The Only Web Statistics You Really Need

Web statistics can make you feel overwhelmed. All the graphs and tables, numbers and percentages. And figuring out the difference between visitors, pages, and hits.

Unfortunately, if you want to understand web stats, reading up on the subject may just make it more confusing. Even if you understand the measurements themselves, how do you interpret them? What’s more important to maximize? Visits per day? Minutes per visit? Or pages per visit? Don’t answer. It’s a trick question. Because none of these measurements help us achieve our website goals.

It’s said that if you ask the wrong questions, you’ll always get the wrong answers. But many web consultants and business owners ask just these questions. They ask these questions, because these are the only questions they know to ask. But if we take into account our website goals, we’ll ask much better questions.

The goal of a small-business website is to convert visitors into customers, and to convert customers into visitors. The key word here is convert. If we measure conversions, we’ll maximize our goals. Conversions are what matters. How easy is it to convert visitors into customers? Customers into visitors? How much does it cost to acquire a new customer? How much business on average will that customer bring us?

So here are the kinds of statistics we need to measure:

As it turns out, these are statistics that direct-response marketers have been measuring for over a century, long before there was an Internet. They’re the same metrics Claude Hopkins advocated in his classic book Scientific Advertising. Back in the day, they just measured in terms of magazine ads and direct-mail pieces. Now we measure in terms of web visits. Different technology, but the same methodology.

Here Are 4 Key Metrics Google Analytics Can Measure

If you measure nothing else about your website, keep an eye on these 4 metrics:

  1. The conversion rate of your ads. That is, for each person who clicks on one of your ads, what percentage of them take action?
  2. The cost per conversion of your ads. That is, on average, how much do you pay in ad costs for each person who takes action?
  3. Where prospects leave your sales funnel. If you have a sequence of pages leading up to a sale, once someone begins down that path, why do they bail out?
  4. Which ads and landing pages in a split test perform better? Try two different variants of each ad and landing page, and find out which one has a higher conversion ratio.

Google Analytics is a free service that can measure all these things for you. It’s a very powerful service. Of course, that means it’s also complex. To demystify Google Analytics, start with ROI Revolution’s free email course, 7 Days to Success with Google Analytics.