Glossary

The Beginner's Guide to Google Analytics

This chapter was last updated in August 2021, refreshed content on GA4 is coming soon...

Assisted conversions: Number of conversions that happened after more than one site visit.

Avg Time on Page: Total time on page divided by pageviews.

Bounce Rate: Percentages of users that leave the site from the page they entered without any interaction.

Channel: Group of traffic sources that fall into a certain strategy. Can be referred to as a “Marketing Channel.”

Conversion rate: The percentage of sessions that include a conversion. Can be calculated by dividing the number of conversions by the number of sessions.

Conversions: Number of admin-determined goals completed.

Dimension: Qualitative data regarding your site’s sessions. These are attributes of the sessions such as geography, technology, etc.

Direct: Traffic that comes from users that put a URL directly into their browser.

Display: Traffic that comes from display ads.

Global Site Tag: A snippet of code used to communicate with Google products such as Google Analytics, Google Ads, and Google Optimize.

Google Analytics 4 (GA4): Google Analytics platform released in October 2020.

Last click conversions: Conversions attributed to the last source/medium/channel visited before converting.

Measurement ID: Unique string of numbers to identify a Google Analytics 4 account.

Medium: Categories of sources, similar to channels.

Metric: Quantitative data, or data that can be measured using numbers.

Organic: Unpaid traffic from search engines.

Pageview: Numbers of times a page was visited.

Paid: Traffic that is paid for.

Predictive Analytics: Estimated future data based on previous trends.

Referral: Unpaid traffic that comes from other websites.

Session: Number of times the site was accessed.

Source: Online origin of a session.

Tag: Line of code placed on a website.

Tracking ID: Unique string of numbers to identify a Universal Analytics account. Looks like: UA-xxxxxxxxx

Unique Pageviews: Number of users to visit a page.

Universal Analytics (UA): Google Analytics platform released in 2012.

Users: Number of unique people who visited the site.