Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Is anybody happily using Google Analytics with big websites? (million+ pages, million+ monthly visitors) [closed]

I was a happy customer of Google Analytics starting from the Urchin times. But something strange happened a few months ago and GA started showing a fake URL called "(other)" that is credited between 5% and 45% of all site traffic. I've tried filtering out some URL parameters to reduce the number of pages. Currently GA shows only 150,000 pages on my site, which is well below the half million limit that some people are talking about. Still, the page "(other)" is showing as the most popular page on my site.

Is anybody else struggling with this issue? I am wondering whether this could be a scalability issue. My site has been growing over the years, and currently doing 1.25 million unique monthly visitors and over 10 million pageviews. The site itself has around half a million pages. If you are successfully using GA with a bigger website than mine, please share your story. Are you using the Sampling feature of their tracking script?

Thanks!

like image 677
Dennis Kashkin Avatar asked May 29 '09 17:05

Dennis Kashkin


People also ask

What percentage of websites use Google Analytics?

Google Analytics is Used by Approximately 55.49% of All Websites. Given that Google Analytics is one of the most popular website analytics tools there is, it should come as no surprise that so many people rely on it.

Can you make money with Google Analytics?

If you're an up and coming analytics expert looking to make a side-income off your skills, that's a lot of potential customers! The demand for people with web analytics skills continues to increase. Companies need help setting up, managing, and understanding their analytics accounts.

How many websites can I track with my Google Analytics account?

Analytics accounts organization For setting up Analytics accounts to manage multiple websites, keep in mind the following: Each Analytics account can have up to 100 properties and each property can have up to 25 views.

Will Google Analytics go away?

On July 1, 2023, standard Universal Analytics properties will stop processing new hits. If you still rely on Universal Analytics, we recommend that you prepare to use Google Analytics 4 going forward.


2 Answers

For a huge website like and I would not use a Free Analytics. I would use something like Web trends or some other paid analytics. We cannot blame GA for this after all its a free service ;-)

GA has page view limits too. (5 Million page views)

Just curious. How long did you take to add the analytics code to your pages? ;-)

like image 104
Shoban Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 15:09

Shoban


In Advanced Web Metrics with Google Analytics Brian Clifton writes that above a certain number of page views, Google Analytics is no more able to list all the seperate page views and starts aggregating the small amount ones under „(other)” entry.

By default, Google Analytics collects pageview data for every visitor. For very high traffic sites, the amount of data can be overwhelming, leading to large parts of the “long tail” of information to be missing from your reports, simply because they are too far down in the report tables. You can diminish this issue by creating separate profiles of visitor segments—for example, /blog, /forum, /support, etc. However, another option is to sample your visitors.

like image 23
viam0Zah Avatar answered Sep 21 '22 15:09

viam0Zah