In part 1 of this series, we discussed how to correctly install your Google Analytics. Now in part 2, we will cover how to establish which key performance indicators (KPI's) you'll be using to measure success. This is the most important part of your web analytics. Which KPI's your nonprofit organization ultimately uses will depend heavily on its goals and the goals of your website (your site does have a purpose, right?!?).
Google Analytics has proven particularly helpful for content-based sites and commerce sites. If you, like most nonprofits, accept donations on your website, then you should consider yourself to be running a "commerce" site, too. If the ultimate goal - or at least one of the most important goals - of your website is to convert visitors to donors, then your KPI's will be very different than if your goal is to prompt visitors to read your organization's latest reports.
Out of the box, Google Analytics provides a lot of useful metrics, such as visitors, pageviews, most popular pages, and a variety of other helpful data. It also gives you some more advanced, calculated metrics like bounce rate, average time on site, and pages/visit.
As you can imagine, a metric like average time on site is less helpful for a donation site than it is for a content-based one. On a donations-optimized site, you are more concerned with whether or not a visitor gave a donation than with how long they spent reading your PDFs. For this reason, you must tailor your KPI's to your own site and strategy.
Here are some things to consider when selecting which KPI's are important for you site, from Metrics Insider (registration required):
Some basic KPI's that would be useful to most nonprofit websites:
For a more complete listing of KPI's, broken down by type of website, check out this post by analytics guru Bryan Eisenberg.
Once you've determined which KPI's are important for your organization's site, Google Analytics, as of a fairly recent update, actually allows you to create custom reports that include all of the key data you need -- and not the stuff you don't. Eric T. Peterson has a great instructional blog post outlining how you could create a custom report in Google Analytics to track visitor engagement.
Google, as they often do, has created a video outlining how to create your own reports:
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