The use of Goals comes forward from the main motivator behind web analytics for most of us: Analyzing and optimizing how many people are doing what we want them to do and (perhaps more importantly) why others don’t.
In its simplest form, a Goal is a page marker that can be set in Google Analytics, which tells you the amount of times a certain page is reached and its most common use is recording product purchases or registration completions. Without tracking Goals, trying to get more business in and out of your website would be like driving blind. There’d be no way of telling what performance is today, nor what it will be tomorrow so it’s impossible to know which of your online marketing efforts are paying off and which aren’t.
Setting goals can be quite straightforward, as long as business objectives are clear and website performance can easily be put into that perspective. For a lot of businesses, the main objective will be to track purchases – quite straightforward and easy to implement. Most e-commerce websites run promotional offers frequently and for those businesses it’s interesting to note that goals can be defined to track purchases made resulting from a visit to a promo page, for example. This goal, if set up correctly, can be an excellent measure of the success of a promotional campaign.
In other instances, one can choose to set up the thank you page after a successful registration as a goal, which would apply to business websites collecting contact details for Sales follow up (leads). NGO websites could opt to track the amount of responses that were received for a petition or information request.
The uses of goals in basic form are straightforward, but with a little imagination, this tracking method can go a long way. It’s important to establish the organization’s own goals and (long-term) objectives in order to determine which analytics goals are to be tracked to give a measure of performance.
Google Analytics offers only 4 Goals per website profile. Should you require more Goals (for example, if you’d like to track Goals for individual products) you could opt to track different parts of your site in separate website profiles.
http://sports.example.com/checkout.cgi?page=1&id=002
http://fishing.example.com/checkout.cgi?page=1&language=fr&id=119
Since both the subdomain as well as the URL parameters behind “page=1” are different but you want both URLs to be tracked by the same Goal, you should set Match Type = Regular Expression Match and set Goal URL to “page=1” (without quotation marks).
In the event that you’ve set out a specific path and would like to test whether your customers stick to that path or get “lost” along the way, you can set up one Goal with Funnel definitions and one without. This will allow you to see how many visitors use alternative routes and this can give you valuable pointers as to how you can keep your visitors in the ideal funnel ( optimizing conversion by preventing visitors from wandering off or losing track of their own objective – purchase, registration, etc.). Setting the Funnel definition can also give you insights into customer behaviour and how they interact with your pages. Whereas you thought clicking a specific link was obvious for anyone, this method can warn you when your visitors think otherwise, potentially resulting in loss of sales.