, LLC through its merger, and spent two years with the United States Peace Corps developing and deploying websites and web applications to attract grants and international aid for Guatemalan NGOs and local development organizations. David earned his Master of Business Administration in International Management from the Monterey Institute of International Studies and holds a B.S. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

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