How GA4 Will Help Growth-Focused Businesses to Gain a Competitive Edge
GA4 Can Be An Important Competitive Advantage for Growth-Focused Businesses
Google introduced GA4 in 2020 and announced July 1, 2023, as the date for sunsetting standard UA properties. Google Analytics 4 (GA4) is the latest generation of web analytics platforms and replaces the former property type, Universal Analytics (UA). GA 360 customers will now have until July 2024. What this means is that all standard UA and 360 properties will stop processing new data from these respective dates.
If you haven't already, the time has come (if it has not already) to transition to GA4 and start building up your historical data and getting familiar with this new platform. It is not possible to migrate historical data from the UA to GA4, as both tools are based on different data models. While the technical basis is the same, GA4 is a unique product with numerous features that are best viewed with an open mind and not always compared to UA.
What makes GA4 Fundamental for Growth-Focused Businesses:
Here is what you need to know about GA4 as far as what GA4 means for your business and why it will be an integral part of growth-focused marketing efforts moving forward.
Track cross-platform user behavior. GA4s focus on different digital ecosystems, including websites, social media, and apps allowing businesses to get more of a big-picture perspective not only of how customers purchase the products or services your business offers but also of what they focus on in terms of your business once they actually become customers.
Improved user understanding: GA4’s ability to track user behavior across multiple touchpoints companies to better understand their users or visitors and target marketing campaigns more effectively. This allows businesses to optimize their marketing efforts and boost their conversion rates.
Improved customer retention: Given the multiple touchpoints that comprise a business sales and marketing funnel or cycle, GA4 assists businesses in improving customer retention by identifying potential churners and targeting them with retention campaigns.
What Are Key Upgrades in GA4
So how is GA4 an improvement on the existing Universal Analytics property? Listed below are some of the key upgrades inherent with GA4.
GA4 is focused on providing marketers with a more comprehensive understanding of their customer journey across different devices.
The tool is built with advanced machine learning as its main form of data measurement. It uses modeling that allows it to extrapolate from existing data in order to make assumptions regarding user behavior and site traffic (predictive analytics).
The new AI-powered “Insights” feature automatically highlights helpful information to make it easier for marketers to find potential insights to create campaigns.
Google designed GA4 to be future-proof to ensure that it will work even when there are no cookies or any identifying data.
Instead of the segments and views used by the old Universal Analytics properties (GA3), the new Google Analytics features “data streams”.
Whereas the traditional Universal Analytics had three levels (Property, Account, and View), GA4 is much more streamlined and only has two levels: Account and Property.
The final highlight of the new Google Analytics 4 is that the tool enables tracking, editing, and fine-tuning events from within the user interface, which means interactions such as clicks, page scroll, and much more. This is a vast improvement over the “event tracking” in previous versions which could only be done through the use of modified analytics code.
What is New and Unique With GA4
While there is quite a lot to learn about GA4, here are some key elements of interest.
GA4 genesis
GA4
captures data across both web and applications, allowing you to combine and view data across all your platforms.
enhances data control and privacy - Internet Protocol (IP) addresses are not collected, and cookieless measurement for some metrics.
uses an event-based data model to deliver user-centric measurement, making it much easier to follow users along their journey.
GA4 is designed for the future of measurement.
2. Explorations
Explorations are perhaps one of the most important and exciting features within the GA4 interface. Explorations is a collection of advanced techniques that go beyond standard reports to help you uncover deeper insights about your customers' behaviour. This is an area worth familiarizing yourself with once your data starts coming in, as it provides more insight and flexibility when exploring your data than UA ever could.
3. DebugView
DebugView allows you to check incoming data at a more granular level. In UA, real-time reports allow you to verify events, conversions, and pageviews as you or a user interact with them on your website. However, you must wait until the data lands in standard reports for things like enhanced eCommerce data. As a result, there is a few hours delay between the event being triggered and when viewing the data is possible.
4. Big Query integration
You can export all your raw events from GA4 properties to Big Query. BigQuery can be accessed to pull data and insight at a more granular level. It allows you to answer the data questions we want to ask and not just be limited by what is available in the GA4 interface. It also allows you to integrate your web analytics data with other sources. A SQL-like syntax is used to query the data, which can be a little overwhelming to non-SQL users. However, a little investment in training in this area is well worth it, and there are lots of online resources to help you along the way.
5. Sampling
You will be happy to hear that in GA4, you can apply comparisons, secondary dimensions, and filters to standard reports, and they will remain unsampled. Big Query allows you to access and query your data without sampling, another reason to get familiar with this tool.
6. View rather than Views
GA4 does not have Views; instead, you have a single reporting View. You can apply filters to your reporting view in GA4 rather than creating a separate view like in UA. GA4 also introduces the concept of data streams. Data streams are sources like your website, iOS app, or Android app. All of which you can populate into one GA4 property and then filter that property by any of these data streams using filters. In UA, you have a separate View for each of these.
7. Enhanced and additional measurements
GA4 gives you more out-of-the-box, beyond surface-level metrics, all of which are tracked automatically:
scrolling below 90% of the page
site search
outbound link clicks
file downloads
interactions with embedded Youtube video player.
In addition to these out-of-the-box metrics, they have improved other metrics such as engaged sessions and engagement time.
An engaged session is defined as spending 10 seconds or more on the site/app, viewing 2 or more screens/pages, or having a conversion event. Engagement rate is essentially, the inverse of bounce rate.
GA4 does a better job tracking engagement time. In UA, the time on page metric could often show '0' if a visitor does not go to another page or you haven't tracked other interactions. GA4 also tracks engagement time when your website is in the browser's active tab. This makes the engagement metric a bit more accurate compared to UA.
8. Audience triggers
Audience triggers let you prompt events when users match the definition of an audience and become members. Using audience triggers in GA4 allows you to create more complex events and conversions. There are limitless examples of how you can create audience triggers, but here are a few examples:
You can create a 'Premium Customer' audience where for instance, a user is defined as one whose lifetime value is greater than $500. Once they meet this condition, they will become an audience member.
Users can enter an audience pool once they have viewed 2 or more pages and clicked on a CTA.
These audiences can be used to trigger Google Ads and also experiments within Google Optimize.
9. Predictive metrics
This is a more advanced feature of GA4 and one that leverages GA4's machine-learning capabilities. Your website needs to reach a certain volume of traffic and must have purchase event tracking enabled. GA4 can be used to build audiences such as:
likely 7-day purchasers
likely 7-day churning users
predicted 28-day top spenders
likely first-time 7-day purchasers
likely 7-day churning purchasers