New Feature Spotlight: Engagement Goals, Goal Sets and 20 Goals Per Profile
Wednesday, October 28, 2009 | 11:39 AM
Labels: Announcements
Last week, we announced a bundle of new enterprise-class features in Google Analytics. Over the next few weeks, we'll do posts which go into depth on each new feature. Here is the first, which goes into detail on the expanded and improved goals in Google Analytics (related video). It's very clearly and insightfully written by our friends at WebShare, a Google Analytics Authorized Consultant, with links to related help center articles.
You can probably think of more than four things you'd like your visitors to be doing when they visit your website. Until last week, Google Analytics had limited the number of configurable goals per profile to just four. Sure, you can create 50 profiles and thus track up to 200 goals, but having to switch back and forth in your reports can be a bit cumbersome. Well, here's some very welcome news: comprehensive site performance measurement just got easier. A newly released feature in Google Analytics now lets you create up to 20 conversion goals per profile, including new Engagement goals.
What is it?
Each profile now can be configured with up to four “Goal Sets”, each capable of housing five individual goals. In your Traffic Sources reports, each goal set appears as its own tab (see screenshot below) and the goals associated with the set are listed out in plain text, just as before, to show you how your visitors are accomplishing the objectives of your site. (Click any image to enlarge it.)
When viewing your Goal reports, you'll now see up to 20 individual goals in the “Select Goal:” dropdown list, so you can quickly and efficiently look at trend data, funnel visualizations and more:
Setting Up Your Goals
Goal configuration has a new look which follows the goal set organization. For each goal set, you can add up to five individual goals (the remaining number of goals in each set are conveniently noted for you). To add a new goal, just click on the “Add goal” link for the goal set you wish to add a goal to.
With all of these new goals to configure, it's a good practice to use your goal sets to group your goals strategically. For example, you might use Goal Set 1 to track a set of e-commerce related goals such as Successful Purchase, Added Item to Shopping Cart, Deleted Item from Shopping Cart, and things of that nature. For your next set, you might want to track interaction goals such as Newsletter Signup, Followed us on Twitter, Logged In, etc... The sky's the limit, but make sure to consider how you'll want to use your reports when configuring your new goals.

New Goal Types - Engagement Goals
Time on Site allows you to specify a greater than or less than value of time spent on your site as one of your goals. The following goal would fire once a visit passes five minutes in length:
As always, if you'd like a monetary value to be assigned to any of your goals and used in cost and revenue calculations, just enter the amount in the "Goal Value" field.
Goal Funnels
One more change to the goal creation page is the goal funnel creation step. The setup is collapsed by default (as it is optional), but if your URL Destination goals follow a path and you'd like to see how users are entering, following and abandoning that path, this is something that you can take advantage of. To create a funnel, just click on the “+ Yes, create a funnel for this goal” link and start entering the URL path to your goal, adding up to 10 steps.
Happy Goaling!
With this new addition to Google Analytics, opportunities to understand and then cater to your visitors abound. So the question is, how will you take advantage of this for your site?






13 comments:
Bill Gunyon said...
Why produce time-on-site goals when this data is not correctly recorded by Google Analytics for visitors who access only one page?
7:13 AM
Peter Nixey said...
Is there any logic for why we can't use events as goal targets?
We are already recording events as events in Analytics so do we need to now back them out again to a URL - this seems a little silly.
Also what is the rollout plan for these features? None of the features announced on October 20th are yet showing on my account.
Thanks!
11:10 AM
Zvika Jerbi said...
that's really really great.
Do you know when will this be accessible through GA API.
for now it is not and neither is the unique visitors metric
6:12 AM
<b>Ganesh Ananthan</b> said...
Hi
I have used this feature on my website http://www.techcmantix.com
Nice to implement this .. I can now view my own trends.
Ganz
1:59 PM
dericknwq said...
Google Analytics historically only records time spent if a visitor visits more than a page. In the case of the engagement goal, does "Time on Site" work on a single page visit as the name and the description sounds like?
6:11 AM
Fer said...
A very much welcome update. The initial limitation to 4 goals was possibly one of the most popular drawbacks.
But just being picky, when will the change be rolled to Custom Reports? I still can use only the first 4 goals there.
Looking forward to the next updates!
5:34 PM
Pavel JaĊĦek said...
Nice article.
On the image with goals setting I can see "Add Product to Cart", what brings me to a specific question. As these goals are not "unique", is it enough to get just a number of visits that added some product to cart? Because you would not get a total number of add-to-carts. What insights can you get from this metric?
2:51 AM
Rommil said...
I'm definitely happy to see the addition of these new conversions, however, I have a question:
If I have a time on site goal of being on the page for less than 5 seconds - would a bounce trigger this conversion?
1:15 PM
Jeff Gillis said...
@Fer: thanks for the comment. We'll add the new goals to custom reports soon.
@Pavel: There is now a unique visitor metric which is true uniques in advanced segments and custom reports. We'll be blogging about it soon.
@Zvika: we're hoping to roll this out soon.
@Peter: we've heard this need! hopefully we can prioritize this soon.
Everyone should have goals and advanced features. The rest of the features should be in your account very soon if they are not already.
10:36 AM
Kyle Ploessl said...
Is there any documentation on how "per visit goal value" is calculated?
For example, if 1 visitor converts on 4 different goals - is the value of that visit calculated as the sum of the associated values of each of those 4 goals?
11:49 AM
David said...
Hello.
Where i can see the country that enter on my page and by what searching they did it for example if i have a restaurante page and i have a restaurant name la vitrola, i want to check the country that make that specific search.
Thanks.
7:59 AM
6sMarketing said...
Does anyone know how (or when it will be available) to get the Goal Sets to work in the Custom Reports (also in beta). I can only get them to create custom reports for the original 4 goals in the profile.
1:50 PM
Jeff Gillis said...
@Rommil: A visit is considered a bounce if it only has one "hit" (typically a page view or event) in their session. Bounce rate does not include any time dimension in its computation.
On the last page view during any visit web analytics tools, all of them by default, can't capture the exit time stamp. Time on that page is set to zero. For more information on how time is calculated in web analytics tools please see this page:
Standard Metrics Revisited: Time on Page & Time on Site
http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/2008/01/standard-metrics-revisited-time-on-page-and-time-on-site.html
10:31 AM
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