Google Analytics - Should I Use Google Analytics with HubPages?
76Why Bother with Google Analytics?
What is this Google Analytics nonsenseand why should I waste my time and effort signing up?
If you are at all interested in making money from Google AdSense, then Google Analytics is your best friend on HubPages.
Google Analytics gives you a range of interesting statistics including the number of people visiting your hubs, who are the people visiting your hubs, which hubs are being clicked on, and most importantly, which hubs are bringing in Google AdSense money.
The two most useful areas within Google Analytics are:
- Keyword statistics - which are the keywords that are bringing you web traffic and which are the keywords that are bringing you money. There is also a new 'feature' that allows you to see limited ranking information on your keywords (i.e. where your keywords ranked on Google search during the click).
- Content statistics - which hubs are getting clicks, and which hubs are bringing in Google AdSense money.
This information will let you identify your best keywords and high-yield topics, so that you can capitalize on them, and write more articles around them.
Starting with Google Analytics
The first thing to do is to sign up for Google Analytics. Caspar has a really good step-by-step guide on how to get started with Google Analytics.
Once you are signed up, you want to link your Google Analytics account to your Google AdSense account. This will give you important statistics on which keywords and which hubs are earning you Google AdSense money.
There should be a link at the top of your main Google Analytics screen that lets you do this.
Step 1 - Select Account and Profiles to link with AdSense- Make sure you select your HubPages account for linking.
Step 2 - Select Primary Domain - You must choose HubPages as your primary domain to receive AdSense information on your hubs.
Step 3 - Get Code - If you have multiple domains that are earning Google AdSense revenue, e.g., your personal websites and personal blogs, you will need to add a code snippet, provided by Google, to the bottom of every page in that domain.
Once you do this, pour yourself a margarita, kick-back, relax, and wait for the data to roll in. It will take at least a few hours up to about one day before you start seeing data in your Google Analytics account. You may want to lay-off the margaritas after the first few hours.
Once you have roused yourself from your margarita haze, Google Analytics should be all ready for your passionate attentions. Do not hurry with your Google Analytics. Take your time and treat her well and she will return the favor to you ten-fold! Like any lady though, some areas will achieve greater returns than others. Ultimately, you want to focus on -
Traffic Sources > Keywords.
[seen at the left of your Dashboard]. This is where you will ultimately get the most satisfaction. Don't forget the mood music!
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Making Sense of Google Analytics
Once you get to the keyword page, you will see some information tabs in the middle of your dashboard: Site Usage, Goal Conversion and AdSense Revenue.
Goal Conversion is mainly for e-commerce websites to track transactions such as sign-ups, purchases, and other visitor activity. As such, it is not very relevant to us hubbers.
Site Usage gives you statistics on Visits, Pages/Visit, Avg. Time on Site, % New Visits and Bounce Rate for your various keywords. This information is useful to help you fine tune your hubs.
For example there may be particular keywords that are getting in a lot of visitors, but visitors leave right away (high Bounce Rate). This may indicate that your hub is not providing relevant information to visitors who are doing searches on those keywords. You may want to retool those hubs to contain information more relevant to the keywords that are bringing you traffic.
Visitors who stay longer, and visit a greater number of pages indicate well-written content that give visitors what they want, thereby enticing them to read more from you. These are the hubs that you should emulate for future success.
Finally, the AdSense Revenue tab is also very useful. This tab gives you statistics on AdSense revenue, number of AdSense Ads Clicked, number of AdSense Page Impressions, AdSense CTR, and AdSense eCPM.
Pay special attention to CTR which means Click Through Rate and eCPM which means effective Cost Per Thousand Impressions.
CTR tells you the percentage of visitors that clicked on a Google AdSense advertisement. A CTR of 100% means that every visitor that entered on that keyword phrase clicked on an advertisement.
eCPM tells you how much a keyword phrase can earn per thousand impressions. The advertisements for a keyword phrase can vary within a big range. eCPM gives you an average measure of how much you can earn from a particular keyword phrase for every thousand visitors.
This will quickly let you determine which are your highest paying keywords, which are your highest click keywords, and which are your most valuable keywords.
Note - It is against the Google AdSense Terms of Service (TOS) to show your CTR and eCPM so do not publish these figures anywhere including your screenshots. Doing so may get you banned from Google AdSense.
It is also useful to view this information on a hub by hub basis. To do this, select
Content > AdSense > Top AdSense Content on the left of your Dashboard.
Keyword Ranking on Google Analytics
Very recently, Google has added a new tracking variable into some of its search results. Apparently, this new tracking variable allows you to obtain your keyword ranking on Google search at the time of the click.
Note - Apart from the coolness factors of getting search ranking information from Google Analytics, I have not yet found a good use for this data. Indeed, most of the rankings you see will be quite good because they are exactly the ones that are getting you Google traffic. What I truly want is the ability to track certain goal keywords irrespective of whether I am getting clicks on them or not.
This feature is also still very new, and cannot be easily obtained in your Google Analytics tables yet. However, you can get a preview of these rankings by creating some of your own filters.
First of all, you want to create a new profile. This is important because you still want your original Google Analytics HubPages profile to contain all of your data in unfiltered form.
To create a new Google Analytics profile -
- Click on the Analytics Settings link on the top left corner of your Google Analytics screen. This will bring you back to the main menu where you see a list of all your domains.
- Find your HubPages domain and look to the right. There should be a +Add New Profile link. Click on that.
- Choose Add Profile to an Existing Domain. Make sure that HubPages domain is selected in the Select Domain section below. Also enter in a unique Profile Name. Then click on Continue.
This creates a new profile for you, and puts you back in the Analytics Settings screen.
Create New Google Analytics Filters
Now that you have your new profile, click on the Edit link to the right of your profile name. Scroll down to the Filters section and click on Add Filter.
Then follow the steps for filter creation listed here, on WebMaster World.
Note that there are some small mistakes in the instructions -
In step 2c the filter pattern should be - google.com/(search|url).*\bcd=\d*
In step 2d the custom filter should read -
Field A -> Extract A -> Choose Referral -> \bq=([^&]*)
Field B -> Extract B -> Choose Referral -> \bcd=(\d*)
Once you are finished with this, go get more margaritas, and wait for Google Analytics to collect data in your new profile.
Go to your usual Traffic > Keyword menu. To view the new ranking information, go to the section that says Dimension, it should currently be set to Keyword. Click on the box and select User Defined Value at the very bottom of the drop down menu. This will show you the keywords as well as their Google rankings.
Note - It seems that Google has only added this new ranking information on a small number of searches. I only get ranking information for less than 5% of my total traffic.
Join HubPages and start making money with Google AdSense.
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Comments
well explained and very helpful hub
Some of these stats are confusing to me. For example on keyword phrase has an average time on that hub as 21:30, but the bounce rate is 100%. Unless 21 m and 30 seconds is "quick" I don't understand why the bounce rate is that high?
Some of the keywords are odd too - like some people have found my profile page searching for "mandybeau" (what?) Another on "elven men" (yeah...explain that one!) Another on "how often to write hubs"
In fact, of the 35 keywords that pulled up Volume 9 of EADT, 27 came from searching on "mandybeau" according to analytics. One bounce was from "dog slapping nose with tongue" which I don't know what that bounced - it was only a hub on dog body language.
Hi Shibashake - - this hub is a keeper! A great reference tool!
A lot of Google Analytics statistics are a mystery to me. Thanks for writing this hub and I will make sure to refer to it when I try to figure it all out. :)
Shiba - brilliant. I just wish I could compute computer stuff. I think you've done a great job! It's not the easiest of subjects and IMO rather complicated.
Definitely an article to bookmark - as rch above me has already said. Damn but this must have taken some writing.
Rated up. And will be again 'cos I'm coming back to do so. Really Shiba - bloody well done!
Thanks Nancy! Always good to see you :)
Hello nms - thanks for visiting. Glad it was helpful.
Hey Kb -
"one keyword phrase has an average time on that hub as 21:30, but the bounce rate is 100%"
That is truly strange. You are correct that an average time of 21:30 should have low bounce rate number associated with it. I looked through my own data and all the ones with a bounce rate of 100% also had an average time of 0:00. Maybe it is just an error in Google, and it will work itself out as you collect more data.
"some people have found my profile page searching for "mandybeau" (what?) Another on "elven men" (yeah...explain that one!)"
Hmmm that also sounds strange. The only thing I can think of is that you posted on the Forums on mandybeau's threads and someone got to your profile from there. It is still strange through, because then the Google link should be to the forum post and what should show up for you is a click from HubPages and not from Google. The same thing with the elven men situation. Maybe there is a time window that Google Analytics uses which would be very interesting. I'll have to look into this some more.
"dog slapping nose with tongue"
I think you did talk about the dog licking his nose with his tongue and also people doing so, so this one seems less strange to me.
Wait for more data to pile up and I think these inconsistencies will go away.
rchicaferro - Hey you mean all my other hubs aren't keepers?! ;-)
wandererh - They are a mystery to me too - lol. Let me know if you learn anything interesting and I'll add it to the hub. We can all try to tame that saucy Google Analytics girl together :)
FD! - I am so happy! I have never gotten a "bloody well done!" before. Always it is just the vanilla "oh well done" - but the 'bloody' just makes it truly special ;-)
This is perfect timing. I'm thinkin of doing this since I've started a new website and want to know what is bringing everyone to it.
Shiba - honoest ... I get glassy eyed and starey (like a gynaecologist) when talk gets technical. I'm such a child ...
I trooly admire the way you excuted this. You deserve my Frog Flavour :)
Jolly well done ;)
Only time I get bloody is when Wally paws (read: scratches) me hard and at just the RIGHT angle to gash me. He then licks the cut...ugh. I know what he does at night - making his nails into weapons. I swear...
Anyway...thanks for your explination. I guess the dog slapping nose one was odd because I never thought of the dog slapping his nose. That must be one heck of a nose lick!
As far as "mandybeau" and "elven men" If you find anything - you're goddessly good. Those two just defy explination, imo. Just like that 21 minute bounce...that's one slow bounce!
I guess now, you'll get searched on those keywords too :) I should go to random hubs and type: mandybeau, elven men, that is all. LOL :D
Thanks for stopping by RGraf. Also congrats on your book! :) How did the book signing go?
[FD] Ewww Frog Flavor? I don't even know what that is and I don't think I want to know :)
"I get glassy eyed and starey (like a gynaecologist) when talk gets technical"
Haha - this reminds me of "A Fish Called Wanda" except instead of Russian, its Google talk. Actually I think John Cleese doing Google speak would be extremely sexy. :)
[kblover] lol - Well you know I have a hub on Elven Men - so feel free to leave as many elven men comments on it as you want. ;)
Heh - I just might go there and "mark" the page with an elven men comment :D
BTW, what do you think of the content overlay feature? It seems like it might be interesting, though I wonder how accurate/valuable that info is.
Hey Kb - I was thinking about the elven men thing last night. You know that hit may be from me. Here is what I think - I was doing a Google search on "elven men" - clicked through, then went to Hubtivity, then went to your article - all in a quick succession of clicks - so perhaps Google Analytics does have a click window sortta thing so that if somebody clicks right away from a page it attributes the "actual" page to the area that the person finally lands - i.e. spends time on. Would have to test this out - but it kindda makes sense - no?
Re content overlay - yeah it is somewhat interesting although that seems to only give me data on my own website. I have never been able to get anything on my hubs. Are you getting overlays on your hubs? That would be pretty cool. Let me know - coz it would be interesting to add that if that were the case.
Hey shiba - yeah, your explination about the keywords makes sense. Google would have to have some kind of objective way to say "that keyword made the user view this page", and the time between clicks seems like an easy way to do it, especially to determine the 'landing page'.
Yeah, I can get content overlay on my hubs. I click on the hub that I created an analytics profile on (i.e. I entered the hub's URL when it asked for the new domain to track) and then on the left menu, I go to content then site overlay or something of that nature. You should get a new popup window that loads the hub and then shows all the places people have clicked.
I use Google Analytics to track results for a client's web site. I didn't know we could use it for Hubpages, too. I'll take the time to closely read your Hub which is well written.
Hey kb, thanks for the great information. I am going to try it out and then integrate it into the hub. You da man! :)
Thanks Don. Let me know if you run into any problems.
Great info here and a hub worth bookmarking and revisiting (I'll do both) - my only worry is that I will spend too much time analysing once I've set it up on all my sites - and thus less time adding content.
Hey KB - I must be doing something wrong because I was unable to get the overlay thing working.
Do you have to create a new profile for each hub? I tried creating a new profile, and then entering in a hub URL as the domain, but that didn't work out because Google tried to associate a new ID to it.
I also tried just clicking on the hub within the Content menu, and then going Site Overlay from there, but again I didn't see any data on it. You should write a hub on this :)
Hi Iphi, Yeah Google Analytics can be a bit addictive especially at the beginning, but I found that over time it is really not a time sink at all. It actually encourages me to write more content because I get to track my progress over time.
What you really want to track is trends - so really you get the most useful data if you let it sit for a while until you get to notice interesting trends over time. This also has the very nice side effect of not having to check it too often. I usually look into it whenever something strange occurs - big hikes or big drops - but other than that I only drop in now and then. Unless I am bored :)
Give it a try - I think it will be fun and helpful :)
"Hey KB - I must be doing something wrong because I was unable to get the overlay thing working."
----------
I'm probably not explaining it right and/or leaving out steps. Maybe I'll create a hub on it, not a bad idea. I hope Wally won't get mad and think I'm "cheating" on him by writing about something other than him! :D
I just looked at mine and I know some people don't like my EADT hubs since they've gotten a few down votes. I guess ignorance really is bliss... :(
Kb - Definitely write a hub about it. I would be interested in learning how to do it. If Wally gives you any trouble - I will send you my Shiba ;) He will give you *even more* trouble ;)
"some people don't like my EADT hubs since they've gotten a few down votes"
Personally, I really don't like the thumbs down button at all. I think it gets misused more than anything else. I've been saying "get rid of it" for the longest time but of course nobody listens to little Shiba. Maybe I'll write a hub about it or just bite everyone in the ass :)
Just ignore that stuff - your hubs are very good. And get cracking on writing the site overlay one - I really want to try it out! :D
Nicely written hub and I deff have noticed big improvements by using Analytics, well done !
How / where do you add the Google Analyitics code at the bottom of every page? Does this go into a text capsule?
Thanks for the tips. I hope I can use them soon.
Thanks BadCo. I enjoyed your Google AdSense hub - congrats on the 100! :)
BaliMermaid - You do not need to add Google Analytics code for HubPages. But you need to choose HubPages as your *primary domain*. That is the only way. Then just enter your Google Analytics ID into your HubPages Affiliate Settings - in the Analytics box. Let me know how it goes.
Thanks for dropping by satomko. Good luck on your Google AdSense and welcome to HubPages!
Informative Hub about Analytics. I signed up, but then I wasn't in the mood to try to digest whatever Google offered about Analytics, so I kind of put it on the back burner. This Hub makes it look like a far less complicated "deal" than Google does. :)
Thanks Lisa. Definitely check it out - it is not too difficult to start off and you can learn while you use. That is what I am currently doing :)
I signed up quite some time ago but never got around to really analyzing my traffic. I do not I have a high bounce back rate but I think that is because I need to work on my content some more.
Hi Camping Dan -
By bounce back rate do you mean number of pages/visit? Yeah that is difficult to push up.
Some of my hubs have good visits on some keywords but high bounce rates on other seemingly synonymous words. Those are harder to figure out. :)
Redoing hubs definitely help a lot. I have been doing a fair amount of that lately, and it definitely makes a difference.
I connected Google Analytics to hubpages and went into analytics profile
and turned on adsense reporting.They said I need to post code at top of web page.Can not do that with Hubpages can we
Hi foreclosure2010,
What you need to do is choose HubPages as your primary domain. You can do that by going into "Edit AdSense linking settings" and then setting HubPages as your primary domain on step two.
This is currently the only way to make HubPages work with Google Analytics, because as you say, we cannot add code to HubPages.
Thanks for the tips. I have just set up analytics now, and will bookmark for checking out the reporting options.
Good to see ya Kya. Yeah Google Analytics can be quite fun. When I have more time I would like to look more deeply into their filtering functionality. Seems pretty powerful and highly customizable.
Always too many things to do and too little time :)
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Nancy's Niche says:
8 months ago
Excellent article on a complicated subject...