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  • Most digital analytics tools, including Google Analytics, use a simple model to organize

  • the data you collect.

  • There are three components to this data model -- users, sessions and interactions.

  • A user is a visitor to your website or app,

  • a session is the time they spend there,

  • and an interaction is what they do while they're there.

  • You can think of users, sessions and interactions as a hierarchy.

  • Let's talk through the details of this hierarchy using the analogy of a restaurant.

  • Restaurants have many customers, some that visit for just one meal, and some that visit

  • regularly.

  • During each visit, a person can have one or more interactions with the restaurant staff.

  • A customer that checks in with the host and leaves right away

  • because no tables are available has just one interaction during that visit.

  • In another visit, they may check in, get seated, order dinner, and pay the bill.

  • This visit has four interactions.

  • Like a restaurant, your website or mobile app also has visitors, or users.

  • Some users visit just one time, and some visit multiple times.

  • In Google Analytics, we refer to each visit as a session.

  • Later in this course, we'll talk in greater detail about how Google Analytics identifies

  • the same user across multiple sessions.

  • But for now, it's important to remember two things:

  • First, there is a relationship between users and sessions,

  • like the relationship between restaurant customers and their visits.

  • Second, Google Analytics can recognize returning users from multiple sessions over time,

  • just like a restaurant staff recognizes its regular customers.

  • A visit to a restaurant is made up of interactions,

  • like ordering a meal and paying the bill.

  • Similarly, a website or app session is made up of individual interactions.

  • For example, a user might visit your homepage and then leave right away.

  • This session would have one interaction -- a page view.

  • In another session, a user might visit your homepage, watch a video, and make a purchase.

  • That session includes three interactions.

  • In Google Analytics, we call each individual interaction within a session a "hit."

  • There are different types of hits -- for example, pageviews, events and transactions.

  • Each one is designed to collect a different type of data.

  • You can now see that each interaction that Google Analytics tracks belongs to a session,

  • and each session is associated with a user.

  • We'll revisit the three components of the data model -- users, sessions, and interactions

  • --

  • as we discuss the Google Analytics platform throughout this course.

Most digital analytics tools, including Google Analytics, use a simple model to organize

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