Data Snacks

Analyzing Return User Behavior

Analyzing Return User Behaviour helps you optimize your site for better engagement and more conversions.

Monja DobnikMonja Dobnikon July 23, 2021 (last modified on January 7, 2022) • 4 minute read

Hello everyone. Welcome to another episode of Data Snacks. I’m Monja, a product marketer here at Databox.

今天,我们要谈论分析返回User behavior using Google Analytics metrics which helps us better understand how many people visit our website multiple times and how they behave when they do visit. That will help us optimize our site for better engagement and more conversions down the road.

Specifically, we’re going to assess the breakdown between New and Returning Visitors, how often they bounce and how long they stay, and which pages they visit most frequently.

Analyzing Return User Behavior

With this information, we can understand the value of attracting more return visitors and adding value to their most popular pages to make sure that they stay even longer and return more often.

谷歌分析Website Engagement Dashboard Template by Databox

In this episode of Data Snacks, I’m going to show you how to:

  1. Visualize a variety of Return User metrics, including return sessions vs new, weekly traffic patterns, bounce rates and average session duration, and most visited pages by our returning users.
  2. Assess the differences in behavior between new users and returning users
  3. Identify pages that people return to, so that we can make them even more valuable to returning users and increase engagement.

Below, you can view the full episode, or, keep reading for a fully transcribed version of the episode complete with relevant screenshots.

Let’s start!

Choosing The Right Metrics

Here’s what I want to see––I want to track Sessions by New vs Returning Visitors in the context of comparing and understanding their behavior. Google Analytics is the perfect data source for this.

From theDatabox Designer, I’m going to theMetrics Libraryand selecting Google Analytics as the data source, then search on “return” and drag and drop the Sessions by New vs Returning pie chart metric to my data board. Next, I’m going to click on the data block I just created andset the date rangeto Month to Date, so I can see what’s going on recently.

At a glance, I can see that returning visitors make up about a quarter of all my sessions.

Next, I want to see if this split between new and returning is consistent over time, so I drag and drop a line chart metric onto my dashboard and create a custom metric in Google Analytics that selects Sessions and uses a dimension of User Type. This creates two lines on my chart where I can compare new vs returning users over time. I can see that the proportion stays pretty consistent week over week and month over month. If I saw an irregular part, it might be due to a one-off event, like an email campaign to existing customers.

New vs. Returning Visitors’ Behavior

Now, to get some insights into how new vs returning visitors behave, I create a combo chart to compare bounce rates for both segments. I used two custom metrics tocalculate bounce ratesfor new vs returning and overlaid them in my chart. As you can see, new users bounce at a much higher rate than returning users by a factor of about 10 percent. So, returning users are more engaged and less likely to lose interest, which is probably what we would expect.

Compare Bounce Rates

I then create a duplicate of the bounce rate chart, only now I use comparative metrics for Average Session Duration, and you can see that returning users spend almost twice as much time on our website – that’s great news!

Creating a Custom Metric

Where Our Return Visitors Spend Most of Their Time

Finally, I want to know where our return visitors spend most of their time, i.e., which pages they visit most frequently when they return to our site. I use a table that uses acustom query from our Query Builderto pull the pages most visited by returning users.

Now we know which pages are resonating with these valuable visitors, so we can review and optimize them even more and promote them using content marketing and paid campaigns to drive even more interested visitors with a higher probability of becoming new customers.

Returning Users

Time to Track

There are certainly more insights you can pull from this visualization––these examples were just a few to get you started.

At a high level, tracking your New vs Returning Visitor behavior and engagement can improve your website performance and yield more interested, even sales-ready leads.

Want help creating this report? Start a chat with one of our dashboard experts and they’ll help build this report for you for free.

If you haven’t already, justcreate your free Databox accountand reach out to our team either via chat or email.

谷歌分析Website Engagement Dashboard Template by Databox

See you next time.

About the author
Monja Dobnik
Monja Dobnik是一个名单t Marketer here at Databox. She has a curious mind and a head full of ideas still waiting to come to life - either in text or video form.
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