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  • The Audience section of Google Analytics is full of information to help you understand

  • characteristics about your users.

  • This includes information about their geographic location or the type of device they use to

  • access your site. Other reports in the Audience section help you understand your users' behavior

  • over multiple visits to your site, like how often they visit and how much time elapses

  • between visits.

  • In this lesson we'll review:

  • How to learn about user behavior with the Frequency and Recency reports

  • How to access geographic data How to view data about mobile traffic to your

  • site How to access data about your custom dimensions

  • The Audience reports are designed to provide insight into the characteristics of your users,

  • what devices they use to visit you, and how loyal and engaged they are with your business.

  • Let's start by taking a look at one of the most commonly used reports in Google Analytics

  • -- the Locations report.

  • The Locations report lets you see where visits originate by Continent, Sub Continent, Country,

  • Region, Metro Area or City. For web visitors, this location information is derived from

  • mapping IP addresses to geographic locations.

  • The heat map can be adjusted to display any metric geographically. For example, switching

  • the map to show the metric % New Visits allows you to quickly identify mature versus emerging

  • markets for your business. Having this information can help you decide whether to focus more

  • on building awareness or instead on building customer loyalty in different locations.

  • The data table is useful for doing more detailed analyses.

  • For example, if you're looking to expand your business, you may want to identify the areas

  • from which you receive little traffic, but have seen that users who do come are likely

  • to be good customers. These regions could represent untapped markets where advertising

  • could help build more awareness and opportunity for your business.

  • Using the comparison view in the data table, you can add in a metric like "average value"

  • to see which of your least traffic generating regions perform above average.

  • You could also use the locations report to identify the regions where you already have

  • a large audience, but lower than average performance. For example, if certain regions have a higher

  • than average bounce rate, your advertising messaging, website or application may need

  • to be optimized to appeal more to the given audience. This could mean translating your

  • ads and site to the local language or adding more geographically relevant content to your

  • site. Let's move on to the Behavior reports in the

  • Audience section.

  • The first report in the Behavior section is the New vs Returning report. It gives you

  • a quick look at the ratio of your first time and repeat visitors. You can compare this

  • ratio for different time periods to see how your audience loyalty may be shifting.

  • You can also see the relative impact of new vs returning visitors by viewing the Ecommerce

  • metrics in this report. As you can see here, Returning visitors not only make purchases

  • more often, but also tend to spend more per purchase. Knowing this behavior, you might

  • decide to develop a customer loyalty program or remarketing strategy that helps grow your

  • returning customer base. The Frequency report lets you see how frequently

  • visitors return to your site within a time frame -- once, twice, or even more.

  • If visitors come once but don't return, you might infer that you're marketing your site

  • to the wrong audience, or that your site content and design are not sufficiently engaging or

  • easily navigable.

  • The Recency report shows how many days go by before users return to your site -- do

  • they tend to visit once a week or just once a month?

  • This information can especially be useful if you are a publisher or maintain a blog

  • on your site. Let's say you currently offer new content on your site on a daily basis,

  • but see from the Recency report that customers only tend to visit once a week. Knowing this

  • behavior, you might decide to develop a new email subscription option for your site or

  • other notification system to remind users to visit your fresh content when it's created.

  • Next, the Engagement report lets you see how much time people spend on your site in increments

  • of seconds, and how many pages they view. Note that single-page visits are assigned

  • to the 0-10 visit-duration.

  • Depending on the nature of your site, your target duration for a visit will vary. For

  • example, if you have a blog or news site, you're probably hoping visitors spend some

  • time there to carefully read through the content. On the other hand, if the purpose of your

  • site is to help people quickly troubleshoot a technical problem but users are spending

  • a lot of time on the site, you might conclude that your instructions are unnecessarily complicated.

  • As with visit duration, your goals for page depth can vary depending on the nature of

  • your site. For example, if you're running a website for a college in addition to finding

  • information about the admissions process, you want visitors to look at many pages of

  • your site in order to learn about the background of the school, understand the different departments

  • and faculties, and learn about available social activities. On the other hand, if the purpose

  • of your site is to provide contact information for store locations, you may want your visitors

  • to have to view only one or two pages before they find the information they need.

  • Now, let's move on to the Technology and Mobile reports.

  • Understanding the technologies visitors use to reach and consume your site lets you fine

  • tune current versions, and plan upcoming implementations. You want to be sure your website is fully

  • functional on your users devices.

  • You can use the Browser and Operating systems report to quickly identify whether users may

  • be having issues using your site in some browsers. For example, if your site has a comparatively

  • high bounce rate on a mobile browser, you may need to create a mobile optimized version

  • of your website with streamlined content and simpler navigation, or you may need to fix

  • a technical issue your users are experiencing.

  • You also want to understand the extent to which visitors are migrating away from desktop

  • to mobile browsers to plan your development accordingly.

  • You can use the mobile overview report to see a breakdown of visitors by whether they

  • visit using smartphones, tablets or desktop devices. Again, you can compare this breakdown

  • between different date ranges to see how quickly mobile usage of your site has changed over

  • time.

  • The Mobile Devices report lets you see additional details about the devices your visitors use,

  • including the mobile device name, brand, service provider, input selector, operating system,

  • and other dimensions like screen resolution.

  • These reports can give your developers and designers direction on how to create a mobile

  • optimized experience to best suit your users. Finally, with some help from your development

  • team to implement additional code, you can use Custom Dimensions to collect and analyze

  • data that Google Analytics doesn't automatically track, like demographic data.

  • For example, you might have a form on your website where visitors can indicate which

  • industry they work in. In this case, you can use a custom dimension to capture your users'

  • selections. Subsequent visits will remain classified under the segment a user selected

  • so that you are able to analyze how users in different industries engage with your site.

  • Custom dimensions appear as primary dimensions in Custom reports, rather than appearing directly

  • in the Audience report section, but they are still powerful tools for understanding your

  • audience better.

  • Note that you must be using the newest version of the Google Analytics tracking code to implement

  • Custom Dimensions.

  • Check out the resources in this lesson for more information about using Custom Dimensions

  • for your website or mobile application and for additional information on using the Audience

  • reports.

The Audience section of Google Analytics is full of information to help you understand

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