The Ecommerce Conv Rate by Source metric in Google Analytics measures the percentage of website visitors who made a purchase, broken down by the source of their referral (e.g. organic search, email, social media).
With Databox you can track all your metrics from various data sources in one place.
Used to show comparisons between values.
Databox is a business analytics software that allows you to track and visualize your most important metrics from any data source in one centralized platform.
To track Ecommerce Conv Rate by Source using Databox, follow these steps:
The Sessions by Channel metric in Google Analytics measures the number of user sessions coming from various traffic sources such as organic search, direct, referral, social, and paid.
The Users by Page metric in Google Analytics shows the total number of unique users who have viewed a specific page on your website during a selected time frame.
Pageviews is a metric that measures the total number of times a page has been viewed on a website, including multiple views by the same user. It helps track website traffic and user engagement.
The Goal Completion by Goal metric in Google Analytics measures the percentage of users who completed a specific website goal, such as a purchase or form submission, out of the total number of users who visited the site.
The Revenue by Landing Page metric calculates the total amount of revenue generated from users who landed on a specific page of a website. It helps to identify the pages driving the most revenue, optimize those pages for better conversion rates, and understand customer behavior and preferences.
Unique Purchases metric shows the number of individual products that were purchased by customers, rather than the total number of purchases made. It helps measure product popularity and sales performance.
The Quantity by Channel metric in Google Analytics measures the number of sessions coming from each traffic source (e.g. search, social, email) on your website or app.
The Avg. Time on Screen metric measures the average length of time that users spend on a particular website page or screen before moving on to another page or exiting the site.