Google Analytics

BurntNjal

Free Member
Oct 22, 2005
14
0
Ribchester, Lancs
Just saw this on Slashdot... Google has launched a website analytics service... I managed to sign up and stick the code on my pages..... but now it looks like their servers are being absolutely slaughtered as everyone else with a website tries to sign up at the same time. Everything Google is just timing out for me.

Anyway, there's some details here . And the site itself is here. It appears that it's free for people who don't use adwords as long as the number of pageviews is less than 50Million per month..... *cough* I'm WELL below that!
 

BurntNjal

Free Member
Oct 22, 2005
14
0
Ribchester, Lancs
Top Hat said:
I saw that, they've bought Urchin, looks good.

Not signed up yet myself.

And I thought it was 5 million page views, so were gonna be close :)

I've just checked and you're right... I stand corrected.

Still... I don't think I'm going to be getting anywhere near the 5 million threshold either!

All seems to be working now, except for the same thing as the poster above. I'm just waiting for my first lot of data to go in. I hear there's problems with it when using Firefox on Linux. I'll have a check tomorrow night when I'm home if it has similar problems with Firefox on OSX
 
Upvote 0
B

bitsnstuff

This article may interest you:-

1. Facts of the week: Google Analytics - is it worth its price?
Yesterday, Google released a new service with the name Google Analytics. Google Analytics is basically a rebranded version of Urchin, a web analytics service that Google purchased in March.
What is Google Analytics?

Like other web analytics services, Google Analytics is a service that tells you where visitors to your site are coming from, what links on the site are getting the most traffic, what pages visitors are viewing, how long people stay on the site, which products on merchant sites are being sold and where people give up in multistep checkout processes.

The main difference between Google Analytics and other web analytics services is that Google Analytics is free. In exchange for sharing your data with the company, Google doesn't require you to pay directly for their analytics service.

Should you use Google Analytics or should you stay away from it?

Why is Google Analytics free? Does Google have to give money away? Of course not. Google will find ways to monetize this service. There is no such thing as free lunch. Everything, even what is seemingly free, must be paid for by somebody in some way.

Google already knows a lot of things about you. If you also use their new tracking service, you will tell Google how much you earn, when you earn it, which products you sell, how often you sell them, how much you spend for ads on other sites and you will reveal much more information about your online business.

Ask yourself if you want Google to know that much about you and your company. Do you really want to share your revenue information with a company that also wants your advertising dollars? Do you want to share your revenue information with any other company at all?

Google officials have declined that they will use the data to better understand how much you are willing to pay for ads, based on conversions. They also claim that they do not plan to tap into the data as a means of improving regular search results or to identify bad sites. Nevertheless, these things are easily possible if you use Google Analytics.

Google engineer Matt Cutts even writes in his blog: "Blackhat SEOs may be leery of using Google for analytics, but regular site owners should be reassured." That sounds as if Google might actually use the information for other purposes.

Think twice before using anything that is "free"

While Google's new analytics tool looks great at first glance, you should think twice before using it. The market power of Google can make your business highly dependent on Google if you decide to use all of Google's services. The more Google knows about you, the better they can get your money.

If a company in the real world asked you to tell them everything about your interests, the shops you visit, the magazines you read, your full address, your revenue and a lot of other very detailed and confidential information about you and your company then you probably wouldn't give that information to the company.

When it comes to Google, many people happily reveal information they wouldn't even tell their friends. Be careful.
 
Upvote 0
Another aspect to consider is the placement of their code above the </HEAD> tag.

Its just more bumf before your content. In all honesty I have been using webalizer to get stats as it is based on server logs. How does Google Analytics combat caching?

Not convinced we need this one!
 
Upvote 0

BurntNjal

Free Member
Oct 22, 2005
14
0
Ribchester, Lancs
I agree with the poster above about giving private information away to another company. However, this doesn't really bother me att he moment. If I were running a large ecommerce operation I'd definitely think twice about it (and would really expect something like this built into the site anyway).

I've been using Webalizer for a while too, and I've not liked it for just as long. There's no option to actually do anything with the data, and it's not possible to find out anything other than the "top 20" of whatever it decides to show you. It's fine for very VERY basic stats, but useless for anything else.

My first stats have finally appeared in Google Analytics. It's taken about a day and a half, rather than the 12 hours or so they claimed, probably due to the massive surge in demand they've had. I want to have some more data in there before I start passing judgement on it. Looks pretty good so far though.
 
Upvote 0
Since I read BurntNjal's post, I have set this up on my small eCommerce site. I haven't used stats before and at the moment, it's probably too early to say. Nevertheless, the info has been interesting and I'm very happy with the service. What Google have done is convince me that it's easy to do (I'm not a tekkie per-se) and reassured me that I can do it. So I did it. Simple
 
Upvote 0

Latest Articles