---
title: "How to Use Google Analytics"
description: "This tutorial will teach you how to use Google Analytics to measure your most important website metrics."
image: "https://images.ctfassets.net/lzny33ho1g45/how-to-use-google-analytics-p-img/58d909c11dde1448700c22442598f60b/file.png"
---

# How to Use Google Analytics

This tutorial will teach you how to use Google Analytics to measure your most important website metrics.

[Google Analytics](https://zapier.com/blog/ga4-vs-universal-analytics) is a website analytics platform that lets you track and measure visits to your website, actions taken on your website, visitor demographics, and much more. If you're just getting started with Google Analytics, this tutorial will teach you how to use Google Analytics to track and measure your most important website metrics.

- [Access Reports](#reports)
- [Audience reports](#audience)
- [Acquisition reports](#acquisition)
- [Behavior reports](#behavior)
- [Adjust Data Displayed in Reports](#adjust)
- [Add Users](#users)
- [Create Goals](#goals)
- [Create Custom Dashboards](#dashboards)

**Google Analytics Price:** Free with a Google account

## How to Access Google Analytics Reports

After logging in to Google Analytics, the first view you'll see is your dashboard. The default Google Analytics dashboard contains several blocks that highlight important overview metrics like site traffic (how many people are visiting your site), traffic sources (where those visitors are coming from), and visitor locations (where most of your site visitors live).

While the default dashboard provides a nice overview of your site's performance, you'll most likely want to dig deeper into the data to gather more actionable insights. To view more detailed data, use the _REPORTS_ section of the left navigation menu to navigate to the datasets you're most interested in.

### Google Analytics audience reports

Click the _Audience_ tab to expand it and access all of the audience metrics that Google Analytics tracks.

On the _Overview_ page, you'll get a quick glimpse of metrics like:

- How many users have visited your site
- What percentage of those visitors were new versus returning
- The average number of sessions per user (how often users visit your site more than once)
- The average session duration (how long people stay on your site during a single visit)

If you want to know more about your audience, you can dig into some of the deeper reports.

Select _Geo_ > _Location_ to see where most of your visitors live.

Select _Technology_ > _Browser & OS_ to see what browsers your visitors use most often.

Open _Mobile_ > _Overview_ to see how many of your users visited your site on a desktop, mobile, or tablet device.

There are also a couple of reports under audience that you'll have to enable if you want to use them: _Demographics_ and _Interests_.

- _Demographics_ shows you what percentage of your site visitors belong to different age groups and what percentage are male/female.
- _Interests_ shows you what shopping categories and industries your visitors are interested in.

However, in order for Google Analytics to collect this data, it has to enable cookies on your site, so [you have to update your privacy policy](https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/2700409?hl=en&utm_id=ad) to stay [GDPR compliant](https://eugdpr.org/the-regulation/). GDPR violations can result in fines, so if you're not sure you'll be compliant when tracking this information, it's better to leave it disabled.

### Google Analytics acquisition reports

Reports under the _Acquisition_ tab show you how your visitors get to your website. On the _Overview_ tab, you'll see a pie chart showing the percentage of your visitors that arrive from four different sources:

- Direct (they type in the URL)
- Social (from e.g., Facebook or Twitter)
- Organic search (from e.g., Google)
- Referral (from a link on another site)

Below that, you'll see a breakdown of the number of visitors who arrived from each source.

If you want more specific details, you can dig deeper into your acquisition reports:

Open _All Traffic_ > _Source/Medium_ to see the exact sources that are driving traffic to your site.

If you run Google Ads, you can link your Google Analytics account to your Google Ads account to view Google Ads metrics in Google Analytics. Go to _Acquisition_ > _Google Ads_ > _Campaigns_ and click the _Get started_ button to link your accounts.

You can also link Google Analytics to Google Search Console to see the keywords visitors used to find your site in organic search. Go to _Acquisition_ > _Search Console_ > _Landing Pages_ and click the _Set up Search Console data sharing_ button to link your accounts.

### Google Analytics behavior reports

Reports under the _Behavior_ tab show you how visitors interact with your website and content. You can use behavior reports to see key metrics for each page of your website, find out what users are searching for on your site, and view your website's page speed metrics.

To see page-level metrics for the different pages of your website, navigate to _Behavior_ > _Site Content_ > _All Pages_.

Each of your website's pages will display in order of popularity (which pages had the most visits) along with several metrics:

1. **Pageviews:** The total number of views each individual page received within a set timeframe.
2. **Unique Pageviews:** The total number of _unique_ views each individual page received (i.e., this doesn't count when one person views the page twice).
3. **Avg. Time on Page:** The average amount of time users spent looking at a specific page.
4. **Entrances:** How often a page was the first page a user visited on your site.
5. **Bounce Rate:** How often users viewed only that page before leaving your site.
6. **% Exit:** How often users exited your website after viewing that page.

If your website has a search function, you can use the _Behavior_ > _Site Search_ > _Search Terms_ report to see what keywords and phrases users are searching for on your site.

And the _Site Speed_ reports will show you average load times for your site overall (_Overview_) and for each page of your site (_Page Timings_), as well as suggestions for how to improve the load speeds of different pages of your site (_Speed Suggestions_).

## How to Adjust the Display in Google Analytics Reports

Each report in Google Analytics has a default setting for how it displays, but you can adjust those settings to grab the exact data you need.

For example, by default, Google Analytics will show you data for the last week when you open a report. To change the timeframe for the report:

1. Click the date range at the top-right corner of the report.
2. Use the date-picker to select the timeframe you want to view.
3. Click _Apply_ to apply the change to the report.

You can also view data for a specific segment of users. For example, say you want to see data only from people who visited your site on a mobile device:

First, click _+ Add Segment_.

Then, check the box for _Mobile Traffic_, and click the _Apply_ button.

Now you can see data for mobile traffic alongside data for all site traffic and compare the numbers.

There are tons of different ways to segment your data by user behaviors, actions, demographics, and more. You'll find all of the options in the _+ Add Segment_ menu.

Finally, you can adjust how the data is sorted in any table in Google Analytics by clicking the column header. For example, tables in the _Behavior_ > _Site Content_ report are sorted by default from most to least pageviews. But if you wanted to see pages by highest to lowest time on page instead, click the _Avg. Time on Page_ column header. And if you want to sort by lowest time on page to highest time on page, click the _Avg. Time on Page_ column header a second time.

## How to Add Users to Google Analytics

If you want your clients, coworkers, or employees to be able to view and access your website data in Google Analytics, you can add them as additional users. To add users to Google Analytics:

Click the _Admin_ tab.

Select _User Management_ under the correct column:

- If you add a user under _Account_, that user will have access to all of your account's web properties.
- If you add a user under _Property_, that user will have access to the specific website property you select.
- If you add a user under _View_, that user will have access to a specific view you create.

Most likely, you'll want to add users to a specific web property. Select the appropriate property in the property dropdown, and click _User Management_.

Click the `+` icon to add a new user, and select _Add users_.

Enter your new user's email address, select the appropriate permissions, make sure the _Notify new users by email_ box is checked, and click _Add_ to add the user.

## How to Create Goals in Google Analytics

Google Analytics Goals make it easy to measure actions taken on your site that contribute to your business goals. For example, you might set up goals to track form completions (to measure lead acquisitions), free trial signups (to measure conversions), or purchases (for an eCommerce site).

To create a goal in Google Analytics:

Click the _Admin_ tab, and then select _Goals_.

Click _+ New Goal_, and then select the radio button next to _Template_, and click _Continue_.

Give your goal a name, and select the goal type:

- **Destination** goals are triggered when a visitor lands on a specific page. For example, if you have a _Thank You_ page that displays after a user makes a purchase, a _Destination_ goal set for that page will measure every user that lands on that page.
- **Duration** goals are triggered when a visitor spends a specific amount of time on your site.
- **Pages/Screens per session** goals are triggered when a user visits a specified number of pages on your site.
- **Event** goals are triggered when users take a specified action (e.g., playing a video).

For this tutorial, we're going to select the _Destination_ goal type. Select the radio button next to _Destination_, and click _Continue_.

Type in the path of the page you want to track visits to. For example, instead of `https://www.site.com/thank-you`, just type the path: `/thank-you`.

Turn on the _Value_ toggle if you want to assign a monetary value to each goal completion, and enter a value.

Finally, click the _Verify this Goal_ link to make sure you've set the goal up properly, then click _Save_ to create the goal.

After your goal is created and has been running on your site for a week or so, you can access goal completion data in the _Conversions_ > _Goals_ reports.

## How to Create Custom Dashboards in Google Analytics

Once you've played around with Google Analytics enough to understand which reports are most important for your business, you may want to set up a custom dashboard to get a quick view of the metrics you care about the most.

To create a custom dashboard in Google Analytics:

Click _Customization_ > _Dashboards_ > _Create_.

Choose _Blank Canvas_, give your dashboard a name, and click _Create Dashboard_.

Add widgets for each piece of data you want to show on your dashboard. For this example, we're going to create a widget that shows average time on page in a table for our most popular pages.

- Select _Table_ under _Standard_.
- Add the dimension _Page_.
- Add the metric _Avg. Time on Page_.
- Select the number of rows to display in the table.
- Click _Save_.

Your custom dashboard will refresh to display the widget you just created. Now, continue adding widgets for all of the metrics you're most interested in to create a dashboard that provides an overview of all of your most important data.

---

If you're looking to measure your website's performance, Google Analytics is a powerful, free tool that gives you all of the data you need to measure performance, gather insights, and develop a data-driven strategy for your website and content.

**Ready to learn more about Google Analytics?** Check out our guide on [turning your Google Analytics data into actionable tasks](https://zapier.com/blog/google-analytics-tips/), or connect Google Analytics to the other applications you use with [these Google Analytics Zapier integrations](https://zapier.com/apps/google-analytics/integrations).