Introducing Flow Visualization: visualizing visitor flow
Wednesday, October 19, 2011 | 10:32 AM
Labels: Announcements, Features, New Google Analytics
Many of you have shared with us difficulties you’ve experienced when using traditional path analysis tools. For instance, many of these tools don’t sensibly group related visitor paths and pages, and segmentation analysis can be difficult. You’re looking for better ways to visualize and quickly find those insights about how visitors flow through your sites.
The Google Analytics team has been listening and is working hard to meet your needs. Our design team chose not to build individual “path analysis,” which can quickly become complicated. Instead, they took inspiration from a wide range of sources to reimagine approaches for visualizing visitor flow. Our goal is to help marketers and analysts better optimize their visitor experience by presenting the ways that visitors flow through their sites in an intuitive and useful way.
This morning at Web 2.0 Summit, Susan Wojcicki & I unveiled the release of “Flow Visualization” in Google Analytics, a tool that allows you to analyze site insights graphically, and instantly understand how visitors flow across pages on your site. Starting this week, “Visitors Flow” and “Goal Flow” will be rolling out to all accounts. Other types of visualizers will be coming to Google Analytics in the coming few months, but in the meantime, here’s what you can expect from this initial release.
Visitors Flow
The Visitors Flow view provides a graphical representation of visitors’ flow through the site by traffic source (or any other dimensions) so you can see their journey, as well as where they dropped off. You’ll find this visualizer on the left hand navigation menu, where you’ll see a new “Visitors Flow” link under the Visitors section.

Nodes are automatically clustered according to an intelligence algorithm that groups together the most likely visitor flow through a site.
You’ll also notice that we made the visualization highly interactive. You can interact with the graph to highlight different pathways, and to see information about specific nodes and connections. For example, if you want to dive deeper into your “specials” set of pages, you can hover over the node to see more at a glance.

This type of visualization allows you to answer important questions, such as “How successful is my new promo page?” In the example above, a marketer instantly gains the insight that there are 5.46K visits (based on the sources on the left hand side) and the majority of visits to the “specials” or promo page come from Google search.
To take this a step further, you can drill down into any node by “exploring the traffic” through the node. In this case, you can see how visitors coming specifically from Google search journeyed across your site.

We realize that you might want to specifically focus on a node, so we’re providing data on all the visits that lead to that node, and not just the ones that come from the top sources in the Visitors Flow. You can also traverse the path forwards or backwards on this visualizer to gain more insight on how engaged the users are to your new promotion.
Goal Flow
Goal Flow provides a graphical representation for how visitors flow through your goal steps and where they dropped off. Because the goal steps are defined by the site owner, they should reflect the important steps and page groups of interest to the site. In this first iteration, we’re supporting only URL goals, but we’ll soon be adding events and possibly other goal types.

You can find the Goal Flow visualizer in the Conversions > Goals section of the “Standard Reporting Tab.” Goal Flow helps you understand:
- The relative volume of visits to your site by the dimension you choose (e.g. traffic source, campaign, browser)
- The rates at which visitors abandon different pathways
- Where and how visitors navigate each of the steps that you defined
- How the visitors interacted with your site, including backtracking to previous goal steps

Pages before and after the node of interest are automatically grouped based on the most common “visitor” flows, and we’re building continued improvements to help group together sensible visitor paths and page nodes.
If you don’t have goals or goal funnels already set up, don’t worry. You can create a new goal or goal funnel from your profile settings and check it out right away - it works backwards on your historical data.
These two views are our first step in tackling flow visualization for visitors through a site, and we look forward to hearing your feedback as all users begin experiencing it in the coming weeks. We’re excited to bring useful and beautiful tools like these to help you understand your site, so stayed tuned for more!
As always, we welcome your input on how we can make Flow Visualization truly useful for you, so let us know in the comments, or send us your thoughts.
- Posted by Phil Mui, Google Analytics team


51 comments:
Rob Jackson said...
Real game changer this for Google, limited funnels has long been a hinderance to platform and this tool seems to address that perfectly.
I'm also personally pleased that Google have released this in the standard version for GA as it shows their commitment to the non enterprise market.
10:56 AM
Exploter said...
After real-time update I did not expect any more surprises planned for us.
Looks great, waiting to see the plugin in action.
I wish that you improve the heatzone option and improve it more professional tool
11:15 AM
Kayden Kelly said...
This is indeed a game changer, especially in light of all the other recent feature announcements.
Our team has been playing with the Flow Visualization tool for a little while now as part of the partner network. If you are interested, here is another take on the Top 5 Examples of How to Use Flow Visualization:
http://www.blastam.com/blog/index.php/2011/10/ga-flow-visualization-use-cases/
11:16 AM
Vincent Guérin said...
I don't have it yet in my Google Analytics. Any idea on when the functionnality should be rolled out to everyone?
11:19 AM
Anthony Centeno said...
Keep the enhancements coming! Really like the "backwards" look for newly created goals. The Visitors Flow view is a welcome addition and something I can see clients really responding to.
11:48 AM
mprice14 said...
Can't wait to use this but its not showing yet!
12:04 PM
fundsamentals said...
This is great and falls in line with what http://optimizable.org prescribes.
12:23 PM
Loudacris said...
I'm kind of annoyed that I don't see either flow report or the real-time reports yet on my dashboard yet. What gives??
12:39 PM
Phil Mui said...
On timeline: all users should see the new Flow Visualization reports within a few weeks.
2:44 PM
High Value Seo Team said...
Nice work Google, lovin the analytics change. Pure awesomeness. I can see this will definitely help some of our seo clients.
3:00 PM
Justin Freid said...
Not showing for me yet, either, but it'll really help in building and tweaking sites. This is one of the best conversion tools I've seen.
3:03 PM
tAssilo said...
Looks like a great new tool.
It really visualizes traffic flows very nicely.
This tool will be very useful for some of our wellness hotel clients.
4:33 PM
Gus said...
Hi, just to tell that "Visitors Flow" and "Goal Flow" links are broken.
Cheers
Gustavo
6:32 PM
Gus said...
Hi, sorry, links worked after logged in
6:33 PM
Metricks said...
Excellent. Goal flow especially looks fantastic, and being able to set up goals backwards on historical data - at last! this is fantastic! Even better I've been building a funnel today that this will improve immensely
cheers
Jon
7:51 PM
borntrouble said...
This is something I was missing since a long time and the only reason I used to login to Yahoo Web Analytics. This is a great feature and specially being able to use segments is goal flow would be awesome. Did not find the reports in any of my client accounts yet but will keep looking for it until I get it.
10:32 PM
rahul mulchandani said...
I have not got access to visitor flow and goal flow reports.
can anyone tell me how to tell Google about this issue
10:34 PM
telx said...
visitor flow reports are not showing in my analytics account too.
how much time will it take to show up in my visitors report.
10:37 PM
Nick Hu said...
What is the difference between the current funnel visualization and new goal flow?
10:39 PM
Brett said...
Really great feature from the article, adds immense value. nice one.
12:50 AM
Sardar Mohkim Khan said...
The real time feature on the Google Analytics brings a massive wealth of information to publishers and content writers as well. You know exactly at what are the Peak hours, did a post get you the right exposure and from what sources. I think this will help bloggers especially to focus on the right time and the right content.
Best -
Engine021 - [www.engine021.com]
1:26 AM
Unknown said...
I love visual and this will give me an idea how exactly the dimensions in relation with visitors works like traffic sources, top landing pages, goals, content etc. which i can see in one diagram now.
2:46 AM
Olaf Pijl said...
To the people who are posting links with anchor tekst: they're no-followed, so stop ruining the conversation! :)
3:28 AM
AN said...
3:44 AM
seoer said...
Is the change being rolled gradually, or everybody should already see it?
I don't see the flow chart in any of my accounts ...
5:01 AM
Yde van Deutekom said...
Good job!
6:12 AM
Carl Bergstrom said...
This looks quite similar to our alluvial diagrams; see the alluvial diagram generator at mapequation.org:
http://www.mapequation.org/alluvialgenerator/index.html
and
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0008694
Carl Bergstrom
University of Washington
10:02 AM
MAMB said...
Now my Google Analytics do not track page view of my blog. What's problem?
My Blog address:
http://mambvisualbasic6.blogspot.com
8:05 PM
Unknown said...
Dear Analytics Team,
You are doing an amazing job and I couldn't be more grateful. Thank you for your hard work. I am looking forward to the following roll-out of your new and upcoming visualization features! XD
Professionally,
Gabriel Dibble
10:32 PM
The Lexington at Jackson Hole said...
I have quite a bit of experience doing path analysis, working with other propriatary tracking systems.
At the end of the day these reports turn out to be NOT very useful. Visitors will find EVERY POSSIBLE way to navigate around your site.
By it's very nature, the path analysis is pretty 2-dimensional. I find that the "back" button is a huge player in people's navigation paths, yet this is a hard item to visualize in path reports. There tends to be one main path, generally involving the back button, then 1 of every other path.
I strongly encourage web owners NOT to try to Pre-Think the paths they think visitors should take. Rather, they should focus on message, offer and good search/browse on their site.
They reports are interesting to the managers, but they are not the ones I find most useful.
8:54 PM
carl can said...
This is a good post. This post give truly quality information.I’m definitely going to look into it.Really very useful tips are provided here.thank you so much.Keep up the good works. concerto de pára-brisas
4:04 AM
max3w said...
When will it be available in Italy?
Thanks
2:54 AM
Pandu Aji Wirawan said...
Great tool, i want try it!
thank google
12:30 AM
Memet said...
Out of 4 links that the article is refering,3 of them are dead.
2:50 AM
Ian said...
Hello Memet,
I've checked the links in the article and they appear to be working. Can you please call out what links you're seeing problems with.
Thank you,
Ian Myszenski
Google Analytics Team
9:25 AM
thomasdecker236 said...
This "flow" thing looks great, but for some reason its not working for my engagement rings 2012 blog...
2:55 AM
Michael Piccorossi said...
I'm still not seeing this report? Is there an ETA for a wider release?
Thanks!
5:02 AM
msubasi said...
Me, too. I'm still not seeing this report. Any date for WW release?
3:50 AM
mdg33 said...
Any news on when these will be available to everyone?
'Cos they aren't at the moment.
3:35 PM
David Whitehouse said...
Still not getting this 1 month on :(
Come on guys, I'm looking to blog about this to 7,500 RSS subscribers and 14,000 twitter followers!
1:18 AM
Aashish Sahrawat said...
This is what i was waiting from my months.
G Rocks!!
3:15 AM
Unknown said...
All I can say is you guys rock! You enable me to help local businesses survive and are of more value to the U.S. economy than anything that will ever come from D.C. Keep up the great work.
http://slwconsulting.com
1:27 PM
邱晓光 said...
看起来,不是所有的目标渠道,都有可视化功能的
12:16 AM
llag said...
Thank you, this is what I've always thought was lacking in analytics!
2:01 AM
Simelo ... alias Olemis Lang. said...
you are awesome !
this is a very useful feature I've been dreaming of since so long .
Google Analytics rocks !
7:27 AM
singhisking said...
Ya, its major change in analytics.
3:41 AM
Hugo Rodger-Brown said...
Is there any news on the possibility of content grouping / aggregation? Without this, the visitors flow visualisation (which is great) is hard to use, because, for instance, you may have 10,000 product pages, and what you want to see is the flow through "product pages", not through individual URLs.
4:31 AM
Web Point Oh! LLC said...
One of the most appealing new features for Analytics. Thanks!
11:25 AM
Milka said...
visitor flow reports is a fantastic and funny new tool - I expect better than the alternative tools non piwik
3:33 AM
Steve Magruder said...
I just started using this and noticed by dropoffs for starter pages aren't matching with bounce rates. Dropoffs seem to be indicating much higher bounce rates than is reported elsewhere.
8:02 AM
Adelle said...
Super useful report, but does anyone know what the lag time is? For websites? and for mobile? ...in case there is a difference for both
6:37 AM
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