New ways to measure your users in Google Analytics
Almost 90% of marketing executives say that understanding user journeys across channels and devices is critical to marketing success.1
Today's customers have incredibly high expectations for personalized and relevant experiences from brands. That's why Google Analytics keeps working to better measure the full customer journey in all its complexity.
Let's look at four new Analytics features that are all about helping businesses understand users so they can deliver more personalized site experiences.
Focus on your users in reporting
Analytics standard reports have been updated to focus on your users. User metrics are an essential way to understand engagement with your customers, especially those who may have multiple sessions across multiple days.
With our updated standard reporting, you can see immediately, for instance, how many users are coming to your site from paid search ― in addition to seeing the number of sessions.
Users are now included in Analytics standard reports.
To enable this update, sign in to your account and go to Admin > Property Settings and then choose the toggle switch labeled Enable Users In Reporting.
For other ways to analyze by user, try existing reports like Active Users, Cohort Analysis, and Lifetime Value. In case you're wondering, session metrics will continue to be available in standard reporting ― that's not changing. Learn more about audience reports.
Measure lifetime metrics and dimensions for every user
Another tool that marketers can use to analyze visitors on an individual level is User Explorer. And now we've added something new: lifetime metrics and dimensions for individual users (based on the lifetime of their cookie). These new metrics and dimensions will give Analytics users a much more detailed way to measure visitors and customers.
New lifetime metrics and dimensions for individual users in User Explorer.
For example, you can look back and see the total amount of time an individual user has spent or the total number of transactions an individual user has made on your website. You'll also see new dimensions that show data such as when a user made their first visit to your site and which channel acquired them.
The new lifetime metrics and dimensions are already available in your Analytics account. Learn more about User Explorer.
Audiences in reporting
For marketers who live and breathe audiences ― which is most of us ― the breathing just got easier. We've added the option to publish any audience to a new report in Analytics that should help make every audience easier to understand.Publish your audiences into Analytics and then view reporting in the Audiences report.
For instance, you might decide to publish an audience to Analytics so that you can see all users who have purchased within the last 12 months but not during the last 2.
You can find the new Audience report in your Analytics account. Learn more about Audiences in reporting.
Reach users most likely to convert
Meet our newest metric: Conversion Probability. It takes user-based metrics one step further to show you just what the name suggests: the probability that a given user will convert in the future. The calculation is based on a machine learning model that learns from users who have made transactions in the past.The advantages are clear: Marketers can create remarketing lists that target users who have a high likelihood to purchase and then reach those users through either advertising campaigns in Google Ads and Display & Video 360 or site experiments in Optimize.
We are also adding a new Conversion Probability report. This report will show you the Conversion Probability for all your users, including across important dimensions such as channel.
The new conversion probability report.
These four new enhancements will help you better understand your users and what they are doing on your site, so that you can create better experiences for them. If you — like those 90% of marketing executives — are working hard to understand your users' journeys, we hope you'll find these features useful.
Happy analyzing!
1"The Customer Experience is Written in Data." Econsultancy and Google, May 2017.