Ecommerce Analytics: How To Analyze Data for Your Business (2024)

Of all the available tactics to grow a business, ecommerce analytics is taking the lead.
What is ecommerce analytics?
Understanding ecommerce analytics
That’s the story of a group of individuals who took very different actions on your online store.
The focus of analytics is on issues that matter most to the business, and the performance metrics are helpful in identifying and solving problems in real time.
Benefits of ecommerce analytics
Understand marketing data

Uncover trends
- The number of visitors to your website by referrals and marketing campaigns
- The actions visitors take on your website over specific periods of time
- Most-visited pages during busy shopping seasons
- What devices people visit your store on

Use customer data

Optimize pricing
How you price products is the most powerful lever to improve profitability.
Types of ecommerce analytics
- Customer lifetime value (CLV). How much you will profit from your average customer during the time they remain a customer. For example, if your typical client comes back to your store three times to buy something, spends, on average, $100 per purchase, and your profit margin is 10% ($10), that customer’s CLV is $30.
- Returning visitors. The percentage of users who return to your site after their first visit. This number is a clear indication that people liked what they saw.
- Time on site. The average amount of time users spend on your site per visit. If people are spending time on your site, it shows they’re having a good customer experience.
- Pages per visit. The average number of pages users navigate on your site in a single visit. A high number of pages per visit (around four) indicates people are interested in what you’re selling.
- Bounce rate. The percentage of users who visit a single page on your website and leave before taking any action. A high bounce rate (usually higher than 57%) means your site is not giving a good first impression. A user may bounce because of poor design, unmet expectations, or slow page-loading time.
Analytics for customer acquisition efficiency
The main metrics to watch while improving your customer acquisition efficiency are:
- Conversion rate. The percentage of people that visited your website and either signed up or made a purchase is called the conversion rate. This is an important number, because the lower your conversion rate, the more expensive and time consuming it will be to make a sale. On average, the ecommerce conversion rate for stores is between 1% and 4%.
- Page load time. When your pages take too long to load, conversion rates will be affected, which will have a negative impact on your customer acquisition efficiency. With more competition and lower attention spans, users get frustrated after waiting just two seconds for a page to load.
- Customer acquisition cost (CAC). CAC measures the amount of money you’re spending to acquire each customer. Since customer acquisition is the main expenditure in ecommerce, if your CAC is higher than the lifetime value of a customer, you will be operating at a loss.
Analytics for scaling growth
As you’re scaling growth, the key metrics to watch are:
- Transactions. Make sure growth is steady by improving your number of transactions weekly or even daily.
- Average order value (AOV). Selling more items or higher-priced products per transaction will help you improve your overall business performance.
- Revenue. Make sure your monthly revenue numbers are going up.
- Unique visitors. If all your other metrics are trending up, then your unique number of visitors will naturally reflect more sales and revenue. Just be careful not to pay too much attention to this metric before the above numbers are also positive. Make sure to manage your CLV/CAC ratio while you grow unique visitors so you remain profitable.
Customer acquisition metrics
Now, you’re ready to use acquisition metrics to optimize your ecommerce store for future growth.
- First, you should invest a small amount of resources in marketing, through low-budget advertising campaigns, to bring in just enough traffic to generate data.
- Then, analyze that data to gain actionable insights on the best ways to optimize the core metrics of your product.
- Once you’ve done that, you can move to the scaling phase and invest more heavily in the channels that have worked best for you.
1. Search engine optimization (SEO)
- Search volume. You can only grow with SEO if there are a lot of people looking for your product on search engines like Google or Bing. Understanding keyword research is useful for learning if the keywords you want to be ranked for can generate enough traffic for growth. If they can’t, you’ll never be able to use them to scale.
- Average ranking position. In your Google Analytics SEO report you can see the average position of the keywords that are bringing you traffic. Position 1 means you’re the first result in Google for that keyword—the one that generates the most traffic.
- Bounce rate. If someone comes to your site through a Google search result and their expectations aren’t met, they’ll leave and your bounce rate will increase. Google uses bounce rates as a measure for ranking too, so high bounce rates are not only bad for ecommerce sales, but for SEO as well.
- Conversion rate. If you have a steady volume of visitors coming from organic traffic, you want to make sure you’re converting them into buyers as frequently as possible. Optimize your entire conversion funnel, from landing page to payment, to better leverage ecommerce SEO to grow sales.
- Revenue. You want to generate sales and revenue from visitors finding you through search. Monitoring revenue from organic traffic is the best measure to see if your SEO improvements are having a positive impact. You can do this directly in Shopify with our built-in analytics tools.
2. Search engine marketing (SEM)
- Search volume. If you’re investing in search engine marketing you want to make sure, as with SEO, that the keywords you’re targeting have high traffic volume. Research through Keyword Planner before you start investing in SEM.
- Cost per click (CPC). You can control how much you’re willing to pay per click in SEM by adjusting your CPC in your Google Ads dashboard. The more you pay per click, the higher your ad will show in your prospective customer’s search results, which will generate more traffic.
- Average ranking position. This metric, shown in your Google Ads dashboard, is directly related to CPC. The more you spend on your keywords’ CPC, the higher your ranking position will be, which will generate more traffic.
- Click-through rate (CTR). Your ad may get shown to a lot of people, but it will only be effective if the right people click on it. Make sure your ad copy is enticing to your target customer. This will raise your CTR (also shown in your Google Ads dashboard) and generate more traffic.
- Bounce rate. If people are clicking on your ads but you’re still seeing high bounce rates, work on your landing pages and ads to make sure the message you’re telling is consistent. Monitor bounce rates for every SEM campaign in your Google Ads dashboard.
- Conversion rate. Optimizing your SEM conversion rate will have a big impact on your profits. Be sure your entire conversion funnel, from the landing page to payment, is optimized to better leverage SEM for sales. You can find the conversion rate of each campaign in your Google Ads dashboard.
- Customer acquisition cost (CAC). In Google Ads, CAC is calculated based on your average conversion rate and average cost per click. For example, if your conversion rate is 10%, that means you need 10 clicks to make one sale. If every click costs $2, your CAC will be $20. If a customer acquisition cost of $20 is too high for you to make a profit, you’ll be losing money while you generate sales.
3. Facebook and Instagram ads
- Impressions. If your ad has a low number of impressions, it’s not being shown to enough people. This means your target market is too narrow. Widen your audience by including more relevant interests or demographics.
- CTR. This is the percentage of people clicking on your ad after seeing it. If your CTR is too low, the messaging or design of your ads need some work, or you’re showing your ads to the wrong audience.
- Cost per click (CPC). On Facebook, a click will cost more depending on the type of audience you’re targeting. A high CPC will translate into higher CAC.
- Bounce rate. Bounce rate works the same with Facebook as it does with SEM.
- Conversion rate. Conversion rate is an important metric, and each advertising campaign may have a different conversion rate. If you identified a particular campaign with a bad conversion rate (in Google Analytics, go to Acquisition > Campaigns to find out), work on your landing pages and ads to make sure they both have a consistent and clear message, highlighting the value of your products.
- CAC. CAC also works the same with Facebook as it does with SEM.
4. Email marketing
- Number of email subscribers. If you want to grow sales by using email, numbers matter. The bigger your list, the better your chances of making a sale. Work on getting as many email subscribers as possible from your potential clients.
- Sales from email. Simply having a big list of email addresses isn’t enough—you need to be able to sell to them. There are two aspects to this. First, you need a list of people who will be inclined to buy from you. Second, you need to work on the content of your emails to make that happen. Read more about these two metrics below.
- Conversion rate from visitors to email subscribers. Building a list requires adding forms to your website and asking people to subscribe. The conversion from visitors to subscribers will depend on how well you can convince visitors to sign up.
- Conversion rate from subscribers to sales. Once you have built a list of people interested in your products, you want to send them regular emails that are interesting and entertaining, and that will convince them to buy from you. Work on the designs of your emails and your selection of products to make sure you sell to your list.
- Open rate. If people don’t open your emails, there is no chance of you selling to them. A quality email list can generate open rates of 20% to 30%. Test your email subjects to make sure they are enticing and can convince people to open them.
- Click-through rate. Once your subscribers have opened your emails, you want them to click on a product, promotion, or piece of content and go back to your site to buy from you. The percentage of people that click on a link in an email is the click-through rate.
- Unsubscribe rate. If you’re not careful with the type of content you send to your list, people may unsubscribe. If too many people (more than 1%) unsubscribe, it’s a sign you’re not sending them what they signed up for.
Tips for ecommerce analytics success
- Set your objectives beforehand
- Establish benchmarks
- Optimize your campaigns
- Incorporate data into your company’s routine
Set your objectives beforehand
Marketing objectives might be:
- Generate high-quality leads at scale
- Improve checkout conversion rate
- Increase profit margins
- Boost sales through upselling and cross-selling
- Increase customer loyalty
- Reduce cart abandonment rate
Then break down your goals into actionable steps and send them to your teams:
- Decide on the goal you want to achieve.
- Prioritize the tasks you need to fulfill to get there.
- Specify how to fulfill each task.
- Send those marketing objectives to decision-makers and managers.
Establish benchmarks
Optimize your campaigns
Incorporate data into your company’s routine
Common challenges around ecommerce analytics
Here are a few challenges you might face when doing ecommerce data analysis:
- Data inconsistency. Combining data from different sources can make analysis tough. Imagine using different channels like Facebook Ads, Google Ads, and email marketing. Each platform provides data in different formats and standards, which makes it difficult to consolidate the information for a comprehensive analysis. Route all your data into one platform and format to better understand and act on your data.
- Data privacy. Ensuring data privacy and security is critical. Failure to do so can lead to legal consequences and break trust with customers. Make sure you use secure data storage and do regular compliance checks to guarantee ongoing protection.
- Data quality. Poor quality data, like incorrect, incomplete, or outdated information, can misguide your decisions. Imagine making inventory decisions based on inaccurate sales data. You’d be over or understocking products and negatively impacting profitability.
- Cherry-picking data. Cherry-picking data means focusing on data points that support a particular conclusion, while ignoring or excluding other relevant data. Imagine you're running an online clothing store and analyzing sales data to decide what products to promote. You might cherry-pick data to focus solely on a successful winter jacket sales week, ignoring the overall decline throughout the entire season.
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