Track all of your key business metrics from one screen
GET STARTED
Google Analytics 4 is a next-generation approach to “privacy-first” tracking, x-channel measurement, and AI-based predictive data all at once. The new property type includes expanded predictive insights, deeper integration with Google Ads, cross-device measurement capabilities, and more granular data controls.
Google Analytics 4 is focused on showing businesses the entire user journey from the first visit to final conversion. It’s event-driven rather than pageview-driven and is designed to work in a world where third-party cookie-tracking is slowly being phased out and privacy concerns are growing.
With Databox, your most important Google Analytics 4 KPIs will be transformed into meaningful insights and delivered to your dashboards, mobile device, Apple Watch, TV display, or Slack channels. Create an entire lifecycle report in Databox by combining your Google Analytics 4 data with data from other data sources you’re using in one place. This will help you and your team stay on top of your most important metrics that drive your business.
Custom metrics and events are available with the use of Databox Metric Builder.
The Average Revenue Per Paying User (ARPPU) is a metric that measures the average revenue generated by each paying customer over a specified time period. It helps businesses determine how much value they are deriving from their paying customers and to identify areas that need improvement to increase revenue.
ARPPU by Country is a metric that calculates the average revenue per paying user for each country where the app or game is available. It helps to understand the revenue generation potential of various countries and identify the markets with strong monetization potential.
The ARPPU by Device Category metric in Google Analytics 4 measures the average revenue generated per user, segmented by the type of device used to access your website or app. This data can provide insights into the value of users across different device categories, helping you optimize your marketing and user acquisition efforts.
ARPPU by Event is a Google Analytics 4 metric that calculates the average revenue per paying user, specifically for the chosen event. It helps to measure the effectiveness of revenue-generating events and optimize them for higher returns.
ARPPU (Average Revenue Per Paying User) by Medium measures the average revenue earned from each paying user within a specific traffic source or marketing channel. It helps identify the most profitable sources of traffic and assists in optimizing marketing campaigns.
The ARPPU (Average Revenue Per Paying User) by Page Title metric is a measure of the average revenue generated per paying user on a particular page of the website or app. It helps businesses understand the revenue potential of each page and optimize their strategies accordingly.
ARPPU by Platform is a metric that measures the average revenue per paying user on different platforms. It helps businesses understand how much revenue they are generating from users who make a purchase on each platform.
ARPPU by Session Medium is a metric that measures the average revenue per paying user based on the traffic source (organic, paid, social, etc.) that led to the session. It gives insights into the effectiveness of different marketing channels in generating revenue.
ARPPU by Session Source is a Google Analytics 4 metric that measures how much revenue is generated on average per user session based on their traffic source data. This metric helps to track the performance of different traffic sources and optimize marketing efforts accordingly.
ARPPU by Source is a Google Analytics 4 metric that measures the average revenue per paying user by the source of traffic. It helps you evaluate the value of your customer base from different sources and optimize your marketing efforts.
The Active Users metric in Google Analytics 4 counts the number of unique users who have engaged with your website or app during a specific time period.
The Active Users by Country metric helps you understand the number of engaged users per country. This metric is important to understand where your audience is located and which countries are more effective for targeting ads.
Active Users by Device Category metric shows the number of users currently engaged with your website or app, categorized by the type of device they are using - desktop/laptop, tablet, or mobile devices.
The Active Users by Event metric shows the number of unique users who have triggered a specific event at least once during a specified time period.
The Active Users by Medium metric in Google Analytics 4 shows the number of currently active users for each traffic medium, such as direct, organic search, social, email, referral, etc., during the selected time period.
The number of distinct Users who visited your site or app during the specified Date Range split by New / Returning Users.
Active Users by Page Path metric in Google Analytics 4 is a report that displays the number of unique users who visited a particular page or set of pages within a specified time period. It provides insights into the popularity of specific content and how engaged users are with it.
The Active Users by Page Title metric shows the total number of users who visited a specific page on your website during a specified time period. It is useful for analyzing the popularity and engagement of individual pages.
Active Users by Platform metric in Google Analytics 4 measures the number of users who have interacted with a website or app using a specific platform (such as desktop, mobile, tablet) during a specified period of time.
Active Users by Session Campaign metric in Google Analytics 4 indicates the number of users who have engaged with your website or app through a specific campaign within a given session.
Show more...
Download this free dashboard to measure the overall engagement of your website and app visitors. Get insights into how visitors interact with your most important pages, which actions are they taking, how much of their time they're giving you and more
Google Analytics 4 dashboard template which will give you insights about your users, sessions, referrals and more.
Download this free Google Analytics 4 Acquisitions dashboard template to dig deeper into your traffic sources, monitor user behavior, and keep an eye on how it all impacts your revenue.
The Google Analytics 4 SEO dashboard shows exactly which search terms lead to visitors, and the quality of those visitors.
Focus in on the metrics that matter from your Google Analytics 4 account. Measure the key outcomes that your website was designed to create, as well as the leading indicators that help pinpoint where your greatest opportunities lie.
Download this free dashboard to get full insights into your online sales. Keep an eye on your product performance, conversion rate, and revenue.
This report combines search, user data plus goals from Google Analytics on your business website and also phone calls / actions from Google My Business.
Show more...
This is expected behavior for metrics that are non-aggregatable. All of the Google Analytics 4 Custom metrics (metrics created with Metric Builder) metrics are non-aggregatable.
When a metric is non-aggregatable, this means that Databox does not SUM up granulated (daily, weekly, etc.) data for the total value (Big Number), since this would be invalid. Instead, Databox makes an additional API request to the API to obtain the Big Number value. This applies to all non-aggregatable metrics in Databox for all integrations, including Google Analytics 4.
List of non-aggregatable metrics (this includes dimensional metrics based on the metrics below) for Google Analytics 4:
– Active Users
– Average Purchase Revenue
– Average Session Duration
– ARPPU
– Bounce Rate
– Ecommerce Purchases
– Engagement Rate
– Engaged Sessions
– Event Count per User
– Events per Session
– Sessions
– Session Conversion Rate
– Sessions per User
– Views per Session
– Transactions per Purchaser
– Total Ad Revenue
– Total Revenue
– Total Users
– User Conversion Rate
– all Custom metrics (created with Metric Builder)
To try out the new Google Analytics, set up your website and/or app on a Google Analytics 4 property. There are three ways to do this. (You’ll need Edit permission on the Google Analytics account.)
If you have a site that is set up on Universal Analytics, you can upgrade it to also use a Google Analytics 4 property. When you click Upgrade to GA4, you create a Google Analytics 4 property that collects data alongside your existing property. Your Universal Analytics property is left unchanged and continues to collect data — you can always access it via the property selector or Admin screen.
Read more: Introducing the next generation of Analytics, Google Analytics 4 – Analytics Help
Databox only migrates metric keys (technical metric markers) and not the dimensions, therefore if the metric key is valid but the dimension from Google Analytics 3 does not exist in Google Analytics 4 (same dimension naming is required), Databox is not able to migrate the metric and the given Custom metric will need to be recreated for GA4 or removed entirely. Hence the same naming is a requirement for successful migration.
Data is subject to thresholding as Google does not provide values via the API if they are below a certain number for the segmentation (dimension) that was applied. More information on GA4 data thresholds is available here.
If no daily values are available on graphs in Databox, set up the same report with the same Date Range and granularity in the GA4 User Interface. If the thresholding is the reason data is not displayed, a yellow warning icon will be displayed on the report in GA4, stating that the data was thresholded.
If the Quota Limits for GA4 are hit in Databox, the ‘Limit Reached’ error message will be displayed in Databox or temporary issues will appear with using the GA4 Metric Builder. The error messages as well as any issues with using the Metric Builder will subside when the limits are reset in the following hours.
Google documentation on GA4 Quota Limits – https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/reporting/data/v1/quotas
Check the Custom Metric setup, if ‘Cohort’ is selected in the Metric field. Cohorts are not yet supported in Metric Builder for Google Analytics 4.