Web analytics provides statistics and basic tools to help you understand how people are using your online service (i.e. website or online application) and how the service is performing. More importantly, you can use this data to make improvements to the service.
It’s equally important to remember that data is part of a bigger picture. Analytics will not provide you with conclusive answers about your online service - it can help you understand how your service is performing and evaluate how to further improve and invest in an online service. This data can and should be complemented by user research and usability testing.
Why gather analytics?
Site analytics can help you understand how to improve your service. If you can ask specific, discrete and data-focused questions of the data you can gain important insights into your platform.
Some questions you might have about your site include:
I have a lot of outdated content and updating will be a big job - Where should I start?
I get constant email requests for information that is already included in the web site - Why are people having trouble finding that information?
The head of my department is pushing for a new feature on the site - but, I’m not sure it’s a good idea. How do I support this claim?
Google analytics is only one part of a larger puzzle. The best way to know if your service is useful and valuable is to ask the people you are trying to serve.
Don’t be intimidated by user research - you can start small. Identify a group of 5 people (site users, colleagues and/or strangers). Ask them basic questions such as “How do you typically get to the site? What is the most common reason you have for visiting the site?”
Be neutral and open to user feedback. User opinions may be opposite of yours (ex. Users like the blue button, you like the red button. Users want feature X, you want feature Y).
Product Purpose
Every online site has a different purpose. Some sites (e.g. http://unocha.org ) are for advocacy and the purpose is to share the information with a wide number of people. Other sites are operational - they fill a specific need for a certain audience. Different purposes means the way we measure and understand users will be different. User your product goals to guide your analytics.
How many users are coming from countries with active humanitarian operations?
Engagement rate/clicks on links
Site visitors (location)
Humanitarian Context
It is important to consider what is happening in the larger humanitarian context in order to make sense of patterns you might see in the analytics data. Questions to consider include:
Is there a new emergency or rapid scale up?
Is there an advocacy campaign that may be encouraging more page views or new search terms?
Has there been an interview with a senior leader?
Has a major news organization linked to a report or page on the site?