“Acquisition” reports are located under
the “Acquisition” section in the left-hand navigation. You can use the Acquisition reports
to compare the performance of different marketing channels and discover which sources send you
the highest quality traffic and conversions. This can help you make better decisions about
where to focus your marketing efforts. Before we discuss Acquisition reports, it can be
helpful to know how Google Analytics identifies traffic sources for your website. When a user
lands on your site, the Google Analytics tracking code automatically captures several attributes
(or dimensions) about where the user came from. This includes the traffic medium, source,
and marketing campaign name. You can think of the medium as the mechanism that delivered
users to your site. Some common examples of mediums are “organic,” “cpc,” “referral,”
“email,” and “none.” Let’s look at these different types of mediums: “Organic”
is used to identify traffic that arrived on your site through unpaid search like a non-paid
Google Search result. “CPC” indicates traffic that arrived through a paid search
campaign like Google AdWords text ads. “Referral” is used for traffic that arrived on your site
after the user clicked on a website other than a search engine. “Email” represents
traffic that came from an email marketing campaign. And “(none)” is applied for
users that come directly to your site by typing your URL directly into a browser. In your
reports, you will see these users as having a source of “direct” with a medium of “(none)".
“Source” provides more information about the medium. For example, if the medium is
“referral,” then the source will be the URL of the website that referred the user
to the site. If the medium is “organic,” then the source will be the name of the search
engine such as “google.” Under “All Traffic" let’s look at the “Source/Medium”
report in The Google Store Analytics account using the dates August 1, 2015 through August
31, 2015. This shows the sources and their respective mediums sending referrals, search
engine traffic, and direct traffic to the site. Notice that the default sort is users.
To identify effective traffic sources, we can look at the source/medium combinations
with the most users, but that doesn’t necessarily mean this was the best traffic. Ideally, traffic
should be “high quality,” meaning that users who arrive from a source engage with
the website or complete a conversion. A good indicator of traffic quality can be bounce
rate. We can click into the comparison view and select the metric “bounce rate” to
compare bounce rate for each source/medium combination to the site average. Sure enough,
we can see that our YouTube traffic is bouncing at a much higher rate than the site average.
The Google Store may want to investigate to make sure that YouTube traffic is landing
on a page that’s valuable to those users. If we want to see only the “organic” sources
sending traffic to the site, we could type “organic” into the filter. You can see
that Google referred more traffic than any other non-paid source and had a relatively
low bounce rate compared to other sources. This means that users arriving from Google
Organic search are landing on highly relevant pages. Now let’s compare the performance
for all of our various Google marketing activities that generated traffic by changing the filter
to “google.” We can now see that organic traffic was our biggest traffic source, followed
by google/cpc, which represents paid search traffic using Google AdWords. This is a great
way to add context to your analysis and understand which marketing activities are generating
success for your business. There are other ways to view which traffic sources bring the
most engaged users to the site. Using the “Channels” report, we could view traffic
by channel, which bundles the sources together under each medium. Traffic sources are automatically
grouped into basic categories (or channels) like Organic, Social, Direct, Referral, Display,
etc. Clicking into each channel will break out the individual sources for that channel.
If you want to group your sources differently, you can create your own channel groupings
in Google Analytics. We’ll cover this more in an advanced course. If you want to view
your traffic organized by which sites have linked to yours, you can look at the “Referrals”
report. You can even click into individual referrals to see which specific web pages
link back to your site. If you want to understand which specific pages of your site are being
linked to, you can add a secondary dimension of “landing page” to the report. This
will show you which external sites are sending traffic to each of your specific pages, and
potentially offer you a source of new advertising partnerships with those referring websites.