I have the problem with displaying stars in google-search results.
Here, as an example, there are two links to the sites (driving schools in Denmark)
1. https://www.koereskoleoplysningen.dk/listing/skrivers-koreskole-allerod/ (rating stars not working)
2. https://www.koereskoleoplysningen.dk/listing/trekantens-koreskole-vejle/ (rating stars working).
I checked the validity of the star rating (using google search engine), by simply inputting in the mentioned cases:
1. koereskole oplysningen Skrivers Køreskole – Allerød
2. koereskole oplysningen Trekantens Køreskole – Vejle
The first school shows only the link, whereas the second one displays overall rating with total number of ratings correctly. I used https://search.google.com/structured-data/testing-tool to check if both sites contains AggregateRating field (it contains all information about ratings) and both pages returns the same correct results (all pages contains AggregateRating field).
This issue occurs also for other sites (I have more than 1000 listings and some of them as the mentioned examples, show ratings stars properly, some of them not).
I validated the sitemaps, website ranker show me the highest results, Yoast SEO is configured and also didn't return me any errors.
Well, from our analysis there are three factors at play:
1 Trusted review sites
2 Schema markup
3 Site authority
Source
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recently I tried to prepare a Product List analysis. I was interested in how products on particular possitions are clickable, and then added to the basket and finally purchased.
One of the metrics that affect effectiveness is Product List Views - the number of times a given item on the list was viewed by the user. But when I started to analyze the data, one thing disturbed me. Well, on our website, immediately after entering, 18 products are loaded automaticlly, 3 in each line (and we send to GA ec: impression list for each product). And strangely, according to Product List Views, each item has a different number of views. Strange all the more because all products are loaded immediately. Even more bizarre, even products in one line have different views. And the question - how GA calculates the that metric.
I also checked Google Merchandise Store (to be sure that this is not just our implementation error). And they have similar results. ec: impression list loads when the page is opened for 12 products, 4 per line. in GA the results for each item are different. I checked only for the desktop devices, 1440x900 resolution to minimize the issues of window size and the number of products in the line. Nothing. The results between the products are different
It is also not related with scrolling. in GMS they fire tags on 25, 50 and 75% of page, but events are not related to line with products. On my page there are no scroll events due to infinity scroll we use on product list pages.
So, once again - how GA calculates the metric?
On site.com I've two products: site.com/product-1 (old product) and site.com/product-2 (new product)
On these two pages, I have to compare their
• page visits
• users
• time spent on page
• bounce rate
• etc
in a different timeframe: same period last year and this year.
I already had a look at Can I compare two different page's stats in Google Analytics? but it's not what I'm looking for.
Thanks for any kind of suggestion!
I think there are two parts to your question, one part is about how to compare two different timeframes, the other is how to get a report with page visits, users, time spent on page, bounce rate, etc. Maybe a third is about filters.
Comparing stats in two different periods
In the date selection, there is a "Compare to" checkbox, check that and select the periods that you want to compare, like so (I'm comparing 2017 to 2016):
Creating a custom report
Here's a guide on how to get the dimensions and metrics that you want. In your case, I would select the "Page" dimension and select the metrics that you want to include (avg. time on page, pageviews, users, bounce rate, etc). Make sure the report type is "Explorer"
After you finish creating the report, you'll see a list of all the pages on your site with the metrics you've selected. Click on the "advanced" link beside the "search" to do some advanced filtering. Add a "Matchin RegExp" filter like so (the "|" means Or):
When you apply the filter, you should see only those two product pages listed, if not, look at your regex to make sure they're specific enough. Here is a quickstart if you're not familiar.
When you have done that, use the "compare to" period to select the periods you want to compare.
Then when you're done, there should be checkboxes beside the product pages you want to compare, check those and click on "Plot Rows" at the top and you should see the two pages plotted in the graph above as well.
This seems like it should be really simple to figure out. What I want to see how much revenue was generated by people who visited any page. That is to say, how many people viewed the page /foo and then later went on to make a purchase? And how much did these folk spend?
I cannot, for the life of me, find a way to generate that data. I can see this data per landing page, by creating a report with the dimension "Landing Page" and the metric "Revenue":
My report config:
My report output
That works just fine. But I don't care about how people entered, I care about all the pages they visited, whether those were entrance pages or not. So when I simply change the dimension from "Landing Page" to just "Page" I get this:
My New Report Config
My New Report Output
Why is it zero? Shouldn't revenue be applied to any page that was visited in the lead up to a purchase? We can see there's lots of revenue, so how is this report showing no revenue?
The closest thing to what you want is the "Page Value" metric. More info here
In your report, you would only see rows and data for pages where an actual transaction (or a goal with a value) take place, which according to your description, is not what you want.
I want to create a Google Analytics segment for our users who view at least a certain number of pages on our site. From what I can tell (please correct me if I'm wrong) this is easy to do if you don't care about what kind of page they view: you create a filter for the segment that checks to see if Unique Pageviews is greater than some value such as 4. However our site has a whole bunch of pages that I don't really care if someone reads (our "about page" for example). So what I'm trying to do is create a segment of how many people view at least X pages of what we call "Learning Content" (basically two specific page types on our site). How can I segment the users who read a certain amount of learning content?
Two types of pages fit into our definition of learning content. The first one has a URL matching a regex that sort of looks like /learning_content_1/.* and the second matches regex /learning_content_2/.*. I've already created a content group for learning content that correctly identifies these two content groups. However I wasn't able to find any way to filter a segment based on how many unique pageviews (or even just pageviews) come from a specific content grouping. Is this even possible? If not, how might I work around that?
The research I've done so far: Google Analytics: How to segment by many groups of pages was somewhat helpful but didn't address the question of how to create an actual GA segment based on pageview information for a content grouping or content group.
The only way I can think of handling this, is by associating a specific custom event that gets triggered on this page. Then you can create a segment that matches users who have that event category:
and total events greater than 4:
It's a workaround, and it doesn't work if you are tracking other events, but maybe that works for you?
I'm attempting to emergency-revamp my print company's website after the guy "developing" the site for me simply disappeared off the face of the planet last week, leaving me with no site and potentially countless thousands in lost revenue (not happy isn't close). All goes well until I came across this issue and for the life of me I can't find any answer's anywhere to it:
Creating a tabbed table containing sizes and prices in Wordpress... easy (this is not a stereotypical pricing table)
Integrate woocommerce into the chosen theme...easy
Now, making each price an individual "add to cart" button - major rage quit imminent.
I have no interest in making a product for every single conceivable variation as it's simply not necessary should I be able to get the tabbed table working as described. Having to do so would probably give me heart failure as I would then have to create yet more un-necessary graphics. My customers just want to be able to see the price, click the price (and thus "add it to cart"), purchase, done.
Here's the tabbed table in question in case everything I've just type makes zero sense: http://www.protradeprinting.com/canvasprints/
ANY suggestions would be a big help.