
A KPI is a key part of a measurable objective, which is made up of a direction, KPI, benchmark, target and time frame. For example: "Increase Average Revenue per Customer from £10 to £15 by EOY 2008". In this case, 'Average Revenue Per Customer' is the KPI. (Source: Wikipedia)Which are then the online key performance indicators that a web publisher should look at? Traffic? Visitors? Revenue? Yes, all of these are critical variables which should be constantly monitored to see how your web site is performing and how effectively you are achieving specific improvements. The expert team at the Google Conversion Blog has just finished preparing an introductory guide to such online Key Performance Indicators to help you understand how to wisely select them as well as how to start tracking them inside the various Google data monitoring tools (AdSense, Analytics, etc.). If you are a professional online publisher who is serious about creating a strategic framework to direct, monitor and support your online business growth, this is must-read information. Here all the details:
Using Web-Based Key Performance Indicators
by Brian O' SullivanGet More Quality Visitors
Each Key Performance Indicator refers to a sub-objective of the main target "Get more quality visitors" and those KPIs have a precise reference inside the Google Analytics dashboard.Sub-Objective | KPI | Report in Google Analytics |
Have more people visit the website | Number of unique visitors | Visitors > Visitor Trending > Absolute Unique Visitors |
Ensure there's a return on marketing efforts | ROI of online campaigns | Traffic Sources > AdWords > AdWords Campaigns (Clicks tab) |
Have more people buy products from the website | Ecommerce conversion rate | E-commerce > Conversion Rate |
Have more people register to be a user on the site | Goal completion rate of 'new registrations' | Goals > Conversion Rate |
Increase the number of interactions people have on the site | Goal completion rate of 'new comment posts' | Goals > Conversion Rate |
Increase the percentage of returning visitors | Percentage of returning visitors | Visitors > New Vs Returning |
Increase the number of 'branded visits' | Percentage of visits that come from direct or branded keywords | Visitors > Visitor Trending > Visits (apply branded visitors segment) |
What Are KPIs?

Why Use KPIs?

- Changes in your KPIs tell you when you need to take action. If the bounce rate on your homepage increases by 50% you need to figure out why and take action to reverse the trend.
- Secondly KPIs help you bridge the gap between your Google Analytics account and the rest of your business. They help you understand what each stakeholder in your company wants from your Google Analytics account, and from your company's online presence. Get your colleagues engaged with how your online business is progressing, per key reports and metrics.
How Should You Create Your KPI List?

1. Make Sure They Are Important and Related to The Business
You really need to tie your KPIs with your business objectives. A KPI such as 'attract more visitors' may seem like a good choice but is it really tied with your business objectives? What if marketing go ahead and double your visitors but none of the new visitors buy? Attracting more quality visitors might be better, where quality is measured by conversion rate or bounce rate.
2. Make Them Actionable
If you can't take action on one of your chosen KPIs it's not a good KPI. Ask yourself, if I come in tomorrow and this KPI has doubled or halved - what am I going to do?
3. Focus on Your Audience and Give Them Context
If you're sharing reports with other team members, bear in mind that not everything is relevant to everyone. If you're sharing metrics with team members, try focusing their attention on what is most important for their jobs. Example: "50% of users used the search function on our site last week. Of those that did 45% exited the site immediately after viewing search results for the top ten terms". This is useful information for the design team members working on improving site search and for their manager but it may be unnecessary information for the marketing department.
KPI: Bounce Rate - Why Is It So Important?
You can watch Google Analytics Evangelist, Avinash Kaushik, talk about the significance of bounce rate in this YouTube video:Originally written by Brian O' Sullivan for Google Conversion Room and first published on February 14, 2009 as "Using Key Performance Indicators: Part 1 and Part 2".
Photo credits: What Are KPIs? - Cyril Hou Why Use KPIs? - adempercem How Should You Create Your KPI List? - Eduard Härkönen Make Sure They Are Important and Related to The Business - vacuum3d Make Them Actionable - Andrey Stratilatov Focus on Your Audience and Give Them Context - _chilli